Tuesday, September 30, 2008

High Hopes


This is the world's smallest man (a Mongolian chap who runs a restaurant) posing with the world's longest legged woman (a Russian realtor). He is 2 feet 5 inches tall, her legs are 4 feet 4 inches long. I am reminded of the joke about the boy mouse who picks up a girl giraffe in a bar.
The morning after, the mouse's friend, the lion, asks why the mouse looks so tired.
That is all.

Monday, September 29, 2008

Week 5 Football

This is getting serious. I actually study this stuff and I am drowning in failure. Here's the weekend tally.
Pitt -16 @ Syracuse
Pitt 34, Syracuse 24
I never liked Dave Wannstedt and now I still don't like him more and forever what a no good stuttering lackluster spitwad of a....whew, I feel better now. Not really. Wanny's boys get a "W", and I get a
"L"
Michigan State -8.5 @ Indiana
Sparty 42, IU 29
Good. I got one right, simple, straight ahead correct. Iowa is going to East Lansing this coming week, and the MSU should handle 'em. I'm getting ahead of myself.
"W"
Northwestern @ Iowa -8
'Cats 22, Iowa 17
I am elated, though I was incorrect on this selection, as NU goes to 5-0 on the season. Further, I have been informed that I have been placed on double secret probation for not keeping the faith.
"L"
Minnesota @ Ohio State -18
Ohio State 34, Minnesota 21
Terrelle Pryor looked pretty good, and Minnesota is better than I gave them credit for, but this ends up being just another reason to hate Ohio State.
"L"
Tennessee @ Auburn -6
Auburn 14, Rocky Top 12
I said that Auburn is hard to bet on. That's wrong, they're hard to win on. A monkey could pick better than I've been doing.
"L"
TCU @ Oklahoma -18
Sooner 35, Horned Frogs 10
The Sooner Schooner got to run around a bunch and Oklahoma looks like the real deal. Makes me pretty happy to get a pick correct, too. Ain't too many of these to go around, the "W"s, that is.
"W"
Illinois @ Penn State -14
Penn State 38, Illinois 24
I suck at this. The Illini hung a couple of TD's on PSU early, but they have a shoot themselves in the foot tendency. Penn State is, right now, an excellent team, and this game ran pretty close to form. One more PSU score sure would have helped me...
"L"

This week, it is a record of 2 up and 5 down, craptacular once again. Adding them up (and I can still get the simple arithmetic correct) I am now 15-21-1 for the year.
Pathetic.
I quit.
Until Friday.

Friday, September 26, 2008

Football Fun #5

After four weeks of careful study and investment, I'm 3 under break even. If I did this for a living, I'd be asking Washington for a slice of the $700 billion sugar cookie they're baking up right now. Hmm...maybe I should call my Congresspersons...let's play!
Pitt -16 @ Syracuse
Syracuse finally won a game last week, and Pitt squeaked one out by a point over Iowa. Wannstedt's boys are pretty good, and 'Cuse is pretty bad. The Panthers will run it up.
Michigan State -8.5 @ Indiana
The Hoosiers are 2-1, but both their wins came against cupcake opponents. Michigan State is 3-1, with their loss coming at the hands of California in their first game. After last week, I think MSU is a pretty good football team. I also think Indiana is, again, not a pretty good football team. MSU by 17.
Northwestern @ Iowa -8
I may be forbidden from flying the Purple Flag on Saturday after this. I will root for the 'Cats. I will bet on evil Iowa.
Minnesota @ Ohio State -18
Minnesota is sporting 4-0 record coming into Columbus. Ohio State is still sporting a shiner from two weeks ago against USC. I think that Ohio State makes a point of running it up on the Gophers.
Tennessee @ Auburn -6
The Rocky Top gang looks kind of blah this year, and Auburn is one of those teams that's hard to predict. Auburn's at home and they're going to be pumped. Take the Tigers.
TCU @ Oklahoma -18
Big point spreads can make you shudder. The Horned Frogs (I gotta look up how they got their name!) are gonna be road kill as that little Sooner wagon they drive around gets a workