Well, that was quick.
I'll admit to some surprise that Ratzinger was chosen as Pope. I didn't think we'd have a non-European, but I was expecting someone less obvious. You hear about how people go into the conclave as Pope and go out a cardinal, and it makes the most obvious choice seem less so.
It's been interesting listening to the analysis about his election, especially as they try to peg where Ratzinger is going to fall in terms of orthodoxy. Most everyone says he'll be in line with John Paul II, though there's been some talk about him as a moderate, especially in his choice of Benedict as a name, given the moderate role of some of the more recent Benedicts. The name also suggests the understanding of a shorter papcy, as Benedict XV served for under a decade.
Speaking of the name, I am kicking myself a bit with regards to the Tournament of Popery, as I made a last-minute change from Benedict to Leo. Not sure why I did this; in retrospect Benedict is the perfect name for someone serving as Pope at this juncture.
This did leave the door open for Chris Rosenberg, who wins the Tournament of Popery with a score of 20 points based on his selection of the election happening tomorrow. Craig Barker and I tie for second with 15 points (we both had Thursday). Our last two entrants - Anthony De Jesus and ML Kingston - scored no points, as they both went for a longer conclave. Chris will pad his win by 5 or 10 points depending on whether or not it was the fourth or fifth ballot.
As you might have picked up from the discussion above, none of us got the cardinal or name correct.
Funnily enough, I learned about the election today not through the usual 21st century means, but from the bells of my church. Go figure.
19 April 2005
15 April 2005
Probably won't get much of a chance to post this weekend, so I just wanted to remind folks that there is still time to enter my Tournament of Popery. Instructions are in the April 12 post.
(Quick note on an irritation with Blogger: the link for each post doesn't take you to the post, but to the comments for the post. What's the point of that?)
(Quick note on an irritation with Blogger: the link for each post doesn't take you to the post, but to the comments for the post. What's the point of that?)
14 April 2005
The savior of otherwise postless days: television recaps.
Reality bites: On American Idol we're in an interesting situation where there's no real stand-outs. The annual competition between talent and image is a push at best. Even more confusing is the run of Scott Savol, who combines a pretty good voice with (what appears to the layperson) as a borderline sociopathic aspect. The sex appeal of Constantine Maroulis - he of the greasy shoulder-length hair and Chiclet-style yellowish teeth - is also hard to get a grip on, other than noting that he looks more dangerous than he actually is.
Over on America's Next Top Model Tyra Banks took a full-on nutty on a contestant last night, the capper to a double elimination. The judges hope this'll get the remaining contestant going, but it may just shake them more. The contestants have also shown an amazing lack of fashion knowledge (not knowing what haute couture is and being unable to pronounce designer names) and general knowledge (similar problems pronouncing 'magenta' and 'chartreuse.'). It's ugly.
Missed The Apprentice last week, though I've gotten the gist of things elsewhere. Big news is of course the arrest of hot-head Chris, which will only be a concern if he makes the finals. I don't see that happening. No real stand-outs here, either. Many more people who seem to be coasting, which will prove interesting now that the small teams should prevent such things.
Missing last week also apparently allowed me to miss an ugly product placement for Domino's new cheeseburger pizza. So much the better.
A modicum of praise be for Revelations, the short-run NBC series about the looming end of the world. The pilot was a little confusing, as it took some time to develop the background. Atmospherically it was all sorts of dramatic, although not so stupidly heavy-handed as Point Pleasant.
Anyway, Bill Pullman (a UMass grad according to a new ad running here; who knew?) plays a Harvard prof whose daughter was killed by a Satanist. He goes to Chile, captures the Satanist, and is now engaging in some sort of Starling-and-Lechter dialog with him (I'm calling pre-emptive shenanigans if they run off together to sacrifice more kids).
Meanwhile, Natasha McElhone plays a British nun with an Italian name who is investigating religious phenomena trying to prove that the end of days is nigh. She, of course, crosses paths with Pullman's character, which has the usual rational scepticism versus higher power face-off. The something happens to rattle the prof's beliefs, and we're off.
There's also a baby who was the only survivor of a ferry sinking. The baby may be the second coming. Or he's been sent to lead us astray. We'll be finding out later.
Smartly, this is only a six-episode run. So if it tanks, NBC can cut and run. If it doesn't, we can expect more eschatalogical wackiness next season. Either way, Aaron Barnhart pretty much nails the show in his review.
And finally I've been enjoying the USification of The Office, possibly because I've not seen the original yet. Tuesdays at 9:30 on your local NBC station.
Reality bites: On American Idol we're in an interesting situation where there's no real stand-outs. The annual competition between talent and image is a push at best. Even more confusing is the run of Scott Savol, who combines a pretty good voice with (what appears to the layperson) as a borderline sociopathic aspect. The sex appeal of Constantine Maroulis - he of the greasy shoulder-length hair and Chiclet-style yellowish teeth - is also hard to get a grip on, other than noting that he looks more dangerous than he actually is.
Over on America's Next Top Model Tyra Banks took a full-on nutty on a contestant last night, the capper to a double elimination. The judges hope this'll get the remaining contestant going, but it may just shake them more. The contestants have also shown an amazing lack of fashion knowledge (not knowing what haute couture is and being unable to pronounce designer names) and general knowledge (similar problems pronouncing 'magenta' and 'chartreuse.'). It's ugly.
Missed The Apprentice last week, though I've gotten the gist of things elsewhere. Big news is of course the arrest of hot-head Chris, which will only be a concern if he makes the finals. I don't see that happening. No real stand-outs here, either. Many more people who seem to be coasting, which will prove interesting now that the small teams should prevent such things.
Missing last week also apparently allowed me to miss an ugly product placement for Domino's new cheeseburger pizza. So much the better.
A modicum of praise be for Revelations, the short-run NBC series about the looming end of the world. The pilot was a little confusing, as it took some time to develop the background. Atmospherically it was all sorts of dramatic, although not so stupidly heavy-handed as Point Pleasant.
Anyway, Bill Pullman (a UMass grad according to a new ad running here; who knew?) plays a Harvard prof whose daughter was killed by a Satanist. He goes to Chile, captures the Satanist, and is now engaging in some sort of Starling-and-Lechter dialog with him (I'm calling pre-emptive shenanigans if they run off together to sacrifice more kids).
Meanwhile, Natasha McElhone plays a British nun with an Italian name who is investigating religious phenomena trying to prove that the end of days is nigh. She, of course, crosses paths with Pullman's character, which has the usual rational scepticism versus higher power face-off. The something happens to rattle the prof's beliefs, and we're off.
There's also a baby who was the only survivor of a ferry sinking. The baby may be the second coming. Or he's been sent to lead us astray. We'll be finding out later.
Smartly, this is only a six-episode run. So if it tanks, NBC can cut and run. If it doesn't, we can expect more eschatalogical wackiness next season. Either way, Aaron Barnhart pretty much nails the show in his review.
And finally I've been enjoying the USification of The Office, possibly because I've not seen the original yet. Tuesdays at 9:30 on your local NBC station.
12 April 2005
Thing #7 6 That I've Done That You Likely Haven't
Organize a prediction game for an upcoming Papal election.
To play, you just need to email me with your responses to the following four questions:
1. Who will be elected Pope? While it's possible that the new Pope will come from outside this group, it's most likely that he'll be selected from the voting membership of the College of Cardinals. For those of you looking for more guidance, you could peruse this list of favorites. Or this one. There's also this article that details some dark horse candidates.
2. What day will the new Pope be elected? Note that the conclave will start on Monday, April 18.
3. On what ballot will the new Pope be elected? If what I've read is correct, there will be one vote on the first day of the conclave, with four votes per day after that.
4. What name will the new Pope take? For a look at the past 264 names, check this list here.
Scoring: each question is worth 25 points. For questions 2 and 3, you will lose 5 points for each day or ballot off you are. For example, if you said the new Pope would get elected on the 100th ballot, and he actually got elected on the 98th ballot, you'd get 15 points.
For question four, you'll get 10 points if you get the name or the number, but not both. You'll also get mocked if you pick the name but have the wrong number; I did post a link to that list, after all.
Entries are due by 11:59 pm on Sunday, April 17. No money, of course; this is already borderline on speeding my way on the Hell Express.
Organize a prediction game for an upcoming Papal election.
To play, you just need to email me with your responses to the following four questions:
1. Who will be elected Pope? While it's possible that the new Pope will come from outside this group, it's most likely that he'll be selected from the voting membership of the College of Cardinals. For those of you looking for more guidance, you could peruse this list of favorites. Or this one. There's also this article that details some dark horse candidates.
2. What day will the new Pope be elected? Note that the conclave will start on Monday, April 18.
3. On what ballot will the new Pope be elected? If what I've read is correct, there will be one vote on the first day of the conclave, with four votes per day after that.
4. What name will the new Pope take? For a look at the past 264 names, check this list here.
Scoring: each question is worth 25 points. For questions 2 and 3, you will lose 5 points for each day or ballot off you are. For example, if you said the new Pope would get elected on the 100th ballot, and he actually got elected on the 98th ballot, you'd get 15 points.
For question four, you'll get 10 points if you get the name or the number, but not both. You'll also get mocked if you pick the name but have the wrong number; I did post a link to that list, after all.
Entries are due by 11:59 pm on Sunday, April 17. No money, of course; this is already borderline on speeding my way on the Hell Express.
11 April 2005
First, to tie up loose ends, congrat to Brian Hight for winning this year's Frozen Four pool. He correctly tabbed Denver University (or is it the University of Denver - none of the announcers seem to agree, even with themselves, on the name of the place) as the latest repeat champ. You final tally:
Hight - 50 points
Bruce - 42
Boggie - 30
Coen, Harper-Nixon - 26
Sorenson - 20
Barker - 16
Moving on to today's festivities, I got to hear when both the radio and TV guys got their rings at today's Red Sox opener. The TV guys took it pretty well, while Troop and Joe were in various states of awe, glee, and speechlessness. I suppose it's hard to call a game with that much bling on. It was actually pretty funny to listen to, as I think in that moment what those guys were covering on the radio became much more real, if that makes any sense. That and, for the homers they are, getting rings must have put things into overdrive.
It didn't hurt that the Sox won, either.
Watching news coverage tonight we saw a woman that the wife used to work with. It was hard to tell at first as she was wearing a hat and had sunglasses on, but it was cool to see her being interviewed about Opening Day.
Not much else to report on currently. I'm beginning to peel after getting burnt on Friday during a riverboat cruise, but it's pretty minor.
Hight - 50 points
Bruce - 42
Boggie - 30
Coen, Harper-Nixon - 26
Sorenson - 20
Barker - 16
Moving on to today's festivities, I got to hear when both the radio and TV guys got their rings at today's Red Sox opener. The TV guys took it pretty well, while Troop and Joe were in various states of awe, glee, and speechlessness. I suppose it's hard to call a game with that much bling on. It was actually pretty funny to listen to, as I think in that moment what those guys were covering on the radio became much more real, if that makes any sense. That and, for the homers they are, getting rings must have put things into overdrive.
It didn't hurt that the Sox won, either.
Watching news coverage tonight we saw a woman that the wife used to work with. It was hard to tell at first as she was wearing a hat and had sunglasses on, but it was cool to see her being interviewed about Opening Day.
Not much else to report on currently. I'm beginning to peel after getting burnt on Friday during a riverboat cruise, but it's pretty minor.
09 April 2005
Greetings from New Orleans, where I'm helping out with the NAQT ICT. We got down here a little early to sightsee, fuller recap to follow. Suffice it to say that if you've not been here you should visit.
Keeping up with the meme:
Thing #5 That I've Done That You Probably Haven't
Read a baseball book a week from spring training through the end of the regular season.
This was, I think 1996. I'd fallen out with baseball before the 1994 strike, which caused me to fall out even more. Cal Ripken's streak brought me back a bit, and I decided to give it a chance by reading up on things. It worked; I now enjoy baseball quite a bit. Not as much as football. Or hockey, I suppose. Still, it's back in my good graces, which I'm sure is a load off of Bud Selig's mind.
Keeping up with the meme:
Thing #5 That I've Done That You Probably Haven't
Read a baseball book a week from spring training through the end of the regular season.
This was, I think 1996. I'd fallen out with baseball before the 1994 strike, which caused me to fall out even more. Cal Ripken's streak brought me back a bit, and I decided to give it a chance by reading up on things. It worked; I now enjoy baseball quite a bit. Not as much as football. Or hockey, I suppose. Still, it's back in my good graces, which I'm sure is a load off of Bud Selig's mind.
06 April 2005
Thing #4 That I've Done That You Likely Have Not
Blogged about my honeymoon while still on my honeymoon.
I doubt that I'm alone on this one generally, but as far as people I know go most of my friends who are married wed in pre-blog times.
Had we not been trying to follow the ALCS I don't know if I'd have blogged. Then again, public internet locations in Killarney are cheap and plentiful. So perhaps I would have just blogged less.
Blogged about my honeymoon while still on my honeymoon.
I doubt that I'm alone on this one generally, but as far as people I know go most of my friends who are married wed in pre-blog times.
Had we not been trying to follow the ALCS I don't know if I'd have blogged. Then again, public internet locations in Killarney are cheap and plentiful. So perhaps I would have just blogged less.
03 April 2005
Thing #3 That I've Done That You Probably Haven't
Sang "Take Me Out to the Ballgame" duing a blackout at Fenway Park.
OK, there is one person who reads this semi-regularly who did this (hi Paul!).
I think I've mentioned this, but if not here's the skinny: it was a 1991 game against the White Sox, transformer blew in Kenmore Square. While we were waiting for the lights to come back on, Sox PA guy Sherm Feller leads us in song. Or sings the first verse with us, leaving the rest of us to finish while he gets another Scotch.
The Sox would lose in extra innings, but it was a great game all 'round.
Sang "Take Me Out to the Ballgame" duing a blackout at Fenway Park.
OK, there is one person who reads this semi-regularly who did this (hi Paul!).
I think I've mentioned this, but if not here's the skinny: it was a 1991 game against the White Sox, transformer blew in Kenmore Square. While we were waiting for the lights to come back on, Sox PA guy Sherm Feller leads us in song. Or sings the first verse with us, leaving the rest of us to finish while he gets another Scotch.
The Sox would lose in extra innings, but it was a great game all 'round.
02 April 2005
I wrote a post about John Paul II, but it wound up getting eaten. Which probably isn't a bad thing, as I don't think it was very good. Suffice it to say I'm pretty conflicted, as for every positive you can point at something that doesn't sit so well.
So I'm not even going to bother to recreate the post. Were I a better Catholic (or a better person, for that matter), I'd make some commitment to being more involved in my faith. Knowing who I am, though, I'll just continue to feed that typical (or stereotypical) divide American Catholics have of appreciating the Pope while not caring as much for all of those faith and morals issues where he says things that clash with our secular American values.
So after all that typing, I'm vaguely dissatisfied with the results. That's probably a metaphor for something.
So I'm not even going to bother to recreate the post. Were I a better Catholic (or a better person, for that matter), I'd make some commitment to being more involved in my faith. Knowing who I am, though, I'll just continue to feed that typical (or stereotypical) divide American Catholics have of appreciating the Pope while not caring as much for all of those faith and morals issues where he says things that clash with our secular American values.
So after all that typing, I'm vaguely dissatisfied with the results. That's probably a metaphor for something.
01 April 2005
Thing #2 That I've Done That You Likely Have Not
Waited bascially a lifetime between taking the driver's test to get a driver's license.
Took it the first time when I was 17, and the second time when I was 34. I won't rehash the details here; interested parties can check the archives for the summer and early fall of 2004 for more.
I will say that I have found, in the six months or so that I've been driving, that I do enjoy it. I still don't understand the impulse that leads people to drive to work if they have a useful public transit option. Though the vagaries of the T (especially the Green Line) can lead to very similar irritation as rush hour traffic.
Waited bascially a lifetime between taking the driver's test to get a driver's license.
Took it the first time when I was 17, and the second time when I was 34. I won't rehash the details here; interested parties can check the archives for the summer and early fall of 2004 for more.
I will say that I have found, in the six months or so that I've been driving, that I do enjoy it. I still don't understand the impulse that leads people to drive to work if they have a useful public transit option. Though the vagaries of the T (especially the Green Line) can lead to very similar irritation as rush hour traffic.
31 March 2005
I've not had much to post about the last few days. Life's been pretty uneventful and we don't have any more college hockey until next week. In order to fill the gaps until something more interesting comes along, I'm going to pick up the "10 things I've done that you probably haven't" meme, but post them one at a time. Which will fill that longing for a week and a half of annotated personal navel-gazing that many of you have.
Thing #1 That I've Done That You Probably Haven't
Lost a playoff round at a debate tournament to an opponent who arrived at that tournament prepared for the wrong topic.
The year was 1987, the location Lexington (MA) High School. It being the bicentennial year for the Constitution, the LD debate topics for the year were all going to be Constitutionally-themed. Unlike policy debate, where there was one topic for the year, LD topics changed on some regular basis (monthly or bimonthly, though a handful of tournaments had one-off topics).
In any event, some wires got crossed somewhere and the folks from the Bronx High School of Science show up thinking that the topic being used was something other than it actually was. Bronx Science is a pretty good team, but I figure that this is going to hamstring them.
But I wind up getting paired against one of their folks in the quarterfinals. Clearly, they were better debaters than I gave them credit for. And, naturally, I lose a 3-2 decision. I don't remember much about the round, though I do have a memory of getting stumped on a cross-examination question that I'd answered with relative ease in other rounds.
In a way this round more or less summed up my performance as a debater. I averaged about one piece of hardware a year, generally at that level. My best performance, at least based by nomenclature, was a semifinal berth at the very first debate tournament I ever participated in. My partner and I (in novice policy debate) had to forfeit based on team policy, as our semifinal round was against another team from my school with a better record.
The closest I ever came to a national tournament was via student congress, where participants get to vote for other participants. Being the only person from my school who competed in student congress didn't help.
So there's more than you ever wanted to know about my debate career.
Thing #1 That I've Done That You Probably Haven't
Lost a playoff round at a debate tournament to an opponent who arrived at that tournament prepared for the wrong topic.
The year was 1987, the location Lexington (MA) High School. It being the bicentennial year for the Constitution, the LD debate topics for the year were all going to be Constitutionally-themed. Unlike policy debate, where there was one topic for the year, LD topics changed on some regular basis (monthly or bimonthly, though a handful of tournaments had one-off topics).
In any event, some wires got crossed somewhere and the folks from the Bronx High School of Science show up thinking that the topic being used was something other than it actually was. Bronx Science is a pretty good team, but I figure that this is going to hamstring them.
But I wind up getting paired against one of their folks in the quarterfinals. Clearly, they were better debaters than I gave them credit for. And, naturally, I lose a 3-2 decision. I don't remember much about the round, though I do have a memory of getting stumped on a cross-examination question that I'd answered with relative ease in other rounds.
In a way this round more or less summed up my performance as a debater. I averaged about one piece of hardware a year, generally at that level. My best performance, at least based by nomenclature, was a semifinal berth at the very first debate tournament I ever participated in. My partner and I (in novice policy debate) had to forfeit based on team policy, as our semifinal round was against another team from my school with a better record.
The closest I ever came to a national tournament was via student congress, where participants get to vote for other participants. Being the only person from my school who competed in student congress didn't help.
So there's more than you ever wanted to know about my debate career.
27 March 2005
Two rounds done, and we've got our all-WCHA Frozen Four. Pool standings, with number of teams left and national champion pick in parentheses:
Coen - 26 points (3/Colorado College)
Hight - 26 (3/Denver)
Boggie - 22 (3/Minnesota)
Sorenson - 20 (2/CC)
Bruce - 18 (2/Denver)
Harper-Nixon - 18 (2/BU)
Barker - 16 (1/Michigan)
A couple of people have noted how this pool is the ying to their March Madness bracket yang. Not sure it's reached that level for me yet, though Kentucky's impending loss isn't going to help me in Barker's pool (it was the one thing that differentiated me from the other folks who have Illinois going all the way). In the Bruce's weighted competition it appears that my fortunes are tied with Louisville's.
For something completely different, Easter was pretty uneventful. The in-laws were down for the weekend, and we had an early dinner at restaurant that's part of a local yacht club (we'd briefly looked at the place for our wedding reception, but they wanted way too much for a room rooted in the 1970s). Church was a zoo, of course, as the C&E folks packed it to standing room only. The priest made a pretty funny reference to the need to show up more often, using the phrase "same Bat-time, same Bat-channel." We'll see how it goes.
Coen - 26 points (3/Colorado College)
Hight - 26 (3/Denver)
Boggie - 22 (3/Minnesota)
Sorenson - 20 (2/CC)
Bruce - 18 (2/Denver)
Harper-Nixon - 18 (2/BU)
Barker - 16 (1/Michigan)
A couple of people have noted how this pool is the ying to their March Madness bracket yang. Not sure it's reached that level for me yet, though Kentucky's impending loss isn't going to help me in Barker's pool (it was the one thing that differentiated me from the other folks who have Illinois going all the way). In the Bruce's weighted competition it appears that my fortunes are tied with Louisville's.
For something completely different, Easter was pretty uneventful. The in-laws were down for the weekend, and we had an early dinner at restaurant that's part of a local yacht club (we'd briefly looked at the place for our wedding reception, but they wanted way too much for a room rooted in the 1970s). Church was a zoo, of course, as the C&E folks packed it to standing room only. The priest made a pretty funny reference to the need to show up more often, using the phrase "same Bat-time, same Bat-channel." We'll see how it goes.
After the first round of the Frozen Four:
Coen, Hight - 14 points
Sorenson, Barker - 12 points
Boggie, Bruce, Harper-Nixon - 10 points
Upset points work a whole lot better when there are, you know, upsets. The only one that's happened - North Dakota over BC - was picked by no one. Not surprising given the people involved, various upsets involving BU were picked but obviously came for naught. Harvard and Maine got their share of upset picks, with similar results.
Without giving too much away about the second round so far, yesterday did bust someone's bracket pretty seriously. So much for a repeat of the 1998 final.
In related news, I got an email back from Comcast regarding my question on ESPNU. My inquiry was passed along to the marketing department, and did I know that there is a sports package that I could buy? Not that any of those channels would have helped me yesterday, either. I'm not sure that sort of answer is one they wanted to append a link to a customer service survey to, but I was happy to comment on the "helpfulness" of their canned response. I don't expect a reply.
Coen, Hight - 14 points
Sorenson, Barker - 12 points
Boggie, Bruce, Harper-Nixon - 10 points
Upset points work a whole lot better when there are, you know, upsets. The only one that's happened - North Dakota over BC - was picked by no one. Not surprising given the people involved, various upsets involving BU were picked but obviously came for naught. Harvard and Maine got their share of upset picks, with similar results.
Without giving too much away about the second round so far, yesterday did bust someone's bracket pretty seriously. So much for a repeat of the 1998 final.
In related news, I got an email back from Comcast regarding my question on ESPNU. My inquiry was passed along to the marketing department, and did I know that there is a sports package that I could buy? Not that any of those channels would have helped me yesterday, either. I'm not sure that sort of answer is one they wanted to append a link to a customer service survey to, but I was happy to comment on the "helpfulness" of their canned response. I don't expect a reply.
26 March 2005
Good early games on the road to the Frozen Four today. Maine took Minnesota to OT in Minneapolis, and Denver also had to go to an extra frame to knock out Bemidji State.
Not that I got to see either game.
No local cable - NESN, FSNE, or CN8 - carried either game. Now, if lived in college hockey hotbeds like Kansas City, Memphis, Tulsa, Wichita, or Mason City, Iowa, I'd have had some luck. But in suburban Boston, we don't get a game being played in our own state or one involving a Hockey East team.
Not helping is that Comcast hasn't added ESPNU to its offerings. It's not even available as part of their sports pack. Hopefully, other college hockey fans have sent along an email similar to my own, asking when it may join our lineup. Too late for this year, of course.
Not that I got to see either game.
No local cable - NESN, FSNE, or CN8 - carried either game. Now, if lived in college hockey hotbeds like Kansas City, Memphis, Tulsa, Wichita, or Mason City, Iowa, I'd have had some luck. But in suburban Boston, we don't get a game being played in our own state or one involving a Hockey East team.
Not helping is that Comcast hasn't added ESPNU to its offerings. It's not even available as part of their sports pack. Hopefully, other college hockey fans have sent along an email similar to my own, asking when it may join our lineup. Too late for this year, of course.
So the BU men's ice hockey season ended last night with a whimper rather than a bang (well, it was more like a whimper and a thud) by way of a 4-0 loss to North Dakota. If you saw the game on TV, take my word that it was worse in person. If you didn't watch the game, consider yourself lucky. Nothing worked for BU at any end of the ice, though their 0 for 10 on the power play especially stands out.
Last night was also the second - and hopefully last - appearance of the third jersey. They need to be encased in cement and sunk in the Charles.
The DCU Center (former the Centrum) is an OK place to see a game, though the NCAA component was odd. We got a lot of random clips of "exciting" moments from past championships - just not from hockey very much. We saw Notre Dame stay in the 2002 College World Series, Wake Forest win their second field hockey title in a row, and several basketball moments. We did see clips from 2001 (which we shall not speak of again) and 1996. I don't mind this, though they could have cut the number of clips in half and shown more hockey content.
I also know now the dates and locations of several NCAA championship events. Were I to be in Annapolis, College Station, Sacramento, or Houston over the next couple of months I'd make the trip. Note to Cooch: the NCAA team bowling final will be on ESPN2 in mid-April. Set your TiVo.
The BC-Mercyhurst game was much more fun, as a 5-4 final for BC would suggest. We knew something would be up when Mercyhurst scored on their first shot. Both teams looked like they were playing at three-quarters speed, while Mercyhurst's approach to defense was, shall we say, nonchalant? Still, they put forth a better performance than BU did. Erie should be proud.
In any event, if you're looking for 2 tickets to tonight's BC-North Dakota game, drop me a line.
As for the Frozen Four pool, only one person got all of yesterday's games right. He is, I think, also the most objective entrant of everyone given that UVa doesn't have hockey:
Hight - 8 points
Barker, Coen, Harper-Nixon, Sorenson - 6 points
Boggie, Bruce - 4 points
Only one person with a real bracket-busting loss; going with BU all the way was a bold choice for someone (not me!).
Last night was also the second - and hopefully last - appearance of the third jersey. They need to be encased in cement and sunk in the Charles.
The DCU Center (former the Centrum) is an OK place to see a game, though the NCAA component was odd. We got a lot of random clips of "exciting" moments from past championships - just not from hockey very much. We saw Notre Dame stay in the 2002 College World Series, Wake Forest win their second field hockey title in a row, and several basketball moments. We did see clips from 2001 (which we shall not speak of again) and 1996. I don't mind this, though they could have cut the number of clips in half and shown more hockey content.
I also know now the dates and locations of several NCAA championship events. Were I to be in Annapolis, College Station, Sacramento, or Houston over the next couple of months I'd make the trip. Note to Cooch: the NCAA team bowling final will be on ESPN2 in mid-April. Set your TiVo.
The BC-Mercyhurst game was much more fun, as a 5-4 final for BC would suggest. We knew something would be up when Mercyhurst scored on their first shot. Both teams looked like they were playing at three-quarters speed, while Mercyhurst's approach to defense was, shall we say, nonchalant? Still, they put forth a better performance than BU did. Erie should be proud.
In any event, if you're looking for 2 tickets to tonight's BC-North Dakota game, drop me a line.
As for the Frozen Four pool, only one person got all of yesterday's games right. He is, I think, also the most objective entrant of everyone given that UVa doesn't have hockey:
Hight - 8 points
Barker, Coen, Harper-Nixon, Sorenson - 6 points
Boggie, Bruce - 4 points
Only one person with a real bracket-busting loss; going with BU all the way was a bold choice for someone (not me!).
22 March 2005
What with the Schiavo case all over the place this past week, no time like the present to suggest to one and all that you set yourself up with a durable power of attorney for health care decisions.
Unlike a living will, the durable power of attorney designates someone to make medical decisions for you in the event that you can't. It also includes a section that, like a living will, allows you to make clear indications of what you want and don't want based on your assumed future condition and available treatment options.
The durable power of attorney does require a little more work than a living will. You'll have to have it witnessed and notarized and such, but doing this will help head off problems that could arise if you just filled out a living will and stuck it in a drawer.
NOTE: You should try to find a form specific for your state. A Google search with the terms "durable power of attorney," "health care," and your state's name should lead you to something useful. There are several sites that will try to sell you a form, though between your state bar and the helpful people at your local library, you should be able to find what you need at no cost.
(It should also be noted that nothing in this post should be construed as legal opinion or lawyerly advice. It's one guy [who is not giving you advice as a lawyer or with any guarantee of accuracy] putting out there for you to use as you see fit, as is, at your own risk.)
That being said, here are some decent links:
* The Missouri Bar offers a useful form and informational booklet, as well as a handy HIPAA waiver that will allow medical providers to discuss information with your designee.
* The University of Michigan provides this general form, as well as a link to the Michigan Bar's PDF version.
* This page from the Lifespan hospital network in Rhode Island also provides links to the proper forms and other information related to the topic.
Unlike a living will, the durable power of attorney designates someone to make medical decisions for you in the event that you can't. It also includes a section that, like a living will, allows you to make clear indications of what you want and don't want based on your assumed future condition and available treatment options.
The durable power of attorney does require a little more work than a living will. You'll have to have it witnessed and notarized and such, but doing this will help head off problems that could arise if you just filled out a living will and stuck it in a drawer.
NOTE: You should try to find a form specific for your state. A Google search with the terms "durable power of attorney," "health care," and your state's name should lead you to something useful. There are several sites that will try to sell you a form, though between your state bar and the helpful people at your local library, you should be able to find what you need at no cost.
(It should also be noted that nothing in this post should be construed as legal opinion or lawyerly advice. It's one guy [who is not giving you advice as a lawyer or with any guarantee of accuracy] putting out there for you to use as you see fit, as is, at your own risk.)
That being said, here are some decent links:
* The Missouri Bar offers a useful form and informational booklet, as well as a handy HIPAA waiver that will allow medical providers to discuss information with your designee.
* The University of Michigan provides this general form, as well as a link to the Michigan Bar's PDF version.
* This page from the Lifespan hospital network in Rhode Island also provides links to the proper forms and other information related to the topic.
20 March 2005
Which of these is worse?
a. CBS is airing a movie tonight - in prime time! - called Spring Break Shark Attack.
b. At the end of the ad for Spring Break Shark Attack, there was a quick chomping sound.
c. Brian Brown and Kathy Baker have to stoop to starring in Spring Break Shark Attack.
d. They are all equally bad.
a. CBS is airing a movie tonight - in prime time! - called Spring Break Shark Attack.
b. At the end of the ad for Spring Break Shark Attack, there was a quick chomping sound.
c. Brian Brown and Kathy Baker have to stoop to starring in Spring Break Shark Attack.
d. They are all equally bad.
As promised, here's my Frozen Four pool for the year.
Go here to see the bracket (warning: a print window will also automatically pop up). You send to me your picks for each round through the finals. Points will be given on a 2-4-8-16 basis (2 points for picking a first round win, 4 for the second round, etc.).
Upset points will be granted throughout the tournament based on regional seeding. For example, if Mercyhurst topped Denver to win the national title (and you were crazy or drunk enough to call it), you'd get 19 points (16 for the correct pick, plus three bonus points for the difference in their regional seeds).
The regional seeding is helpfully provided at the bottom of the bracket page.
One entry per person, due by the 11:59:59 pm EST on Thursday, March 24.
Go here to see the bracket (warning: a print window will also automatically pop up). You send to me your picks for each round through the finals. Points will be given on a 2-4-8-16 basis (2 points for picking a first round win, 4 for the second round, etc.).
Upset points will be granted throughout the tournament based on regional seeding. For example, if Mercyhurst topped Denver to win the national title (and you were crazy or drunk enough to call it), you'd get 19 points (16 for the correct pick, plus three bonus points for the difference in their regional seeds).
The regional seeding is helpfully provided at the bottom of the bracket page.
One entry per person, due by the 11:59:59 pm EST on Thursday, March 24.
19 March 2005
I'm not sure which of my five brackets on ESPN.com's tournament challenge is my "real" one. I know it's not the one where I chose winners based on whose mascot would win in a fight (that's how I got the improbable Iowa State-Montana final). I suppose it'll be whichever one is doing the best right now.
There's actually little variance between three of them, separated by 20 points. I didn't pick too many of the upsets, mostly mild ones. I think UW-Milwaukee was the one I picked most consistently, while UAB got a nod at least once. I think the only place I got Vermont was the same place I got Bucknell, the aforementioned mascot bracket.
Speaking of mascots, the second intermission of tonight's BU-UNH Hockey East semifinal featured the mascots of the four semifinal teams in a hockey game against the five mascots of the non-semifinal teams. The non-semifinal team won 2-0. Some observations:
* The UMass minuteman has an unnatural grey pallor to his skin. It's like he's got an airway obstruction or some sort of constrictive lung ailment.
* The Merrimack warrior had a skin tone very similar to his helmet and uniform. I'm assuming he's a Roman legionary stationed in Judea or something. Added entertainment value here as the logo used to represent Merrimack on the video screens was their old one, the Native American rather than the generic ancient guy.
* The Providence friar was wearing a white robe. We figure he's actually come out of the closet (or perhaps shrub) as a Druid.
* The UMass-Lowell river hawk is actually more like a man-bird superhero. It has no wings, a cape, and a very tight-fitting costume.
Everyone else's mascot looked pretty normal, except that Northeastern's husky looks a little horse-like to me in the face.
Anyway, this was the most entertaining part of the game, as BU went down 5-2 to UNH. It was a 40 minute system failure for BU, who garnered all of three shots in the first period (somehow only going down 1-0), and not reaching the 10 shot plateau until there was just over a minute left in the second period. Nothing was working on any end of the ice, and our atrocious penalty killing (7th of 9 in Hockey East) was in full force.
Not sure it'll change too much in regards to the NCAAs, as long as other tournaments hold to form. But I assume we'll be playing in our road scarlet uniforms rather than home white. That may not be a bad thing, as long as they aren't the accursed third jerseys.
Rounding out my sports viewing of late was the opening hour or so of the steroids hearing yesterday. It made for thrilling TV, as the ranking members of the committee and subcommittee made pretty much the same speech four times. The committee chair did make some passing reference to not looking forward to nosebleed seats in the coming few years, which gave a sliver of credence to Tony Kornheiser's theory that the chairman called the hearing in retaliation for MLB not putting the Expos in northern Virginia, which includes the chair's district.
I got through about half of Jim Bunning's testimony before changing the channel. I flipped back a couple of times, but only for a few minutes before returning to sanity and turning back to basketball. I didn't see any of the "star" testimony, but I don't think I missed all that much. Besides, if Bonds wasn't there to blow up at various elected officials, the hearing was never going to be that much fun, anyway.
There's actually little variance between three of them, separated by 20 points. I didn't pick too many of the upsets, mostly mild ones. I think UW-Milwaukee was the one I picked most consistently, while UAB got a nod at least once. I think the only place I got Vermont was the same place I got Bucknell, the aforementioned mascot bracket.
Speaking of mascots, the second intermission of tonight's BU-UNH Hockey East semifinal featured the mascots of the four semifinal teams in a hockey game against the five mascots of the non-semifinal teams. The non-semifinal team won 2-0. Some observations:
* The UMass minuteman has an unnatural grey pallor to his skin. It's like he's got an airway obstruction or some sort of constrictive lung ailment.
* The Merrimack warrior had a skin tone very similar to his helmet and uniform. I'm assuming he's a Roman legionary stationed in Judea or something. Added entertainment value here as the logo used to represent Merrimack on the video screens was their old one, the Native American rather than the generic ancient guy.
* The Providence friar was wearing a white robe. We figure he's actually come out of the closet (or perhaps shrub) as a Druid.
* The UMass-Lowell river hawk is actually more like a man-bird superhero. It has no wings, a cape, and a very tight-fitting costume.
Everyone else's mascot looked pretty normal, except that Northeastern's husky looks a little horse-like to me in the face.
Anyway, this was the most entertaining part of the game, as BU went down 5-2 to UNH. It was a 40 minute system failure for BU, who garnered all of three shots in the first period (somehow only going down 1-0), and not reaching the 10 shot plateau until there was just over a minute left in the second period. Nothing was working on any end of the ice, and our atrocious penalty killing (7th of 9 in Hockey East) was in full force.
Not sure it'll change too much in regards to the NCAAs, as long as other tournaments hold to form. But I assume we'll be playing in our road scarlet uniforms rather than home white. That may not be a bad thing, as long as they aren't the accursed third jerseys.
Rounding out my sports viewing of late was the opening hour or so of the steroids hearing yesterday. It made for thrilling TV, as the ranking members of the committee and subcommittee made pretty much the same speech four times. The committee chair did make some passing reference to not looking forward to nosebleed seats in the coming few years, which gave a sliver of credence to Tony Kornheiser's theory that the chairman called the hearing in retaliation for MLB not putting the Expos in northern Virginia, which includes the chair's district.
I got through about half of Jim Bunning's testimony before changing the channel. I flipped back a couple of times, but only for a few minutes before returning to sanity and turning back to basketball. I didn't see any of the "star" testimony, but I don't think I missed all that much. Besides, if Bonds wasn't there to blow up at various elected officials, the hearing was never going to be that much fun, anyway.
16 March 2005
I'll also take a moment to plug Matt the Bruce's "March Mathness", where you assign what amounts to confidence points to any or all teams. I may be doing it a disservice by calling it "March Mathness," as it's not all that complex, but it does require that extra step beyond the usual BS analysis that 99.4 percent of us put into filling out brackets. Or, probably more accurately, the usual BS analysis that 100 percent of me puts into filling out brackets.
So while I will not be running my usual March Madness pool (though I will be running a Frozen Four pool once the bracket is set up on Sunday), I do have an ESPN.com Tournament Challenge group for one and all:
Name: Bracket Racket 2005
Password: madness
ESPN does give you five entries, so feel free to use one (or all) to join. Note that the group will lock when play begins, so you won't be able to move your entry to another group.
Name: Bracket Racket 2005
Password: madness
ESPN does give you five entries, so feel free to use one (or all) to join. Note that the group will lock when play begins, so you won't be able to move your entry to another group.
14 March 2005
Apropos of having nothing to say, an update on the reality shows I watch. You missed them, I can tell.
On American Idol, the show has whittled its contestants down to the final 12, but with a hitch. One of the more popular contestants on the show quit due to some set of ill-defined personal reasons involving family matters. Of course, every yahoo with access to a two-bit message board is saying he's gay and didn't want to be outed.
Regardless, the show's change in format, where the 24 semifinalists competed every week rather than in groups over a month's time, actually went pretty well outside of throwing two and a half hours of programming at us a week. One problem was the gender-balancing of the contestant pool, as there was not equal talent in the men's and women's pools (this year in the men's favor).
I'm not going to get into the individual contestants, other than to note the greatest benefactor in this whole episode of a finalist quitting is the son of baseball Hall of Famer Ozzie Smith, who was voted off in the last round of the semifinals. He had more votes than the other guy who got booted, so he was asked back to take the open spot.
The Apprentice and it's book smarts versus street smarts is proving one thing very clearly - it doesn't matter how much education you have, your ability to succeed pretty much directly correlates with how much of a jackass you are.
The tasks have mostly been marketing-related, coming up with a way to pitch a new Burger King sandwich or promote a new body wash (a task one team tried to win by making an ad combining the fondling of cucumbers and surprise gayness).
The contestants are more interesting than last time out, though with that level of "interesting" comes worrisome, call a mental health professional moments. Such as when one contestant walked off the task, wheeling her suitcase aimlessly along the streets of a Jersey seashore town. Or another contestant going into fugue state while recounting her hardscrabble upbringing.
Anyway, it's better than last season, if still ridiculously over-hyped. I'm looking forward to Martha Stewart taking over for a series, if for no other reason than in hopes that she'll shiv someone.
America's Next Top Model has started its fourth season, and it's pretty much the same as before. Young women do something requiring photography and are adjudged worthy or not of becoming a housemate on The Surreal Life sometime in 2007.
Off the bat, I did not like the way the show went from 35 to the 14 finalists in one show. Perhaps a two hour episode would have been better, if at least to give more background to contestants. It was pretty easy to tell who was going to make the finals given how many of the women who didn't basically had cameos in the episode.
If the show's idea of a creative shake-up is a move from New York to LA, it may be a long season. They've also seemingly gone the "interesting" route with casting, given the number of contestants with children (and even, occasionally, husbands).
Tyra Banks, true to not wanting to create a stereotype in casting a bitchy African-American, did so again this season, finding a young woman who managed to antagonize the folks running the first shoot and complain about her makeover (after complaining about not getting one as her look was adjudged to be sufficiently "fierce"). Yet she survived the first cut of the finals. Thankfully, there was a contestant over the age of 21 who had the gall to be a weight closer to most of humanity than the rest of the contestants.
Should this season unfold like all the ones before it, I hope they'll take the summer to come up with some changes. Reality requires some tweaking with format to keep things fresh, and they don't seem to have tweaked enough yet.
On American Idol, the show has whittled its contestants down to the final 12, but with a hitch. One of the more popular contestants on the show quit due to some set of ill-defined personal reasons involving family matters. Of course, every yahoo with access to a two-bit message board is saying he's gay and didn't want to be outed.
Regardless, the show's change in format, where the 24 semifinalists competed every week rather than in groups over a month's time, actually went pretty well outside of throwing two and a half hours of programming at us a week. One problem was the gender-balancing of the contestant pool, as there was not equal talent in the men's and women's pools (this year in the men's favor).
I'm not going to get into the individual contestants, other than to note the greatest benefactor in this whole episode of a finalist quitting is the son of baseball Hall of Famer Ozzie Smith, who was voted off in the last round of the semifinals. He had more votes than the other guy who got booted, so he was asked back to take the open spot.
The Apprentice and it's book smarts versus street smarts is proving one thing very clearly - it doesn't matter how much education you have, your ability to succeed pretty much directly correlates with how much of a jackass you are.
The tasks have mostly been marketing-related, coming up with a way to pitch a new Burger King sandwich or promote a new body wash (a task one team tried to win by making an ad combining the fondling of cucumbers and surprise gayness).
The contestants are more interesting than last time out, though with that level of "interesting" comes worrisome, call a mental health professional moments. Such as when one contestant walked off the task, wheeling her suitcase aimlessly along the streets of a Jersey seashore town. Or another contestant going into fugue state while recounting her hardscrabble upbringing.
Anyway, it's better than last season, if still ridiculously over-hyped. I'm looking forward to Martha Stewart taking over for a series, if for no other reason than in hopes that she'll shiv someone.
America's Next Top Model has started its fourth season, and it's pretty much the same as before. Young women do something requiring photography and are adjudged worthy or not of becoming a housemate on The Surreal Life sometime in 2007.
Off the bat, I did not like the way the show went from 35 to the 14 finalists in one show. Perhaps a two hour episode would have been better, if at least to give more background to contestants. It was pretty easy to tell who was going to make the finals given how many of the women who didn't basically had cameos in the episode.
If the show's idea of a creative shake-up is a move from New York to LA, it may be a long season. They've also seemingly gone the "interesting" route with casting, given the number of contestants with children (and even, occasionally, husbands).
Tyra Banks, true to not wanting to create a stereotype in casting a bitchy African-American, did so again this season, finding a young woman who managed to antagonize the folks running the first shoot and complain about her makeover (after complaining about not getting one as her look was adjudged to be sufficiently "fierce"). Yet she survived the first cut of the finals. Thankfully, there was a contestant over the age of 21 who had the gall to be a weight closer to most of humanity than the rest of the contestants.
Should this season unfold like all the ones before it, I hope they'll take the summer to come up with some changes. Reality requires some tweaking with format to keep things fresh, and they don't seem to have tweaked enough yet.
13 March 2005
The Icedogs live for another week.
BU advanced to the semifinals of the Hockey East tournament by winning tonight's deciding game with PC by another 2-0 score. Goalie John Curry now hasn't given up a goal in just over 168 minutes of play (the last two full games and the time he was in net after PC's second goal on Friday; their other two were both empty netters). His shutout streak was mentioned twice tonight in the third period, yet such fate-tempting didn't lead to the expected Friars goal.
Tonight was less chippy while still physical. The most damaging hit of the night was on the referee, as he collided with a PC player that was coming out of the penalty box. The game continued without the ref for the rest of the period, with him returning for the start of the following one. Consensus among us at the game was that he got the arm he hurt good and numb, and he didn't move it all that much the rest of the night.
The Terriers move on to the semis, where they'll face UNH. Speaking of shutout streaks...
Good news tonight too for the men's hoops team. They made the NIT, and will travel to DC to take on Georgetown in the first round. Northeastern also got in, though they'll be making a longer trip to face off against Memphis. Holy Cross (for the locals who care) get to face off with intra-religion foes Notre Dame. Unfortunately, the winner of this game does not have a shot at the University of San Francisco or St. Joe's in the following round.
BU advanced to the semifinals of the Hockey East tournament by winning tonight's deciding game with PC by another 2-0 score. Goalie John Curry now hasn't given up a goal in just over 168 minutes of play (the last two full games and the time he was in net after PC's second goal on Friday; their other two were both empty netters). His shutout streak was mentioned twice tonight in the third period, yet such fate-tempting didn't lead to the expected Friars goal.
Tonight was less chippy while still physical. The most damaging hit of the night was on the referee, as he collided with a PC player that was coming out of the penalty box. The game continued without the ref for the rest of the period, with him returning for the start of the following one. Consensus among us at the game was that he got the arm he hurt good and numb, and he didn't move it all that much the rest of the night.
The Terriers move on to the semis, where they'll face UNH. Speaking of shutout streaks...
Good news tonight too for the men's hoops team. They made the NIT, and will travel to DC to take on Georgetown in the first round. Northeastern also got in, though they'll be making a longer trip to face off against Memphis. Holy Cross (for the locals who care) get to face off with intra-religion foes Notre Dame. Unfortunately, the winner of this game does not have a shot at the University of San Francisco or St. Joe's in the following round.
12 March 2005
Things returned to normal at the Agganis Arena tonight, as the BU hockey team won a 2-0 decision over Providence to force a third game in their Hockey East quarterfinal match-up. Much better performance than last night, though PC was a lot chippier than you'd expect from the team with a one game advantage.
We're the only series going three games, as Maine and BC won their deciding games by 5-1 scores. For the record, the two "streaking" teams no one wanted to play wound up going 0-4 and got outscored 22-4 in the playoffs. Thanks for nothing, NU and Lowell.
On the down side, the BU women's hoops team lost the America East tournament final to Hartford, 52-50. Hartford won on their last shot, an 18 footer that hit the front of the rim and got a home bounce up and in. We got one last chance, but couldn't get off a decent try. So no repeat of 2003's tournament run from the eight seed, but a positive tournament nonetheless.
We're the only series going three games, as Maine and BC won their deciding games by 5-1 scores. For the record, the two "streaking" teams no one wanted to play wound up going 0-4 and got outscored 22-4 in the playoffs. Thanks for nothing, NU and Lowell.
On the down side, the BU women's hoops team lost the America East tournament final to Hartford, 52-50. Hartford won on their last shot, an 18 footer that hit the front of the rim and got a home bounce up and in. We got one last chance, but couldn't get off a decent try. So no repeat of 2003's tournament run from the eight seed, but a positive tournament nonetheless.
In another case of being careful about what you wish for, the BU hockey team lost to Providence 4-1 last night in the opening round of the Hockey East playoffs. This despite putting up over 50 shots on goal. Providence scored on two of their first three shots.
As you can imagine, it was not a game for the highlight reel.
And as for Northeastern and UMass-Lowell, the two teams no one wanted to play? NU was drummed out of the tournament by UNH, losing two games by a combined score of 10-1. Lowell, meanwhile, went up to Maine and got spanked in the first game 7-2.
UMass-Amherst almost did us a favor, but their 2-0 lead became a 2-2 tie to end regulation, and BC took it in OT. Damn.
On the plus side, the BU women's hoops team is making another improbable run at the America East title. After winning a play-in game to be the tournament's 8th seed, they knocked off top seed Maine, and beat Vermont last night to make the finals, where they'll play host Hartford. If the weather were going to be better, I'd have half a mind to sell my hockey tickets and drive down for the hoops.
As you can imagine, it was not a game for the highlight reel.
And as for Northeastern and UMass-Lowell, the two teams no one wanted to play? NU was drummed out of the tournament by UNH, losing two games by a combined score of 10-1. Lowell, meanwhile, went up to Maine and got spanked in the first game 7-2.
UMass-Amherst almost did us a favor, but their 2-0 lead became a 2-2 tie to end regulation, and BC took it in OT. Damn.
On the plus side, the BU women's hoops team is making another improbable run at the America East title. After winning a play-in game to be the tournament's 8th seed, they knocked off top seed Maine, and beat Vermont last night to make the finals, where they'll play host Hartford. If the weather were going to be better, I'd have half a mind to sell my hockey tickets and drive down for the hoops.
09 March 2005
Here's a new weather term for you all: thunder snow.
It is, simply enough, when you get a snow storm that also produced thunder and/or lightning. We had just such a system yesterday, as in the space of about six hours our temperature dropped by half and the rain turned snow (with a fun frozen rain period in the middle that gave everything a nice, Krispy Kreme-inspired glaze).
Should I be worried that a condition once so rare that Lewis Black called in sick for a gig (in Boston, interestingly) now has its own weather term?
As you can imagine, this was a fun storm to dig out from. Snow on top of ice, blown to various depths thanks to a wind that topped out with gusts around 50 mph. And to think we get to do it all again on Friday. Hopefully without the thunder.
It is, simply enough, when you get a snow storm that also produced thunder and/or lightning. We had just such a system yesterday, as in the space of about six hours our temperature dropped by half and the rain turned snow (with a fun frozen rain period in the middle that gave everything a nice, Krispy Kreme-inspired glaze).
Should I be worried that a condition once so rare that Lewis Black called in sick for a gig (in Boston, interestingly) now has its own weather term?
As you can imagine, this was a fun storm to dig out from. Snow on top of ice, blown to various depths thanks to a wind that topped out with gusts around 50 mph. And to think we get to do it all again on Friday. Hopefully without the thunder.
05 March 2005
Tonight marked the end of the season for two BU men's teams.
The hockey team wrapped up its regular season with a 3-2 at New Hampshire, locking up a tie for second place and the second seed in the Hockey East tournament. While that's a great result for a team not expected to do quite that well this year, it's a little frustrating when you look back and see opportunities lost during the season. Giving up leads to tie games at home against Lowell and UNH (the latter just this past Thursday). Only getting one point out of Northeastern the weekend before. Dropping both games to BC during that home and home series.
Still, better to play Providence in the first round of the Hockey East playoffs than either NU or Lowell, given how this season's gone.
The other team that wrapped things up tonight was the hoops team, as they dropped their opening round game in the America East playoffs to Maine. This is the second year in a row they've lost the opening round game. It may be something in the location, at least this year; they also lost their regular season finale at Binghamton, who is hosting the tournament first and semifinal rounds.
The hoops team winds up 20-8, which I hope will get them into the NIT. I'm not holding out too much hope, given that their best win of the year was their home victory over Vermont. They do have wins over URI, Fordham, Youngstown St., and Michigan, but none of those teams are over .500 (some dramatically so). We'll see.
The hockey team wrapped up its regular season with a 3-2 at New Hampshire, locking up a tie for second place and the second seed in the Hockey East tournament. While that's a great result for a team not expected to do quite that well this year, it's a little frustrating when you look back and see opportunities lost during the season. Giving up leads to tie games at home against Lowell and UNH (the latter just this past Thursday). Only getting one point out of Northeastern the weekend before. Dropping both games to BC during that home and home series.
Still, better to play Providence in the first round of the Hockey East playoffs than either NU or Lowell, given how this season's gone.
The other team that wrapped things up tonight was the hoops team, as they dropped their opening round game in the America East playoffs to Maine. This is the second year in a row they've lost the opening round game. It may be something in the location, at least this year; they also lost their regular season finale at Binghamton, who is hosting the tournament first and semifinal rounds.
The hoops team winds up 20-8, which I hope will get them into the NIT. I'm not holding out too much hope, given that their best win of the year was their home victory over Vermont. They do have wins over URI, Fordham, Youngstown St., and Michigan, but none of those teams are over .500 (some dramatically so). We'll see.
04 March 2005
It must be a sign of my growing comfort with the dentist that I didn't blog before going in to see him today, as if I were going off to war and needed to say that one last thing before shipping out.
It would also be a sign that I voluntarily took a second appointment today to get more work done to hasten the end of the never-ending root canal.
Our fun today was shaping the tooth (or what's left of it) and getting a temporary crown, with the second trip in to make a mold for the post. I didn't even use any Novacaine, which isn't that surprising when you remember that all the nerves for that tooth are long gone.
Not that it was painless. The dentist's assistant was using a tongue depressor to keep my tongue out of the way, and the end of it was jabbing into the back of my mouth something fierce. I had to get them to stop a couple of times even.
Thankfully, when I go back next week to get the post put in I'll be numbed up so I won't feel the jabbing. I actually get to go twice next week, too, as for some reason I have a cleaning scheduled the day before the post. Not that I'm doing all that much, I suppose.
It would also be a sign that I voluntarily took a second appointment today to get more work done to hasten the end of the never-ending root canal.
Our fun today was shaping the tooth (or what's left of it) and getting a temporary crown, with the second trip in to make a mold for the post. I didn't even use any Novacaine, which isn't that surprising when you remember that all the nerves for that tooth are long gone.
Not that it was painless. The dentist's assistant was using a tongue depressor to keep my tongue out of the way, and the end of it was jabbing into the back of my mouth something fierce. I had to get them to stop a couple of times even.
Thankfully, when I go back next week to get the post put in I'll be numbed up so I won't feel the jabbing. I actually get to go twice next week, too, as for some reason I have a cleaning scheduled the day before the post. Not that I'm doing all that much, I suppose.
03 March 2005
TD Banknorth Garden.
Ugh.
For those of you who hadn't heard, the building formerly known as the FleetCenter is now the TD Banknorth Garden. As bad as the FleetCenter name was, with its connotations of colonic health, at least had a certain euphonic nature.
Now, you either have a mouthful or a pointless grab at nostalgia by folks who'll just call it "the Garden." Were this the first name we went with after losing the original Garden, then fine. There's continuity there. The FleetCenter interregnum makes the reversion to a Garden-inclusive name seem a little pointless. Inasmuch as there are people who never stopped calling the arena where the Bruins and Celtics play the Garden, there are others (like myself) who'll probably keep calling the new place the FleetCenter until we get more odd looks than not.
Don't mistake this for love of the FleetCenter name. But there was one Boston Garden. It was torn down, and the building that replaced it is not it. Regardless of who paid what to call it whatever. From my perspective, you could keep calling one of those one day names from the past month and it'd suit me fine. Heck, I think the Jimmy Fund Center is a much better name, given that it highlights a very worthwhile cause rather than someone who'll charge me $1.50 if I'm using their ATM with a non-native card.
The new building is generic, and the changing corporate names just reinforce the point. When I do finally stop calling it the FleetCenter, I'll probably just refer to it as Banknorth. That's the part of the name the bank would want me to remember, isn't it?
Ugh.
For those of you who hadn't heard, the building formerly known as the FleetCenter is now the TD Banknorth Garden. As bad as the FleetCenter name was, with its connotations of colonic health, at least had a certain euphonic nature.
Now, you either have a mouthful or a pointless grab at nostalgia by folks who'll just call it "the Garden." Were this the first name we went with after losing the original Garden, then fine. There's continuity there. The FleetCenter interregnum makes the reversion to a Garden-inclusive name seem a little pointless. Inasmuch as there are people who never stopped calling the arena where the Bruins and Celtics play the Garden, there are others (like myself) who'll probably keep calling the new place the FleetCenter until we get more odd looks than not.
Don't mistake this for love of the FleetCenter name. But there was one Boston Garden. It was torn down, and the building that replaced it is not it. Regardless of who paid what to call it whatever. From my perspective, you could keep calling one of those one day names from the past month and it'd suit me fine. Heck, I think the Jimmy Fund Center is a much better name, given that it highlights a very worthwhile cause rather than someone who'll charge me $1.50 if I'm using their ATM with a non-native card.
The new building is generic, and the changing corporate names just reinforce the point. When I do finally stop calling it the FleetCenter, I'll probably just refer to it as Banknorth. That's the part of the name the bank would want me to remember, isn't it?
For the second time in two days, someone here in Beverly drove their car across railroad tracks and got hit by a train.
Yesterday, a Peabody woman got the rear end of her SUV taken off when she tried driving across the tracks. The gates and lights deployed a good 45 seconds before the accident (according to the story I read), but they didn't stop the woman because she was driving on the wrong side of the street.
Needless to say, she's facing a number of charges.
This morning, a guy had his Pontic turned 180 degrees when he didn't see the lights or hear the bells while driving over Beverly's only railroad crossing not to sport gates (it's on a private road; not surprisingly residents are very concerned about not having gates now). It's understandable that he wouldn't hear of see the warnings of an impending train: the driver is 87.
He's also a former secretary of the Air Force and NASA exec. I know, it's not rocket science, it's driving.
Thank you, I'll be here all week. Try the veal!
Not sure what's been put in the water here recently (my guesses, given the accident stories: bourbon and Ambien, respectively), but it's an odd run of accidents. Keep your fingers crossed for tomorrow.
Interesting side note is that trains coming through Beverly don't sound their own horn at crossings. Apparently, Beverly has managed to trump whatever state and/or federal laws would require it. Train horns are kind of a hot button issue here; my hometown has had a citizen's committee set up (called HORN, which stands for something too cute by half that makes you want to slap whoever came up with it), with the main contention being that train noise lowers property values.
Because, you know, you might miss that there's a train running by your house.
Considering we've also had a fatality in recent months (boy on bike not seeing or hearing train, view obscured for some reason), perhaps the value of one's McMansion isn't the most important issue here.
Yesterday, a Peabody woman got the rear end of her SUV taken off when she tried driving across the tracks. The gates and lights deployed a good 45 seconds before the accident (according to the story I read), but they didn't stop the woman because she was driving on the wrong side of the street.
Needless to say, she's facing a number of charges.
This morning, a guy had his Pontic turned 180 degrees when he didn't see the lights or hear the bells while driving over Beverly's only railroad crossing not to sport gates (it's on a private road; not surprisingly residents are very concerned about not having gates now). It's understandable that he wouldn't hear of see the warnings of an impending train: the driver is 87.
He's also a former secretary of the Air Force and NASA exec. I know, it's not rocket science, it's driving.
Thank you, I'll be here all week. Try the veal!
Not sure what's been put in the water here recently (my guesses, given the accident stories: bourbon and Ambien, respectively), but it's an odd run of accidents. Keep your fingers crossed for tomorrow.
Interesting side note is that trains coming through Beverly don't sound their own horn at crossings. Apparently, Beverly has managed to trump whatever state and/or federal laws would require it. Train horns are kind of a hot button issue here; my hometown has had a citizen's committee set up (called HORN, which stands for something too cute by half that makes you want to slap whoever came up with it), with the main contention being that train noise lowers property values.
Because, you know, you might miss that there's a train running by your house.
Considering we've also had a fatality in recent months (boy on bike not seeing or hearing train, view obscured for some reason), perhaps the value of one's McMansion isn't the most important issue here.
02 March 2005
I'm a little less understanding about the Pats cutting Troy Brown loose than I was regarding Ty Law. Age may be a concern, but given how versatile Brown is, the role he's played with the team, and his willingness to pass up bonus money in taking that role, it seems petty that the team would cut him loose. I know, I shouldn't be surprised at a front office making a cold-hearted business decision. And I suppose I'm not. I'm more disappointed.
As a free agent Brown could still return to the team, but I'm not counting on it. Then again, I could see Brown taking less and returning if the other offers aren't that much higher and are with less successful teams. He seems like a guy who would, after a fashion, value winning above more cash.
Even still, it's a pity I'm even talking about this.
As a free agent Brown could still return to the team, but I'm not counting on it. Then again, I could see Brown taking less and returning if the other offers aren't that much higher and are with less successful teams. He seems like a guy who would, after a fashion, value winning above more cash.
Even still, it's a pity I'm even talking about this.
27 February 2005
It's 11:40 and the Oscars are over. That's probably the one real surprise of the night.
Not too much I can say about the winners, outside of wondering when Martin Scorcese will finally win one. I mean, given the way his mom looked, Clint Eastwood has another couple of decades to go. Why not give Marty his due?
So here's a question. The guy who won for original song was in the audience, yet we have Carlos Santana and Antonio Banderas perform the song. I like Santana, and know that Banderas can sing to some extent, but if you have the original performer in the building, shouldn't they perform their own song? Given that he won the Oscar he probably minded a little less, but I'd be a bit ticked nonetheless.
Getting back to the time thing, I'm sure everyone will credit the changes in how awards were presented for the savings, and I'd have to say they helped. But I think the limits on performances and the special awards did just as much. It wasn't all that long ago we'd get an all-dancing tribute to sound editing. Thankfully, those days seem to be over.
Not too much I can say about the winners, outside of wondering when Martin Scorcese will finally win one. I mean, given the way his mom looked, Clint Eastwood has another couple of decades to go. Why not give Marty his due?
So here's a question. The guy who won for original song was in the audience, yet we have Carlos Santana and Antonio Banderas perform the song. I like Santana, and know that Banderas can sing to some extent, but if you have the original performer in the building, shouldn't they perform their own song? Given that he won the Oscar he probably minded a little less, but I'd be a bit ticked nonetheless.
Getting back to the time thing, I'm sure everyone will credit the changes in how awards were presented for the savings, and I'd have to say they helped. But I think the limits on performances and the special awards did just as much. It wasn't all that long ago we'd get an all-dancing tribute to sound editing. Thankfully, those days seem to be over.
So bringing all the nominees up on stage for their Oscar category works pretty well. Going to the seats? Not so much.
Chris Rock is good, but his monologue went on too long. Though I did like the cut to Puffy when Rock mentioned that the Source Awards included shooting.
Not much else to mention, it's been pretty much the Oscars otherwise.
Chris Rock is good, but his monologue went on too long. Though I did like the cut to Puffy when Rock mentioned that the Source Awards included shooting.
Not much else to mention, it's been pretty much the Oscars otherwise.
I'm currently at the wife's office, and as I sit here I can hear something skittering around above my head. There's a definite Alien vibe as I wait for whatever it is (mouse? rat? possum?) to drop down from the ceiling.
It's a little disconcerting, but given how close we are to train tracks and the water hardly surprising.
It's a little disconcerting, but given how close we are to train tracks and the water hardly surprising.
25 February 2005
How is it that I now live in a world where Antoine Walker is a Celtic but Ty Law isn't a Patriot?
The Walker thing is a mystery, given how Danny Ainge let his feelings on the once (and future?) captain before shipping him out to Dallas. Perhaps Ainge felt bad that Walker was stuck in Atlanta. Not sure. From what I've read everyone involved in the deal is on the last year of their contract, so even if Antoine II doesn't work out, the Celts aren't stuck with him long-term.
Also interesting: Gary Payton, one of the players sent to Atlanta for Walker, is looking to be bought out of his contract so he can sign with a new team - possibly the Celtics.
Maybe he wants to be here after all.
The Ty Law thing is a little less surprising. Law and the team were having contract issues in training camp, he missed half the season with a broken foot, was going to cost $12.5 million against the cap for the upcoming season, and (if we learned anything this season) the Pats can put together a secondary with just about anyone.
My most enduring memory of Law will be his drafting. We were heading back to Boston from a tournament at Williams when I found out he was our first round draft choice. Sports talk radio, as you can imagine, was livid. There was a lot of talk about why we didn't trade up and try to get one of the fine RBs drafted in front of Law - guys like Ki-Jana Carter or Rashaan Salaam.
It's always nice when long-term planning shows its value. Though I'm sure there are still people out there who swear we should have gone after Joey Galloway.
Looking at it, 1995 was a pretty good draft for the Pats. They got Law, Ted Johnson, Curtis Martin, and center Dave Wohlabaugh (and Jimmy Hitchcock, who played but didn't have the same impact of any of these guys). Compare it to 1994, where after Willie McGinest, the highest impact player the Pats got was Max Lane - an offensive lineman taken in the sixth round out of Navy. Marty Moore, that year's Mr. Irrelevant, actually wound up seeing a fair amount of playing time.
I thought 1994 had a pretty weak top 10 overall, but feast your peepers on 1991. Yowza.
The Walker thing is a mystery, given how Danny Ainge let his feelings on the once (and future?) captain before shipping him out to Dallas. Perhaps Ainge felt bad that Walker was stuck in Atlanta. Not sure. From what I've read everyone involved in the deal is on the last year of their contract, so even if Antoine II doesn't work out, the Celts aren't stuck with him long-term.
Also interesting: Gary Payton, one of the players sent to Atlanta for Walker, is looking to be bought out of his contract so he can sign with a new team - possibly the Celtics.
Maybe he wants to be here after all.
The Ty Law thing is a little less surprising. Law and the team were having contract issues in training camp, he missed half the season with a broken foot, was going to cost $12.5 million against the cap for the upcoming season, and (if we learned anything this season) the Pats can put together a secondary with just about anyone.
My most enduring memory of Law will be his drafting. We were heading back to Boston from a tournament at Williams when I found out he was our first round draft choice. Sports talk radio, as you can imagine, was livid. There was a lot of talk about why we didn't trade up and try to get one of the fine RBs drafted in front of Law - guys like Ki-Jana Carter or Rashaan Salaam.
It's always nice when long-term planning shows its value. Though I'm sure there are still people out there who swear we should have gone after Joey Galloway.
Looking at it, 1995 was a pretty good draft for the Pats. They got Law, Ted Johnson, Curtis Martin, and center Dave Wohlabaugh (and Jimmy Hitchcock, who played but didn't have the same impact of any of these guys). Compare it to 1994, where after Willie McGinest, the highest impact player the Pats got was Max Lane - an offensive lineman taken in the sixth round out of Navy. Marty Moore, that year's Mr. Irrelevant, actually wound up seeing a fair amount of playing time.
I thought 1994 had a pretty weak top 10 overall, but feast your peepers on 1991. Yowza.
23 February 2005
As Craig pointed out, yesterday was the 25th anniversary of the Miracle on Ice hockey game, wherein a bunch of American college kids beat the Soviet Union's Red Army machine 4-3. Place it in the historical context of the Cold War as you wish; there's at least one Russian man out there who cites it as one of the three causes of the collapse of the Soviet Union (and was surprised to find that Boston University, the school that created some of the Soviet giant-killers, was not some sort of hockey player factory - or at least wasn't in the way he was thinking).
I did spend part of last night watching the game again, and was reminded of one of my favorite parts of the rebroadcasts. The one reasonably famous person ABC can find in the crowd?
Jamie Farr.
Those of you over the age of 30 will remember him as Max Klinger on M*A*S*H. The rest of you probably don't know him at all.
It's pretty random, actually. At some break in the action they cut to a crowd shot, and there's Farr. He's looking pretty agitated, and is clearly into the game. It's a nice juxtaposition to what you get when a network "finds" a celebrity at an important sporting event today. Someday, I hope the shmuck that has to do the seatside interviews covers the celeb's eyes with one hand and asks "OK, hot shot, who all is playing in this game again?"
I mean, they'd get canned, but it'd be a great way to go.
(As Craig also noted, yesterday was the 20th anniversary of Bobby Knight throwing a chair across the court at Assembly Hall during a game. I'm sure Viktor Tihkinov wishes he thought of that.)
I did spend part of last night watching the game again, and was reminded of one of my favorite parts of the rebroadcasts. The one reasonably famous person ABC can find in the crowd?
Jamie Farr.
Those of you over the age of 30 will remember him as Max Klinger on M*A*S*H. The rest of you probably don't know him at all.
It's pretty random, actually. At some break in the action they cut to a crowd shot, and there's Farr. He's looking pretty agitated, and is clearly into the game. It's a nice juxtaposition to what you get when a network "finds" a celebrity at an important sporting event today. Someday, I hope the shmuck that has to do the seatside interviews covers the celeb's eyes with one hand and asks "OK, hot shot, who all is playing in this game again?"
I mean, they'd get canned, but it'd be a great way to go.
(As Craig also noted, yesterday was the 20th anniversary of Bobby Knight throwing a chair across the court at Assembly Hall during a game. I'm sure Viktor Tihkinov wishes he thought of that.)
While I can't join in on the memorializing for Hunter S. Thompson (like others linked at left I never really "got" him, though I really liked Joe's excerpt), I would note the passing of Reggie Roby.
Roby had a long and highly successful career as a punter in the NFL, and even though he played many years for the hated Miami Dolphins, I always enjoyed watching Roby kick. Not only did he have tremendous leg extension - often looking like he was going to knee himself in the face - but his punts had amazing hang time. As has been often mentioned in articles about him, Roby liked to wear a watch during games so he could measure hang time.
Don Shula also noted that when the Dolphins played in domed stadiums, Roby liked to try to hit the roof with a punt, and was successful more than once.
Roby did something that none of the guys who punt today can do - make punting fun to watch. Like Reggie White, he died early - he was only 43 - which makes me think that other recent NFL retirees should get themselves to the doctor for a check up ASAP.
Roby had a long and highly successful career as a punter in the NFL, and even though he played many years for the hated Miami Dolphins, I always enjoyed watching Roby kick. Not only did he have tremendous leg extension - often looking like he was going to knee himself in the face - but his punts had amazing hang time. As has been often mentioned in articles about him, Roby liked to wear a watch during games so he could measure hang time.
Don Shula also noted that when the Dolphins played in domed stadiums, Roby liked to try to hit the roof with a punt, and was successful more than once.
Roby did something that none of the guys who punt today can do - make punting fun to watch. Like Reggie White, he died early - he was only 43 - which makes me think that other recent NFL retirees should get themselves to the doctor for a check up ASAP.
21 February 2005
Some equal time for those of you who didn't find the Stock Car Challenge that interesting: an Oscars pool from Yahoo.
Go to Yahoo Movies to join my group:
Group name: Rock the Oscars (group number: 2234)
Password: award
Considering I only have three people in Stock Car Challenge (it's not too late to join! They're only one race into the season!), I'd like to think we can do better here.
Go to Yahoo Movies to join my group:
Group name: Rock the Oscars (group number: 2234)
Password: award
Considering I only have three people in Stock Car Challenge (it's not too late to join! They're only one race into the season!), I'd like to think we can do better here.
20 February 2005
So the owners and players managed to kill the 2004-05 NHL season again yesterday, as reports about an agreement to a $45 million salary cap saving it were, at best, premature. And you know what? I don't really care.
I know, this is a pretty dominant stance, and one widely mentioned in media coverage of the lockout. In my case, college hockey passed the NHL some time ago, so it's not a major revelation. As also mentioned in some circles, the lockout can only help me by keeping college players in college longer (or at least those players who decide life in the minors is preferable to going to class).
It'd be cool if the NCAA did something to promote college hockey more to fans in NHL cities who have an option, but I don't think they're doing so (though I live in a market where the college teams get pretty strong support, so perhaps any effort put forth is being done elsewhere). This would a great boon to some of the newer D1 teams like Niagara, Robert Morris, and Wayne State, who play in or near NHL cities.
But back to the NHL. I don't claim to understand the financial issues underpinning the dispute, but I do tend to agree with the ESPN.com writers that the owners seem to be trying to break the union. The players seem to have made all of the concessions, and the idea that the owners can't move $3 million on the salary cap is ridiculous. The real test, to my thinking at least, will be the decision to start the 2005-06 season with replacement players. Should that come to pass, there's a part of me that hopes the players extend the collective middle finger to the owners and go play in Europe or barnstorm or something. I can't think that the Scab Hockey League would last all that long. On the other hand, if enough people come to see enhanced minor league hockey, the NHL just might persist - for a while.
Either way, I know BU won't get locked out.
I know, this is a pretty dominant stance, and one widely mentioned in media coverage of the lockout. In my case, college hockey passed the NHL some time ago, so it's not a major revelation. As also mentioned in some circles, the lockout can only help me by keeping college players in college longer (or at least those players who decide life in the minors is preferable to going to class).
It'd be cool if the NCAA did something to promote college hockey more to fans in NHL cities who have an option, but I don't think they're doing so (though I live in a market where the college teams get pretty strong support, so perhaps any effort put forth is being done elsewhere). This would a great boon to some of the newer D1 teams like Niagara, Robert Morris, and Wayne State, who play in or near NHL cities.
But back to the NHL. I don't claim to understand the financial issues underpinning the dispute, but I do tend to agree with the ESPN.com writers that the owners seem to be trying to break the union. The players seem to have made all of the concessions, and the idea that the owners can't move $3 million on the salary cap is ridiculous. The real test, to my thinking at least, will be the decision to start the 2005-06 season with replacement players. Should that come to pass, there's a part of me that hopes the players extend the collective middle finger to the owners and go play in Europe or barnstorm or something. I can't think that the Scab Hockey League would last all that long. On the other hand, if enough people come to see enhanced minor league hockey, the NHL just might persist - for a while.
Either way, I know BU won't get locked out.
17 February 2005
The start of a new NASCAR season is just around the corner (so to speak), and in my usual nod to a sport I only follow for fantasy purposes (now that I don't have a boss who is a NASCAR fan), here's the sign-up info for ESPN.com's Stock Car Challenge:
Group name: Vroom!
Password: vroom
Only had four people sign up last year; let's see if we can at least get one for the thumb this year!
Group name: Vroom!
Password: vroom
Only had four people sign up last year; let's see if we can at least get one for the thumb this year!
16 February 2005
Last night was the Westminster Kennel Club dog show, and if you missed the coverage on USA, a German shorthaired pointer named Carlee won best in show.
I mention this not only to further my own pro-dog agenda, but to recall the times when my dad would watch the show with our daschund Abby, all the while reassuring her that she was much prettier than the dogs on the TV.
To be fair, Abby was a cute dog. On the other hand, I don't know if she was all that threatened by the show dogs.
I wasn't the only one who ran across the dog show last night and watched a bit thanks in some part to my dad. My sister pretty much did the same thing. In fact, it sounded like we watched the exact same things on TV last night, which I wasn't expecting.
Unrelated to matters canine, Lent started last week. As many of you remember, I usually have some trouble coming up with something to give up, and even when I do I then sometimes have trouble actually giving it up (remember back to the Lent where I tried to give up cursing, to expected results).
This year I came up with something pretty quickly: nail biting. I've done pretty well so far, managing to not chaw on a single nail so far. They're growing out pretty quickly, which just ratchets up the temptation that much more. It may help that I stopped biting my nails a couple of weeks before I got married in deference to the soon-to-be missus. I think I wound up biting them on the wedding day itself (big surprise), but at least I didn't draw blood like some people who shall remain Rosenberg.
I mention this not only to further my own pro-dog agenda, but to recall the times when my dad would watch the show with our daschund Abby, all the while reassuring her that she was much prettier than the dogs on the TV.
To be fair, Abby was a cute dog. On the other hand, I don't know if she was all that threatened by the show dogs.
I wasn't the only one who ran across the dog show last night and watched a bit thanks in some part to my dad. My sister pretty much did the same thing. In fact, it sounded like we watched the exact same things on TV last night, which I wasn't expecting.
Unrelated to matters canine, Lent started last week. As many of you remember, I usually have some trouble coming up with something to give up, and even when I do I then sometimes have trouble actually giving it up (remember back to the Lent where I tried to give up cursing, to expected results).
This year I came up with something pretty quickly: nail biting. I've done pretty well so far, managing to not chaw on a single nail so far. They're growing out pretty quickly, which just ratchets up the temptation that much more. It may help that I stopped biting my nails a couple of weeks before I got married in deference to the soon-to-be missus. I think I wound up biting them on the wedding day itself (big surprise), but at least I didn't draw blood like some people who shall remain Rosenberg.
15 February 2005
I just wrote a big post on last night's Beanpot final - and it got eaten by an "internal server error." So here's the skinny:
BC beat Harvard in the consolation game, the least attractive regular season college hockey matchup of the season. No one cares. Harvard played like they didn't care, as they were down 3-0 and being outshot 35-10 when we showed up at the start of the third period.
My dubious stat for this game: BC hadn't lost to Harvard in a consolation game since 1981.
BU beat NU for the title, bringing their total to 26 over the 53 years of the tournament. They didn't play all that well, despite taking a 2-0 lead on a shorthander and a power play goal. The Terriers let NU hang around in the offensive zone too much, making it not that surprising when they tied it up with 2 minutes to go.
Chris Bourque put in the winner in OT, and got the MVP award for his tally. Didn't think he'd really earned it - Bryan Miller had the shorthander and got the assist on Bourque's goal, and seemed like a better choice - but I think the media remembered his dad's goal to win the 1996 NHL All Star Game... at the Fleet Center.
The two stats of note I had here: BU's not lost an OT Beanpot game since 1963, and NU has never won a Beanpot in a year where '8' was not its third digit. Could be a long wait over on Huntington Avenue.
BC beat Harvard in the consolation game, the least attractive regular season college hockey matchup of the season. No one cares. Harvard played like they didn't care, as they were down 3-0 and being outshot 35-10 when we showed up at the start of the third period.
My dubious stat for this game: BC hadn't lost to Harvard in a consolation game since 1981.
BU beat NU for the title, bringing their total to 26 over the 53 years of the tournament. They didn't play all that well, despite taking a 2-0 lead on a shorthander and a power play goal. The Terriers let NU hang around in the offensive zone too much, making it not that surprising when they tied it up with 2 minutes to go.
Chris Bourque put in the winner in OT, and got the MVP award for his tally. Didn't think he'd really earned it - Bryan Miller had the shorthander and got the assist on Bourque's goal, and seemed like a better choice - but I think the media remembered his dad's goal to win the 1996 NHL All Star Game... at the Fleet Center.
The two stats of note I had here: BU's not lost an OT Beanpot game since 1963, and NU has never won a Beanpot in a year where '8' was not its third digit. Could be a long wait over on Huntington Avenue.
14 February 2005
Spent a lovely Valentine's weekend in Salem, here's your recap:
Friday we checked into the Hawthorne Hotel, which is highly recommended if you ever decide to sightsee around here. It's right downtown and very close to most of what you'd want to see. Didn't have any plans, so we decided to get a quick bite to eat and see a movie.
That movie wound up being Sideways, which I thought was pretty good. I was afraid that my general lack of wine knowledge would be a problem, but it wasn't. We saw this at the local Hollywood Hits theater, the "cheap" theater. We paid $8 a ticket. Not sure when that became cheap, but there you go.
Saturday dawned with the main plan to go check out the newly-expanded Peabody Essex Museum. The museum grew out of Salem's maritime history, with the bulk of the collection being either maritime-related or items picked up by sea captains and the like while on voyages. If you're interested in Asian art, or various forms of pottery get you going, it's the museum for you. There's also a pretty good collection of local furniture. We also took a house tour where we got to see a house from the 17th, 18th, and 19th century.
We didn't do too much else, though we had a very nice dinner in the hotel's restaurant. After seeing the movie I was too self-conscious to order the pinot, so I went with the shiraz. No complaints there.
Sunday saw us return home and pass a pretty typical Sunday. We wound up watching the Grammys, which was OK if a bit predictable. The all-star version of "Across the Universe" was pretty gruesome, but sales do benefit tsunami relief. The NARAS president was a little less irritating on the issue of downloading music, but still unbearable. It didn't help that he was put in towards the end of the night, which meant he got to be dead weight at what should have been the height of the ceremony.
Two things I didn't know about Jamie Foxx until last night: he has a tattoo on the back of his head and he is a reasonably good musician. He'd have made a better halftime entertainer at the Pro Bowl than former American Idol finalist Jasmine Trias. Jasmine Trias! I can't believe anyone thought it was a good idea to let her sing on national TV again. Ugh.
Friday we checked into the Hawthorne Hotel, which is highly recommended if you ever decide to sightsee around here. It's right downtown and very close to most of what you'd want to see. Didn't have any plans, so we decided to get a quick bite to eat and see a movie.
That movie wound up being Sideways, which I thought was pretty good. I was afraid that my general lack of wine knowledge would be a problem, but it wasn't. We saw this at the local Hollywood Hits theater, the "cheap" theater. We paid $8 a ticket. Not sure when that became cheap, but there you go.
Saturday dawned with the main plan to go check out the newly-expanded Peabody Essex Museum. The museum grew out of Salem's maritime history, with the bulk of the collection being either maritime-related or items picked up by sea captains and the like while on voyages. If you're interested in Asian art, or various forms of pottery get you going, it's the museum for you. There's also a pretty good collection of local furniture. We also took a house tour where we got to see a house from the 17th, 18th, and 19th century.
We didn't do too much else, though we had a very nice dinner in the hotel's restaurant. After seeing the movie I was too self-conscious to order the pinot, so I went with the shiraz. No complaints there.
Sunday saw us return home and pass a pretty typical Sunday. We wound up watching the Grammys, which was OK if a bit predictable. The all-star version of "Across the Universe" was pretty gruesome, but sales do benefit tsunami relief. The NARAS president was a little less irritating on the issue of downloading music, but still unbearable. It didn't help that he was put in towards the end of the night, which meant he got to be dead weight at what should have been the height of the ceremony.
Two things I didn't know about Jamie Foxx until last night: he has a tattoo on the back of his head and he is a reasonably good musician. He'd have made a better halftime entertainer at the Pro Bowl than former American Idol finalist Jasmine Trias. Jasmine Trias! I can't believe anyone thought it was a good idea to let her sing on national TV again. Ugh.
09 February 2005
In the interest of meme generation:
Where I've Watched the Super Bowl
XXXIX At my sister's house in New Hampshire. They just got a big screen TV (hadn't planned on having it in time for the game, but it was delivered early), so it was a better viewing experience than I'd had at home. Mostly family.
XXXVIII At home, which is how I wound up doing dishes during Nipplegate.
XXXVII At my neighbor's apartment at Babson. Wound up being a small gathering of work types, with none of us having a very strong interest in the game.
XXXVI At the house of the director of my former office. This worked out pretty well, as if there was going to be any rioting on campus after the game, all of us who'd have to respond were in the same place. There were a few non-Babsonites there, one of whom I don't think had ever seen a football game (live or televised).
I also got drink very old wine, bottled when the Pats first made the Super Bowl and saved by a co-worker who was, easily, the most ardent Pats fan I'd ever met. Still holds true.
XXXIII, XXXIV and XXXV Honestly, I have no idea. Home, probably. Though I have vague notions of seeing the final play in the St. Louis-Tennessee game on a large screen. So perhaps I went out for that one.
XXXII The then-apartment of the fabulous DeVeaus. Quite a game.
XXXI Went to a party at the American Legion hall in Manchester. Most notable here was the small card table set up in a corner and decorated in Packers colors - for my father. He always hated the Pats, mostly due to the Sullivan family.
XXX Home again, I think.
XXIX In the basement of a house belonging to the brother of someone I'd worked with. Pretty sweet set-up, a ceiling-mounted projection unit with a wall-sized screen. It was much more appreciated with a post-game viewing of Tombstone than during the game itself, given that it was over early.
XXVIII I may not have even watched this one, given how sick I was with the Cowboys. I don't recall doing anything special, at least.
XXVII For this one I spent most of the game in bed, the victim of food poisoning thanks to a Connecticut McDonald's. The blowout status of the game didn't help matters. I did manage to rouse myself at some point in the second half, but spent most of the time getting back into something resembling death warmed over rather than watch the end of the blowout.
XXVI Watched it at T's Pub, or watched as much as one could in such a crowded atmosphere. A fun time, at least.
XXV Headed for the student ghetto in Allston to watch the game at the apartment of a friend of a fellow RA. Proving that I don't learn, I also watched the BU-Norhern Michigan NCAA hockey final in this apartment. Where everyone else thinks of wide right, this Super Bowl reminds me of hitting posts in overtime.
At least Dave Emma didn't get his Hobey until sometime around 11 pm.
XXIV One of the small lounges on the second floor of Sleeper Hall used to have a ceiling-mounted projection TV. We got it going and figured it'd be a great place to watch the game. One problem: the projector would go out of focus when there was some sort of vibration (such as opening and/or closing a door). We muddled through, but part of me thinks the decline in my eyesight started this day.
I've never really cared for Denver, so I did watch all of this blow-out. That it erased the Patriots' record for biggest Super Bowl blowout was a plus as well.
XXIII Home or dorm room. Not sure.
XXII In an unusual move, I decided to take the train back from home to BU during the game. The logic, I think, was that there'd be fewer people, thus a quicker trip and less of the game missed. For the trip I had a Walkman with radio, so I could listen.
Except for that whole part of the trip from North Station to Kenmore Square when you're underground. Care to guess when Doug Williams went on his tear?
XXI Home, likely.
XX A bunch of us gathered at my friend Dean's house to watch what we thought would be a once-in-a-lifetime event. I mean, given what we'd seen of the Pats to then, who'd have expected a return trip?
The game was off by halftime. We spent the second half watching The Looney, Looney, Looney Bugs Bunny Movie. A vast improvement.
IV through XIX Home, most likely, to the extent that I could watch the game for the earlier ones. The first one I really remember watching was XIII. I do remember missing a goodly chunk of XVIII thanks to CCD, as I was very surprised to hear that the Raiders had won.
I through III I suppose I could have caught some of III in utero, not by watching of course. Not even that was possible for I and II.
Where I've Watched the Super Bowl
XXXIX At my sister's house in New Hampshire. They just got a big screen TV (hadn't planned on having it in time for the game, but it was delivered early), so it was a better viewing experience than I'd had at home. Mostly family.
XXXVIII At home, which is how I wound up doing dishes during Nipplegate.
XXXVII At my neighbor's apartment at Babson. Wound up being a small gathering of work types, with none of us having a very strong interest in the game.
XXXVI At the house of the director of my former office. This worked out pretty well, as if there was going to be any rioting on campus after the game, all of us who'd have to respond were in the same place. There were a few non-Babsonites there, one of whom I don't think had ever seen a football game (live or televised).
I also got drink very old wine, bottled when the Pats first made the Super Bowl and saved by a co-worker who was, easily, the most ardent Pats fan I'd ever met. Still holds true.
XXXIII, XXXIV and XXXV Honestly, I have no idea. Home, probably. Though I have vague notions of seeing the final play in the St. Louis-Tennessee game on a large screen. So perhaps I went out for that one.
XXXII The then-apartment of the fabulous DeVeaus. Quite a game.
XXXI Went to a party at the American Legion hall in Manchester. Most notable here was the small card table set up in a corner and decorated in Packers colors - for my father. He always hated the Pats, mostly due to the Sullivan family.
XXX Home again, I think.
XXIX In the basement of a house belonging to the brother of someone I'd worked with. Pretty sweet set-up, a ceiling-mounted projection unit with a wall-sized screen. It was much more appreciated with a post-game viewing of Tombstone than during the game itself, given that it was over early.
XXVIII I may not have even watched this one, given how sick I was with the Cowboys. I don't recall doing anything special, at least.
XXVII For this one I spent most of the game in bed, the victim of food poisoning thanks to a Connecticut McDonald's. The blowout status of the game didn't help matters. I did manage to rouse myself at some point in the second half, but spent most of the time getting back into something resembling death warmed over rather than watch the end of the blowout.
XXVI Watched it at T's Pub, or watched as much as one could in such a crowded atmosphere. A fun time, at least.
XXV Headed for the student ghetto in Allston to watch the game at the apartment of a friend of a fellow RA. Proving that I don't learn, I also watched the BU-Norhern Michigan NCAA hockey final in this apartment. Where everyone else thinks of wide right, this Super Bowl reminds me of hitting posts in overtime.
At least Dave Emma didn't get his Hobey until sometime around 11 pm.
XXIV One of the small lounges on the second floor of Sleeper Hall used to have a ceiling-mounted projection TV. We got it going and figured it'd be a great place to watch the game. One problem: the projector would go out of focus when there was some sort of vibration (such as opening and/or closing a door). We muddled through, but part of me thinks the decline in my eyesight started this day.
I've never really cared for Denver, so I did watch all of this blow-out. That it erased the Patriots' record for biggest Super Bowl blowout was a plus as well.
XXIII Home or dorm room. Not sure.
XXII In an unusual move, I decided to take the train back from home to BU during the game. The logic, I think, was that there'd be fewer people, thus a quicker trip and less of the game missed. For the trip I had a Walkman with radio, so I could listen.
Except for that whole part of the trip from North Station to Kenmore Square when you're underground. Care to guess when Doug Williams went on his tear?
XXI Home, likely.
XX A bunch of us gathered at my friend Dean's house to watch what we thought would be a once-in-a-lifetime event. I mean, given what we'd seen of the Pats to then, who'd have expected a return trip?
The game was off by halftime. We spent the second half watching The Looney, Looney, Looney Bugs Bunny Movie. A vast improvement.
IV through XIX Home, most likely, to the extent that I could watch the game for the earlier ones. The first one I really remember watching was XIII. I do remember missing a goodly chunk of XVIII thanks to CCD, as I was very surprised to hear that the Raiders had won.
I through III I suppose I could have caught some of III in utero, not by watching of course. Not even that was possible for I and II.
08 February 2005
Somewhat lost in the Patriots' hoopla was that yesterday was the first Monday in February. Which, to many of us in the Boston area, is better known as the first round of the Beanpot.
This year, the games had two clear "favorites," if you went by the polls. Nationally-ranked Harvard opened with under .500 Northeastern, while the nightcap pitted top-ranked BC against lower-ranked BU. If you went by the numbers, a Harvard-BC final was in the offing.
It should come as no surprise, then, that BU and Northeastern will square off for the Beanpot title, a pair of red-hued teams on Valentine's Day.
How did this happen?
Harvard-Northeastern started in front of a crowd of dozens with a 5 pm face-off. The early game is always quiet, but is even moreso when the two least-followed teams take the ice first. NU has a vocal but small fan base, but it was more than enough to best the scattering of Harvard supporters.
Even so, the Crimson put up the first goal of the game with less than a minute off the clock. They then proceeded to doze through the next 80-some-odd minutes of hockey, allowing NU to tie it up and then take the win in double OT.
It was not a thing of beauty. Much of the third period looked like it was being played at three-quarter speed. The extra frames pushed back the start of BU-BC by an hour, though it felt like much, much more.
Harvard has played pretty well this year - they've beaten BC and BU in earlier games - but they had no spark last night.
Reasonably pointless statistical note: Harvard hasn't made a Beanpot final since 1998.
Almost pointless statistical note: Harvard hasn't won a Beanpot in a year where there was no change in the US Presidency since 1974. Since then, they've won the title in 1977, 1981, 1989, and 1993. Spooky.
BU-BC had a late start, but the delay didn't diminish anyone's energy. BU came out looking like the Philadelphia Eagles - carrying play but not scoring. BC got their first goal just after they went off a power play, on a knuckling screen shot. BU managed to dampen momentum by tying the score on a goal with less than a minute to go in the period.
BU went ahead on a nice goal in the second period (both goals scored by John Laliberte), and hung on to win despite being outshot by something approaching a 2:1 margin. BC's coach noted that very few of their shots were good scoring opportunities, but I think he's trying to downplay things a little. After all, his team couldn't solve BU's backup goaltender (as our walk-on turned starter is still out with a separated shoulder).
Reasonably pointless statistical note: BC hasn't beaten BU in an opening round of the Beanpot since 1981 - a year before BU goalie Stephan Siewec was born.
Somewhat less pointless statistical note: BC hasn't won back to back Beanpots in 40 years.
So the good news, depending on how you look at it, is that the missus and I will be spending a romantic Valentine's Day at the Fleet Center. That's better than the alternative if we'd lost, which was scalping my finals tickets to buy flowers.
This year, the games had two clear "favorites," if you went by the polls. Nationally-ranked Harvard opened with under .500 Northeastern, while the nightcap pitted top-ranked BC against lower-ranked BU. If you went by the numbers, a Harvard-BC final was in the offing.
It should come as no surprise, then, that BU and Northeastern will square off for the Beanpot title, a pair of red-hued teams on Valentine's Day.
How did this happen?
Harvard-Northeastern started in front of a crowd of dozens with a 5 pm face-off. The early game is always quiet, but is even moreso when the two least-followed teams take the ice first. NU has a vocal but small fan base, but it was more than enough to best the scattering of Harvard supporters.
Even so, the Crimson put up the first goal of the game with less than a minute off the clock. They then proceeded to doze through the next 80-some-odd minutes of hockey, allowing NU to tie it up and then take the win in double OT.
It was not a thing of beauty. Much of the third period looked like it was being played at three-quarter speed. The extra frames pushed back the start of BU-BC by an hour, though it felt like much, much more.
Harvard has played pretty well this year - they've beaten BC and BU in earlier games - but they had no spark last night.
Reasonably pointless statistical note: Harvard hasn't made a Beanpot final since 1998.
Almost pointless statistical note: Harvard hasn't won a Beanpot in a year where there was no change in the US Presidency since 1974. Since then, they've won the title in 1977, 1981, 1989, and 1993. Spooky.
BU-BC had a late start, but the delay didn't diminish anyone's energy. BU came out looking like the Philadelphia Eagles - carrying play but not scoring. BC got their first goal just after they went off a power play, on a knuckling screen shot. BU managed to dampen momentum by tying the score on a goal with less than a minute to go in the period.
BU went ahead on a nice goal in the second period (both goals scored by John Laliberte), and hung on to win despite being outshot by something approaching a 2:1 margin. BC's coach noted that very few of their shots were good scoring opportunities, but I think he's trying to downplay things a little. After all, his team couldn't solve BU's backup goaltender (as our walk-on turned starter is still out with a separated shoulder).
Reasonably pointless statistical note: BC hasn't beaten BU in an opening round of the Beanpot since 1981 - a year before BU goalie Stephan Siewec was born.
Somewhat less pointless statistical note: BC hasn't won back to back Beanpots in 40 years.
So the good news, depending on how you look at it, is that the missus and I will be spending a romantic Valentine's Day at the Fleet Center. That's better than the alternative if we'd lost, which was scalping my finals tickets to buy flowers.
07 February 2005
The idea of a New England Patriots dynasty has, like jumbo shrimp or Swiss cheese, an oxymoronic quality to it. While never quite the Gridiron of the Absurd you'd find in Arizona or (until late) Cincinnati, the checkered past of the Patriots - from abortive moves to St. Louis and Hartford to their former cesspool of a stadium to the many years where watching the game brought with it the color commentary of Beasley Reece - makes contemplation of a Foxboro dynasty a slippery thing to hold.
But I'm warming up to the task. They may not have sealed their destiny by blowing someone out (as the 49ers did to the Broncos or the Cowboys did to the Bills), but three Super Bowls in four years, in an NFL set up to defy dynasty-building, speaks volumes. What speaks even louder is that, loss of coordinators notwithstanding, there would be very few people surprised to see the Patriots play for a fourth title in five years on a February 2006 night in Detroit.
Thinking about the game more specifically, I think I would have opted for Rodney Harrison over Deion Branch for MVP, though it was a close-run thing in my mind. Fitting for the Patriots, there wasn't one clear-cut player to go with.
I'm also still trying to sort out Philly's clock management strategy late in the game, but I think there are plenty of people related in some fashion to the Eagles who are trying to do the same thing.
Now for the commercials. According to the USA Today Ad Meter thing, Bud won the night with their ad about the pilot who ditches the skydivers to go after the Bud Light that's been thrown from the plane. I thought it was a pretty good ad (better than Bud's usual parade of flatuent animals and single entendre sex humor), but the best of the night? Not so much. I'd have given that to Ameriquest's ad involving apparent felinicide. I also thought the FedEx ad with all the required Super Bowl commercial elements was better than its Ad Meter ranking. You can decide for yourself by taking a gander at the ratings.
But I'm warming up to the task. They may not have sealed their destiny by blowing someone out (as the 49ers did to the Broncos or the Cowboys did to the Bills), but three Super Bowls in four years, in an NFL set up to defy dynasty-building, speaks volumes. What speaks even louder is that, loss of coordinators notwithstanding, there would be very few people surprised to see the Patriots play for a fourth title in five years on a February 2006 night in Detroit.
Thinking about the game more specifically, I think I would have opted for Rodney Harrison over Deion Branch for MVP, though it was a close-run thing in my mind. Fitting for the Patriots, there wasn't one clear-cut player to go with.
I'm also still trying to sort out Philly's clock management strategy late in the game, but I think there are plenty of people related in some fashion to the Eagles who are trying to do the same thing.
Now for the commercials. According to the USA Today Ad Meter thing, Bud won the night with their ad about the pilot who ditches the skydivers to go after the Bud Light that's been thrown from the plane. I thought it was a pretty good ad (better than Bud's usual parade of flatuent animals and single entendre sex humor), but the best of the night? Not so much. I'd have given that to Ameriquest's ad involving apparent felinicide. I also thought the FedEx ad with all the required Super Bowl commercial elements was better than its Ad Meter ranking. You can decide for yourself by taking a gander at the ratings.
06 February 2005
In the run up to the Super Bowl, Freddie Mitchell of the Eagles said he had something he wanted to give Rodney Harrison. Given the result and the two players' relative performance (Mitchell had one catch for 11 yards, Harrison two picks, a sack, and at least seven tackles), what did Fred Ex have for Rodney? A congratulatory ham?
Tonight's game at least helped prove one thing: I can pick winners, but not details like the winning margin. Several years of ESPN.com games can back this up.
More on the game tomorrow.
Tonight's game at least helped prove one thing: I can pick winners, but not details like the winning margin. Several years of ESPN.com games can back this up.
More on the game tomorrow.
04 February 2005
With the Super Bowl being this Sunday, it's time for my fearless prediction: the Pats will win.
Were you expecting anything else?
Now, I don't have the cockiness that some fans do. I expect the game to be close. I hope the win won't come down to Adam Vinatieri's foot again, but it wouldn't shock me if it did, either. My thinking is that it'll be close for most of the game, with the Pats winning by a two-score margin thanks to some late points. Given the players and coaches that each team brings into the mix, though, there's very little that would surprise me.
Well, the Pats running the wishbone. That would surprise me.
I've managed to miss most of the hype these last couple of weeks by not watching televised sports news (or "news"), especially avoiding the half-hour specials our Fox affiliate has been running in place of the 7:30 Simpsons. No way I'm going to reward that sort of scheduling.
The one story I've found reasonably interesting is Jacksonville's performance as host. The gist of most of what I've heard is that the city isn't up to the challenge, which makes me worried that the game will fall into a regular Miami-New Orleans-San Diego orbit (with occasionall forays into Tampa and perhaps the Rose Bowl). I like the idea of non-traditional cities getting the game for variety's sake. After this year, though, the pressure will be on Detroit and Arizona to provide more amenities.
(That being said, I do wonder how much of what's being said is accurate and how much of it is media grumbling; Jon's posts on his work trips lead to some doubts on this topic.)
Still don't know what, if anything, I'm doing for the game. I don't even recall where I watched last year's game (I think it was at home; yup, I remember doing dishes during the "wardrobe malfunction"), so it's not like it's a huge concern.
Were you expecting anything else?
Now, I don't have the cockiness that some fans do. I expect the game to be close. I hope the win won't come down to Adam Vinatieri's foot again, but it wouldn't shock me if it did, either. My thinking is that it'll be close for most of the game, with the Pats winning by a two-score margin thanks to some late points. Given the players and coaches that each team brings into the mix, though, there's very little that would surprise me.
Well, the Pats running the wishbone. That would surprise me.
I've managed to miss most of the hype these last couple of weeks by not watching televised sports news (or "news"), especially avoiding the half-hour specials our Fox affiliate has been running in place of the 7:30 Simpsons. No way I'm going to reward that sort of scheduling.
The one story I've found reasonably interesting is Jacksonville's performance as host. The gist of most of what I've heard is that the city isn't up to the challenge, which makes me worried that the game will fall into a regular Miami-New Orleans-San Diego orbit (with occasionall forays into Tampa and perhaps the Rose Bowl). I like the idea of non-traditional cities getting the game for variety's sake. After this year, though, the pressure will be on Detroit and Arizona to provide more amenities.
(That being said, I do wonder how much of what's being said is accurate and how much of it is media grumbling; Jon's posts on his work trips lead to some doubts on this topic.)
Still don't know what, if anything, I'm doing for the game. I don't even recall where I watched last year's game (I think it was at home; yup, I remember doing dishes during the "wardrobe malfunction"), so it's not like it's a huge concern.
31 January 2005
I'm going to hell: I'm about to wax snarky about a funeral.
I went to a funeral today for a family member on the wife's side who I'd never met. Unfortunately, the minister presiding over the funeral had never met him, either, and said as much during his opening remarks. In total, his remarks had an unorganized feel that made me wonder if he'd been called in late to sub for the funeral home's regular minister.
The first five minutes or so also included an inordinate amount of information about the preacher himself, leading me to wonder if he was running for office. He also jumped from his self-referential remarks to reading the obituary (or parts of the obituary) to other remarks given to him (I assume) by family. Some of those remarks, such as the one that referred to the deceased as a puppet master (not sure if that term was used or not, but "pulling the strings" was), seemed unusal to start with, never mind including them in the eulogy.
And while it's been remarked in a kind of kidding fashion in some areas, noting that it was at least good timing for a Red Sox fan to pass after they'd won the World Series is not something best done in actual funeary circumstances. Asking the mourners for a show of hands to find other Sox fans is similarly problematic.
Part of the problem, perhaps, was that we weren't vocal enough. More than once the minister said that whatever sentiment he'd recently voiced would have gotten an amen from the deceased had he been with us. That none of us felt moved enough to do so may have made all of us seem lacking.
Towards the end of the service, a family member sang "Amazing Grace," but was unable to finish the last stanza as she'd started to cry. The rest of us pitched in and sang, perhaps the first touching moment of the entire event. The preacher then returned to the podium and had all of us sing the song again. It's a fine hymn, but that seemed like overkill.
So my three pieces of advice should you ever get called in to officiate a funeral on short notice:
1. Make a quick outline of the service so you don't jump around like you tried to cure your ADHD with a handful of No-Doz.
2. Try not to elicit biographical and genealogical information about the family during the service. Take a second to sort out who is who beforehand.
3. If you really are trying to comfort the bereaved, try not to say things like "I wish you had called me so I could have met him while he was alive." They may feel guilty after you say that.
I went to a funeral today for a family member on the wife's side who I'd never met. Unfortunately, the minister presiding over the funeral had never met him, either, and said as much during his opening remarks. In total, his remarks had an unorganized feel that made me wonder if he'd been called in late to sub for the funeral home's regular minister.
The first five minutes or so also included an inordinate amount of information about the preacher himself, leading me to wonder if he was running for office. He also jumped from his self-referential remarks to reading the obituary (or parts of the obituary) to other remarks given to him (I assume) by family. Some of those remarks, such as the one that referred to the deceased as a puppet master (not sure if that term was used or not, but "pulling the strings" was), seemed unusal to start with, never mind including them in the eulogy.
And while it's been remarked in a kind of kidding fashion in some areas, noting that it was at least good timing for a Red Sox fan to pass after they'd won the World Series is not something best done in actual funeary circumstances. Asking the mourners for a show of hands to find other Sox fans is similarly problematic.
Part of the problem, perhaps, was that we weren't vocal enough. More than once the minister said that whatever sentiment he'd recently voiced would have gotten an amen from the deceased had he been with us. That none of us felt moved enough to do so may have made all of us seem lacking.
Towards the end of the service, a family member sang "Amazing Grace," but was unable to finish the last stanza as she'd started to cry. The rest of us pitched in and sang, perhaps the first touching moment of the entire event. The preacher then returned to the podium and had all of us sing the song again. It's a fine hymn, but that seemed like overkill.
So my three pieces of advice should you ever get called in to officiate a funeral on short notice:
1. Make a quick outline of the service so you don't jump around like you tried to cure your ADHD with a handful of No-Doz.
2. Try not to elicit biographical and genealogical information about the family during the service. Take a second to sort out who is who beforehand.
3. If you really are trying to comfort the bereaved, try not to say things like "I wish you had called me so I could have met him while he was alive." They may feel guilty after you say that.
28 January 2005
So the last headline on Yahoo comes through once in a while - it's currently reporting that Sammy Sosa is about to be traded to Baltimore. Because, really, the Orioles need a 36 year old outfielder whose offensive number have fallen in every category (except doubles, go figure) every year since 2001. I suppose I shouldn't complain, as if the numbers hold to form it'll play to the Red Sox's advantage.
Interesting to note that the union is OK with Sosa voiding his 2006 salary (which a trade would make a guaranteed $18 million), given their problems last year with A-Rod taking a pay cut if he went to the Red Sox. I assume it has something to do with where Sosa is in his career; teams are more likely to employ an aging slugger if they don't have to pay him a small fortune. The more baseball-savvy out there are more than welcome to provide further explanation or correct me as needed.
UPDATE: MLB.com is now saying that the Cubs GM is denying that a deal is in place with Baltimore. He does say that serious talks occurred with several teams. Most interesting: Washington (who could use a marquee name) and KC (where Sosa would be making more than the rest of the team combined, I think).
Interesting to note that the union is OK with Sosa voiding his 2006 salary (which a trade would make a guaranteed $18 million), given their problems last year with A-Rod taking a pay cut if he went to the Red Sox. I assume it has something to do with where Sosa is in his career; teams are more likely to employ an aging slugger if they don't have to pay him a small fortune. The more baseball-savvy out there are more than welcome to provide further explanation or correct me as needed.
UPDATE: MLB.com is now saying that the Cubs GM is denying that a deal is in place with Baltimore. He does say that serious talks occurred with several teams. Most interesting: Washington (who could use a marquee name) and KC (where Sosa would be making more than the rest of the team combined, I think).
I love the last headline spot on the front page of Yahoo. Where else would I learn that more musicians than ever are playing live gigs, and that SpongeBob's creator offficially declared the character's asexuality?
Really, that headline spot is worthy of a blog like the dearly departed Amazon World. Or maybe Amazon World needs to make a comeback. Either way.
Really, that headline spot is worthy of a blog like the dearly departed Amazon World. Or maybe Amazon World needs to make a comeback. Either way.
26 January 2005
Yeah, the Oscars. Have I seen any of these movies? No. In fact, based on the reminder list I've only seen six of the movies open for consideration. And, to be honest, none of them were especially award-worthy. Not Seed of Chucky unworthy, but nothing special, either. Clearly, I need to work on spending my movie dollars more wisely.
There was a time when I made a point to see all the Best Picture nominated films before the awards were given. I've not done that in some time. In fact, the last year for which I've seen all the nominated films, in the theater or not, was 1997 (for the 1998 ceremony - Titanic, As Good as it Gets, The Full Monty, Good Will Hunting, and LA Confidential). Still, I've usually seen about half of the nominated films, at least until now.
Not sure why the change, though living near movie theaters definately helps. When I was at BU there was almost always a theater within walking distance (not to mention the dear departed Nickelodeon, which was on campus). Then again, 1998 was the year I moved back to Boston, and my viewing habits dropped off anyway.
The good news, I suppose, is that there is a second-run house around the corner from where we live now. Hopefully they'll run some of the nominated movies soon, though they seem to focus mostly on foreign films and stuff they can get on the cheap (for example, they've got Shall We Dance? going now, but will be showing The Incredibles next week, so it's not all bad).
There was a time when I made a point to see all the Best Picture nominated films before the awards were given. I've not done that in some time. In fact, the last year for which I've seen all the nominated films, in the theater or not, was 1997 (for the 1998 ceremony - Titanic, As Good as it Gets, The Full Monty, Good Will Hunting, and LA Confidential). Still, I've usually seen about half of the nominated films, at least until now.
Not sure why the change, though living near movie theaters definately helps. When I was at BU there was almost always a theater within walking distance (not to mention the dear departed Nickelodeon, which was on campus). Then again, 1998 was the year I moved back to Boston, and my viewing habits dropped off anyway.
The good news, I suppose, is that there is a second-run house around the corner from where we live now. Hopefully they'll run some of the nominated movies soon, though they seem to focus mostly on foreign films and stuff they can get on the cheap (for example, they've got Shall We Dance? going now, but will be showing The Incredibles next week, so it's not all bad).
23 January 2005
Greetings from Ice Station Zebra, where it looks like the snow is finally beginning to taper off. Still a fair amount of wind, so it's hard to say if what's in the air now is falling or just blowing around.
We're up around 30 inches now, and at one point this morning we had the high score (so to speak) for Massachusetts, though it looks like places on the South Shore will wind up beating us (some places are expected to get the full yard of snow). With the wind there are a number of high drifts. We had one in our driveway that was up around 5 feet. Thanks to a deal with our landlord, we got to shovel it away for a break in our rent (and an even bigger thanks to him for doubling the amount of that break when he saw how much snow we were going to get).
Somehow, in all of this snow, the wife thought it would be a good idea to go to church. Even more surprising, the priests at St. Mary Star of the Sea thought it would be a good idea to remain open. So we walked over, not that we had a choice. I've not seen a plow on our street since last night, and there was a 2 to 3 foot snow pile we had to climb over at an intersection the next street over.
The walk was brisk, but apparently worth it as we made up fifty percent of the congregation this morning. Not surprisingly, Mass was short.
Not much else to say storm-wise, other than to note it's almost time to get back out shoveling. I've managed to get the driveway about half open, which will be handy if our upstairs neighbors actually try to get home tonight. For their own sakes, I hope they're hunkered down somewhere and not planning on returning until tomorrow.
I will take a second to note the passing of Johnny Carson. I don't think I could come close to doing justice to his long and storied career, but will simply note that whatever interest I have in late night TV and topical humor I generally got from him and the Tonight Show before Jay Leno screwed it up. Please join me in a memorial imaginary golf swing.
We're up around 30 inches now, and at one point this morning we had the high score (so to speak) for Massachusetts, though it looks like places on the South Shore will wind up beating us (some places are expected to get the full yard of snow). With the wind there are a number of high drifts. We had one in our driveway that was up around 5 feet. Thanks to a deal with our landlord, we got to shovel it away for a break in our rent (and an even bigger thanks to him for doubling the amount of that break when he saw how much snow we were going to get).
Somehow, in all of this snow, the wife thought it would be a good idea to go to church. Even more surprising, the priests at St. Mary Star of the Sea thought it would be a good idea to remain open. So we walked over, not that we had a choice. I've not seen a plow on our street since last night, and there was a 2 to 3 foot snow pile we had to climb over at an intersection the next street over.
The walk was brisk, but apparently worth it as we made up fifty percent of the congregation this morning. Not surprisingly, Mass was short.
Not much else to say storm-wise, other than to note it's almost time to get back out shoveling. I've managed to get the driveway about half open, which will be handy if our upstairs neighbors actually try to get home tonight. For their own sakes, I hope they're hunkered down somewhere and not planning on returning until tomorrow.
I will take a second to note the passing of Johnny Carson. I don't think I could come close to doing justice to his long and storied career, but will simply note that whatever interest I have in late night TV and topical humor I generally got from him and the Tonight Show before Jay Leno screwed it up. Please join me in a memorial imaginary golf swing.
22 January 2005
So I never made divisional playoff picks for last weekend. I will say that I would have picked all 4 winners; I didn't see either St. Louis or Minnesota hanging with Atlanta or Philly, and there was no way I was going to pick against the Pats and for the Jets. So let's just say that I'm "6-2" so far.
Regarding tomorrow:
Philly finally breaks through and wins the NFC. I don't think the Falcons will be able to run on the Eagles as easily as they did on the Rams, and I think the Philly secondary should be able to handle the passing attack. The wild card that is Michael Vick always leaves the door open for an upset, but I'm saving that for the ACF.
Although, really, picking the Pats isn't an upset, at least by Vegas standards. But they're the lower seed playing on the road, so odds be damned. I have to think that the Pats have been working on a defensive scheme for tomorrow since sometime in early November.
I'm not expecting a lot of points, and would be surprised if the winner cracks the low teens. The foot of Adam Vinatieri will, as usual, play a vital role in the game somehow. Hopefully in a good way.
Regarding tomorrow:
Philly finally breaks through and wins the NFC. I don't think the Falcons will be able to run on the Eagles as easily as they did on the Rams, and I think the Philly secondary should be able to handle the passing attack. The wild card that is Michael Vick always leaves the door open for an upset, but I'm saving that for the ACF.
Although, really, picking the Pats isn't an upset, at least by Vegas standards. But they're the lower seed playing on the road, so odds be damned. I have to think that the Pats have been working on a defensive scheme for tomorrow since sometime in early November.
I'm not expecting a lot of points, and would be surprised if the winner cracks the low teens. The foot of Adam Vinatieri will, as usual, play a vital role in the game somehow. Hopefully in a good way.
As you might have heard, we're due for some snow in this neck of the woods. I can say that as of now, we have enough show to shut North Carolina down for a solid week. :)
We've got somewhere in the 3 to 4 inch range, so there's quite a ways to go. We'd planned on killing some of the night watching the second BU-Maine tilt (the first being last night, a 1-1 tie), but NESN apparently can't show it. Not sure why; they'd listed it earlier, but now have this terse message saying they can't. I'm assuming it's weather-related.
In an unrelated TV note, if you get a chance on Monday tune in Jeopardy to see Brandeis' own Ted Stratton defend the champion status he earned yesterday. Go Ted!
We've got somewhere in the 3 to 4 inch range, so there's quite a ways to go. We'd planned on killing some of the night watching the second BU-Maine tilt (the first being last night, a 1-1 tie), but NESN apparently can't show it. Not sure why; they'd listed it earlier, but now have this terse message saying they can't. I'm assuming it's weather-related.
In an unrelated TV note, if you get a chance on Monday tune in Jeopardy to see Brandeis' own Ted Stratton defend the champion status he earned yesterday. Go Ted!
If you're like me, you've never wondered what it would sound like if you crossed Coldplay with the Dave Matthews Band. If you have wondered, I would direct you to the group Blue Merle, which I first heard on the radio yesterday.
The song I heard is the one you can play on their home page. Not sure if I like it or not, feel free to give your opinions.
The song I heard is the one you can play on their home page. Not sure if I like it or not, feel free to give your opinions.
21 January 2005
The third "season" of The Apprentice kicked off last night, featuring a "book smarts" versus "street smarts" theme. I think I'm going to be sick of this theme really soon, as there's only so far that "slobs versus snobs" can get you. Compare Caddyshack to Caddyshack II, for example.
Otherwise, no real obvious changes from the other seasons, other than they brought in a hipster doofus for entertainment purposes. Considering how close he got to being fired last night, I'm not expecting a deep run for him. I won't miss his colorful leisure suits.
In unrelated news, I'm taken with one of the current Yahoo headlines, "Inch of show cripples North Carolina's capital." Reading the article, it appears that there was a lack of readiness due to forecasts only calling for a dusting. Really, if the margin between a dusting and an inch is what sends you from business as usual to chaos, there may be bigger problems than the weathermen being off a bit.
Otherwise, no real obvious changes from the other seasons, other than they brought in a hipster doofus for entertainment purposes. Considering how close he got to being fired last night, I'm not expecting a deep run for him. I won't miss his colorful leisure suits.
In unrelated news, I'm taken with one of the current Yahoo headlines, "Inch of show cripples North Carolina's capital." Reading the article, it appears that there was a lack of readiness due to forecasts only calling for a dusting. Really, if the margin between a dusting and an inch is what sends you from business as usual to chaos, there may be bigger problems than the weathermen being off a bit.
20 January 2005
Sorry for the absence, was away over the long weekend and got off of schedule a bit. As is usually the case during the MLK weekend, I was in Ann Arbor for a tournament. We won, woo! I also got to try Ethiopian food for the first time, and would highly recommend it if you don't mind eating with your hands.
So American Idol is back, and for all the talk about changes it's pretty mucht he same. People who can't sing are mocked, those who appear to have talent are sent to Hollywood, and Seacrest is still a tool. One change that does seem to be working out is having the celebrity judges during the auditions rather than the finals, as they seem more willing to be critical. Mark McGrath made more critical comments in one show than all the celebtrity judges did all of last season. That, and judging kept him from singing, which isn't a bad thing, either.
We also tuned into the premiere of Point Pleasant last night, or as I like to think of it, What Ever Happened to Rosemary's Baby? Turns out she became a Maxim model who can start fires with her mind (imagine what that photo shoot would be like).
If you've not seen the ads, the show is about the looming battle between good and evil that will apparently involve this young, toothsome "child of darkness" who is now living in a coastal New Jersey town. That power she seems to have also appears to affect people's actions, as we've been promised some hanky panky.
I'm sure debuting after American Idol isn't going to hurt ratings for last night, though its regular slot is Thursday at 9, where it gets to butt heads with CSI and The Apprentice. Hope they can wrap up Armageddon in six episodes.
So American Idol is back, and for all the talk about changes it's pretty mucht he same. People who can't sing are mocked, those who appear to have talent are sent to Hollywood, and Seacrest is still a tool. One change that does seem to be working out is having the celebrity judges during the auditions rather than the finals, as they seem more willing to be critical. Mark McGrath made more critical comments in one show than all the celebtrity judges did all of last season. That, and judging kept him from singing, which isn't a bad thing, either.
We also tuned into the premiere of Point Pleasant last night, or as I like to think of it, What Ever Happened to Rosemary's Baby? Turns out she became a Maxim model who can start fires with her mind (imagine what that photo shoot would be like).
If you've not seen the ads, the show is about the looming battle between good and evil that will apparently involve this young, toothsome "child of darkness" who is now living in a coastal New Jersey town. That power she seems to have also appears to affect people's actions, as we've been promised some hanky panky.
I'm sure debuting after American Idol isn't going to hurt ratings for last night, though its regular slot is Thursday at 9, where it gets to butt heads with CSI and The Apprentice. Hope they can wrap up Armageddon in six episodes.
14 January 2005
Full answers for my completely adequate lyrics quiz are available below (I tried to link to the entry, but it winds up taking you to the comments; odd). The songs that didn't get identified were on the tough side, and my hints only helped a little. In any case, I do plan on trying this again in the semi-near future. I'll leave out the non-English songs. Maybe.
12 January 2005
11 January 2005
I suppose it's a sign of my growing comfort with the dentist that I did not write beforehand about my visit this morning to finish off my root canal.
From what I could tell it was pretty routine, although my endodontist doesn't really say too much while he's working. Given the instruments used, it was less of a dental procedure and more of a craft project. At one point he used what appeared to be a soldering iron (which seemed to be used to soften the gutta-percha used to fill the canals), and he used something like a hot glue gun to give me another temporary filling. Were my root canal televised, I don't know if it'd be on Discovery Health or HGTV. I suppose if I were good with mirrors and somewhat sadistic it could be on DIY.
Now all that's left is to get the post and crown, which will start in March. They've not taken any impressions, so it looks like I won't be finally done with this whole thing until sometime in April or even May. Huzzah.
From what I could tell it was pretty routine, although my endodontist doesn't really say too much while he's working. Given the instruments used, it was less of a dental procedure and more of a craft project. At one point he used what appeared to be a soldering iron (which seemed to be used to soften the gutta-percha used to fill the canals), and he used something like a hot glue gun to give me another temporary filling. Were my root canal televised, I don't know if it'd be on Discovery Health or HGTV. I suppose if I were good with mirrors and somewhat sadistic it could be on DIY.
Now all that's left is to get the post and crown, which will start in March. They've not taken any impressions, so it looks like I won't be finally done with this whole thing until sometime in April or even May. Huzzah.
09 January 2005
Stealing from Craig and the Bruce, and looking to break the monopoly that sports have had on the blog in '05, here's my own 20 song lyrics quiz. These are the first 20 songs played at random when I fired up iTunes yesterday afternoon. I didn't use party shuffle; should that somehow violate the spirit of things, I promise to use it for a follow-up should this one go OK (which is an even money thing, I suppose).
Some notes about the songs:
1. I did leave in what I would consider album cuts, but where I did I tried to use opening lines (unless they include the name of the song or I think there will be a likely participant who knows the band pretty well). Songs I'd lump in here: 3, 6, 15, 18, and 20.
1a. You will notice that 18 is not in English. I will note that (a) the vast majority of the album the song is from is in English, and (b) the album did spawn one of the most popular songs in the year it was released (which is within the last 5 to 7 years).
2. Covers: 4, 5, and 14. The first two are reasonably well-known covers, while 14 has been done by a number of different people. Hint: this one is unplugged.
3. Email or comment answers, when a song is gotten (title and artist) I'll italicize it and give props. I'll give partial props where appropriate, but leave the lyrics in regular text.
4. Not sure what the protocol is for web searching. I assume it's frowned upon. Not like I can check.
5. Oh, yeah, groups are repeated. Assuming that matters.
Good luck!
(PS: I've never been sure what's the proper way to put lyrics into text like this, so I've done what seems most appropriate. If there's some sort of convention I've missed, please let me know.)
1. He roller coaster, he got early warning, he got muddy water, he want mojo filter. ("Come Together," The Beatles; Paul)
2. Oh give your love girl to whoever you choose, how can you lose with the stuff you use now
("It's Your Thing," Isley Brothers)
3. Lately I’ve been feeling low, a remedy is what I’m seeking, I take a taste of what’s below, come away to something better ("Jimi Thing," The Dave Matthews Band; Boggie)
4. What's the use of trying, all you get is pain, when I wanted sunshine I got rain ("I'm a Believer," Smash Mouth; Greg)
5. These people 'round here wear beaten down eyes, sunk in smoke dried faces, they’re so resigned to what their fate is ("Come on Eileen," Save Ferris; Ted)
6. You know you made me cry, I see no use in wonderin' why I cry for you
("Not a Second Time," The Beatles)
7. Rover was killed by a Pontiac, and it was done with such grace and artistry that the witnesses awarded the driver both ears and the tail. ("In Old Mexico," Tom Lehrer; Paul)
8. The fast guys get paid, they shoot, they score; Protect them, Buddy, that’s what you’re here for ("Hit Somebody! (The Hockey Song)," Warren Zevon; Greg)
9. Bye bye babe it’s been sweet love, though this feeling I can’t change, but please don’t take this so badly, ‘Cause Lord knows I’m to blame ("Free Bird," Lynyrd Skynyrd; Paul)
10. Time after time, you refuse to even listen, I wouldn’t mind, If I knew what I was missing ("You Won't See Me, The Beatles; Brian)
11. I’ve been sleeping a thousand years it seems, got to open my eyes to everything ("Bring Me to Life," Evanescence; Boggie)
12. Months went by with us pretending, When did our light turn from green to red,
I took a chance and left you standing, Lost the will to do this once again
("Wasting My Time," Default)
13. I'm in the sky tonight, There I can keep by your side, Watching the whole world wind, Around and round ("Next Year," Foo Fighters; Greg)
14. Days may be cloudy or sunny, We're in or we're out of the money, But I'm with you always ("Come Rain or Come Shine," Glenn Frey; Paul on song, The Bruce on artist)
15. Lie beside me, Whisper to me that you want me, Arms around me, Whisper to me that you want me, There's nothing here to be afraid of
("Just the Morning," Lyle Lovett; Greg on artist)
16 Did you lose yourself somewhere out there? Did you get to be a star? Don't it make you sad to know that life, Is more than who we are ("Name," Goo Goo Dolls; Allyson)
17. I mean about future calamity, I used to think the idea was obsolete, Until I heard the old man stamping his feet. ("Hell," Squirrel Nut Zippers; Greg)
18. Herido y abandonado, Aber aber tu sabes dime mi amor por favor, Que dolor nos quedo
("Corazon Espinado," Santana)
19. I thought you’d come through, I thought you’d come clean, You were the best thing I should never have seen
("Human," The Pretenders)
20. We live in a beautiful world, Yeah we do, yeah we do ("Don't Panic," Coldplay; Boggie)
Some notes about the songs:
1. I did leave in what I would consider album cuts, but where I did I tried to use opening lines (unless they include the name of the song or I think there will be a likely participant who knows the band pretty well). Songs I'd lump in here: 3, 6, 15, 18, and 20.
1a. You will notice that 18 is not in English. I will note that (a) the vast majority of the album the song is from is in English, and (b) the album did spawn one of the most popular songs in the year it was released (which is within the last 5 to 7 years).
2. Covers: 4, 5, and 14. The first two are reasonably well-known covers, while 14 has been done by a number of different people. Hint: this one is unplugged.
3. Email or comment answers, when a song is gotten (title and artist) I'll italicize it and give props. I'll give partial props where appropriate, but leave the lyrics in regular text.
4. Not sure what the protocol is for web searching. I assume it's frowned upon. Not like I can check.
5. Oh, yeah, groups are repeated. Assuming that matters.
Good luck!
(PS: I've never been sure what's the proper way to put lyrics into text like this, so I've done what seems most appropriate. If there's some sort of convention I've missed, please let me know.)
1. He roller coaster, he got early warning, he got muddy water, he want mojo filter. ("Come Together," The Beatles; Paul)
2. Oh give your love girl to whoever you choose, how can you lose with the stuff you use now
("It's Your Thing," Isley Brothers)
3. Lately I’ve been feeling low, a remedy is what I’m seeking, I take a taste of what’s below, come away to something better ("Jimi Thing," The Dave Matthews Band; Boggie)
4. What's the use of trying, all you get is pain, when I wanted sunshine I got rain ("I'm a Believer," Smash Mouth; Greg)
5. These people 'round here wear beaten down eyes, sunk in smoke dried faces, they’re so resigned to what their fate is ("Come on Eileen," Save Ferris; Ted)
6. You know you made me cry, I see no use in wonderin' why I cry for you
("Not a Second Time," The Beatles)
7. Rover was killed by a Pontiac, and it was done with such grace and artistry that the witnesses awarded the driver both ears and the tail. ("In Old Mexico," Tom Lehrer; Paul)
8. The fast guys get paid, they shoot, they score; Protect them, Buddy, that’s what you’re here for ("Hit Somebody! (The Hockey Song)," Warren Zevon; Greg)
9. Bye bye babe it’s been sweet love, though this feeling I can’t change, but please don’t take this so badly, ‘Cause Lord knows I’m to blame ("Free Bird," Lynyrd Skynyrd; Paul)
10. Time after time, you refuse to even listen, I wouldn’t mind, If I knew what I was missing ("You Won't See Me, The Beatles; Brian)
11. I’ve been sleeping a thousand years it seems, got to open my eyes to everything ("Bring Me to Life," Evanescence; Boggie)
12. Months went by with us pretending, When did our light turn from green to red,
I took a chance and left you standing, Lost the will to do this once again
("Wasting My Time," Default)
13. I'm in the sky tonight, There I can keep by your side, Watching the whole world wind, Around and round ("Next Year," Foo Fighters; Greg)
14. Days may be cloudy or sunny, We're in or we're out of the money, But I'm with you always ("Come Rain or Come Shine," Glenn Frey; Paul on song, The Bruce on artist)
15. Lie beside me, Whisper to me that you want me, Arms around me, Whisper to me that you want me, There's nothing here to be afraid of
("Just the Morning," Lyle Lovett; Greg on artist)
16 Did you lose yourself somewhere out there? Did you get to be a star? Don't it make you sad to know that life, Is more than who we are ("Name," Goo Goo Dolls; Allyson)
17. I mean about future calamity, I used to think the idea was obsolete, Until I heard the old man stamping his feet. ("Hell," Squirrel Nut Zippers; Greg)
18. Herido y abandonado, Aber aber tu sabes dime mi amor por favor, Que dolor nos quedo
("Corazon Espinado," Santana)
19. I thought you’d come through, I thought you’d come clean, You were the best thing I should never have seen
("Human," The Pretenders)
20. We live in a beautiful world, Yeah we do, yeah we do ("Don't Panic," Coldplay; Boggie)
08 January 2005
NFL playoffs start today. So, my off the cuff and highly unscientific picks:
Indy v. Denver I think Indy can score more points off of Denver's defense than the Denver offense can score off of what passes for Indy's defense. Pick: Indy
San Diego v. New York Part of me really thinks the Jets can pull this out. Then I consider that I'd be picking the Jets. That's almost as bad as picking the Dolphins for a Pats fan. I keep hearing how under-rated the Bolts are, and thus will give them the benefit of the doubt. Pick: San Diego
Green Bay v. Minnesota Green Bay's won both games this year in close fashion. But Minnesota is something like 2-20 in their last 22 outdoor games. I don't suppose plucky Vikings fans have tented in Lambeau Field? Didn't think so. Pick: Green Bay
Seattle v. St. Louis St. Louis won both match-ups this year, but they're 2-6 in away games. Both teams have won their last two games. Both teams have beaten higher seeded NFC teams recently, but in both cases opposing starters didn't always play the whole game. It's a toss-up, except that Matt Hasselback used to play at BC. That'll do. Pick: St. Louis
Indy v. Denver I think Indy can score more points off of Denver's defense than the Denver offense can score off of what passes for Indy's defense. Pick: Indy
San Diego v. New York Part of me really thinks the Jets can pull this out. Then I consider that I'd be picking the Jets. That's almost as bad as picking the Dolphins for a Pats fan. I keep hearing how under-rated the Bolts are, and thus will give them the benefit of the doubt. Pick: San Diego
Green Bay v. Minnesota Green Bay's won both games this year in close fashion. But Minnesota is something like 2-20 in their last 22 outdoor games. I don't suppose plucky Vikings fans have tented in Lambeau Field? Didn't think so. Pick: Green Bay
Seattle v. St. Louis St. Louis won both match-ups this year, but they're 2-6 in away games. Both teams have won their last two games. Both teams have beaten higher seeded NFC teams recently, but in both cases opposing starters didn't always play the whole game. It's a toss-up, except that Matt Hasselback used to play at BC. That'll do. Pick: St. Louis
05 January 2005
On Jeopardy tonight, Tucker Carlson read a clue and introduced himself as being from "CNN's Crossfire." Now, less than an hour later, I read that he's off the show, as his contract's not being renewed.
Sadly, I couldn't gain too much mirth at this. Seems that Carlson's going to wind up on MSNBC, while Crossfire is getting rolled into other programming as a segment rather than staying its own show. Must be the bow tie.
Sadly, I couldn't gain too much mirth at this. Seems that Carlson's going to wind up on MSNBC, while Crossfire is getting rolled into other programming as a segment rather than staying its own show. Must be the bow tie.
Another college football season is in the books, and it didn't so much go out with a whimper instead of a bang as much as it went out with the muffled thuds of an old-fashioned beat down. Did Oklahoma send their actual first string to the Orange Bowl?
I didn't watch must past the first half, and to be honest I don't think I needed to watch as much of the first half as I did. If I were an Auburn fan (or even a Utah fan), I'd be feeling a little ticked this morning, as I'd be thinking that my school could have given USC more of a run than what they got from the Sooners.
Last night also marked the end of ESPN.com's bowl pick-em game, in which I fared a bit better than last year, when it looked like I intentionally tried to pick losers. I finished with a winning record (barely; 15-13) and in points in the middle of the pack. My main nemesis was the MAC, as I think I only picked one of their bowl games correctly. I also continued my perfect streak of picking the loser of the New Orleans Bowl. To that, I can only say that we don't get a lot of Sun Belt games up here, so it's hard to judge.
I'm also a little ticked at myself for not taking UConn in the Motor City Bowl. I can only plead temporary insanity there, as at this point they are my default regional divison 1 team. I'm further ticked at the confidence point system the game uses, as in changing some games I wound up only getting 2 points for Georgia Tech's pasting of Syracuse, a game I'd originally assigned a 26 or 27 to. I'm specifically to blame for losing the 28 point game; I took Cal over Texas Tech.
I didn't watch must past the first half, and to be honest I don't think I needed to watch as much of the first half as I did. If I were an Auburn fan (or even a Utah fan), I'd be feeling a little ticked this morning, as I'd be thinking that my school could have given USC more of a run than what they got from the Sooners.
Last night also marked the end of ESPN.com's bowl pick-em game, in which I fared a bit better than last year, when it looked like I intentionally tried to pick losers. I finished with a winning record (barely; 15-13) and in points in the middle of the pack. My main nemesis was the MAC, as I think I only picked one of their bowl games correctly. I also continued my perfect streak of picking the loser of the New Orleans Bowl. To that, I can only say that we don't get a lot of Sun Belt games up here, so it's hard to judge.
I'm also a little ticked at myself for not taking UConn in the Motor City Bowl. I can only plead temporary insanity there, as at this point they are my default regional divison 1 team. I'm further ticked at the confidence point system the game uses, as in changing some games I wound up only getting 2 points for Georgia Tech's pasting of Syracuse, a game I'd originally assigned a 26 or 27 to. I'm specifically to blame for losing the 28 point game; I took Cal over Texas Tech.
04 January 2005
Keeping the two game set with Minnesota from being a total loss, the BU hockey team won the opener in Agganis Arena, prevailing by the same score they'd lost by the previous night, 2-1. Fans of symmetry will also enjoy that the same BU player, Brad Zancanaro, scored the last goal at Walter Brown and the first goal at Agganis.
One game in, there's very little I can say in the negative about the new place. The biggest problem I encountered was that the concessions staff didn't seem to know how to work the registers. Fans are also going to have to learn that it's not good form to stop in the middle of the concourse to chat, as it slows everything down.
I did read in a USCHO story that some people complained about the rows being too long in the sections, and about a lack of leg room. The rows are long, but no longer than those you would find at the Fleet Center. Hopefully, people will begin to realize that you should spend less time getting up and more time watching the game. As for leg room, I'm often in need of it, and didn't find it wanting from my seat. I don't think we get any extra room as premium seat holders, but I could be wrong.
(That being said, I could use a skosh more hip room. Of course, I could do something about that my own self.)
There were some opening night issues, as people get used to operating things. With all the new technology I figure it will take a few games for everyone to get ramped up, regardless of any practice they've had previous to opening. Heck, the team is still trying to get used to the bigger ice surface (it's 5 feet wider) and they've been practicing there for a couple of weeks.
Not much else to complain about. The wait to get out of the parking garage under the arena was longish, but not unlike what you get in any parking garage after an event. It was certainly shorter than any time I've been to a game up at BC. I don't think I've ever gotten out of their garage in less than 20 minutes.
On the tooth front, I am a little sore where I had the work done yesterday but nothing approaching actual pain. And to some extent I think the soreness is my own fault, as waited a little longer to take my ibuprofen so my last dose would be closer to bed time.
Between the game and the dentist, things actually went much better than expected yesterday. Hopefully the job I applied for in the afternoon will work out as well.
One game in, there's very little I can say in the negative about the new place. The biggest problem I encountered was that the concessions staff didn't seem to know how to work the registers. Fans are also going to have to learn that it's not good form to stop in the middle of the concourse to chat, as it slows everything down.
I did read in a USCHO story that some people complained about the rows being too long in the sections, and about a lack of leg room. The rows are long, but no longer than those you would find at the Fleet Center. Hopefully, people will begin to realize that you should spend less time getting up and more time watching the game. As for leg room, I'm often in need of it, and didn't find it wanting from my seat. I don't think we get any extra room as premium seat holders, but I could be wrong.
(That being said, I could use a skosh more hip room. Of course, I could do something about that my own self.)
There were some opening night issues, as people get used to operating things. With all the new technology I figure it will take a few games for everyone to get ramped up, regardless of any practice they've had previous to opening. Heck, the team is still trying to get used to the bigger ice surface (it's 5 feet wider) and they've been practicing there for a couple of weeks.
Not much else to complain about. The wait to get out of the parking garage under the arena was longish, but not unlike what you get in any parking garage after an event. It was certainly shorter than any time I've been to a game up at BC. I don't think I've ever gotten out of their garage in less than 20 minutes.
On the tooth front, I am a little sore where I had the work done yesterday but nothing approaching actual pain. And to some extent I think the soreness is my own fault, as waited a little longer to take my ibuprofen so my last dose would be closer to bed time.
Between the game and the dentist, things actually went much better than expected yesterday. Hopefully the job I applied for in the afternoon will work out as well.
03 January 2005
I'm home, with what I'm told is about 80 percent of the root canal completed. Next week I get to go back in to finish it off. It should be a fun time for all.
The procedure wasn't too bad, I was pretty well numbed up. The worst part was the novocaine shot by the cheek; it didn't hurt too badly, but more than expected. Actually, the worst part was having to listen to a whole Avril Lavigne song on the radio the dentist had on. That sucked.
I'm still pretty numb now, so I assume the pain that stems from what took place is en route. I've already taken a bunch of ibuprofen, and have been told to keep doing that for a couple of days.
More later.
The procedure wasn't too bad, I was pretty well numbed up. The worst part was the novocaine shot by the cheek; it didn't hurt too badly, but more than expected. Actually, the worst part was having to listen to a whole Avril Lavigne song on the radio the dentist had on. That sucked.
I'm still pretty numb now, so I assume the pain that stems from what took place is en route. I've already taken a bunch of ibuprofen, and have been told to keep doing that for a couple of days.
More later.
I feel like I should say more about the Walter Brown Arena swan song, but I've got nothing. I suppose tonight's experience (or, maybe more realistically, a few games' worth of experience) in Agganis will give me something by way of comparison.
Or it could be that I'm too on edge for my root canal, which will start in about an hour. The kind words of you commenters were good to hear, though I've also heard some less pleasant information from others. I suppose it's all fear of the unknown; it's not like I've had one of these before. On the plus side, I've already had the tooth drilled out, and I don't think the guts of the tooth are that badly off.
I did do some reading on the subject on-line, which was somewhat reassuring although almost all the pages belong to dentists or dental associations. I wouldn't expect a lot of worrisome words from them. I will say that seeing the phrase "titanium rotary files" caused a bit of a blood pressure spike, what with visions of Marathon Man and Brazil. OK, it's not going to be that bad - I don't know that my endodontist is a sadist, and I don't think anyone believes I have information (rather than pulp) that needs extracting.
Or it could be that I'm too on edge for my root canal, which will start in about an hour. The kind words of you commenters were good to hear, though I've also heard some less pleasant information from others. I suppose it's all fear of the unknown; it's not like I've had one of these before. On the plus side, I've already had the tooth drilled out, and I don't think the guts of the tooth are that badly off.
I did do some reading on the subject on-line, which was somewhat reassuring although almost all the pages belong to dentists or dental associations. I wouldn't expect a lot of worrisome words from them. I will say that seeing the phrase "titanium rotary files" caused a bit of a blood pressure spike, what with visions of Marathon Man and Brazil. OK, it's not going to be that bad - I don't know that my endodontist is a sadist, and I don't think anyone believes I have information (rather than pulp) that needs extracting.
02 January 2005
An era of BU hockey ended with a whimper tonight, as the Terriers lost their last game at Walter Brown Arena, dropping a 2-1 decision to Minnesota.
There was not a lot of pomp to the final game. The team that won back to back national titles in the early '70s was introduced before the game, and all former and current BU players in attendance had a photo op on the ice after the game. Apparently the pomp is being saved for tomorrow, as there'll be a 45 minute ceremony of some sorts.
I took a few pictures, and plan to write something up. Someday.
There was not a lot of pomp to the final game. The team that won back to back national titles in the early '70s was introduced before the game, and all former and current BU players in attendance had a photo op on the ice after the game. Apparently the pomp is being saved for tomorrow, as there'll be a 45 minute ceremony of some sorts.
I took a few pictures, and plan to write something up. Someday.
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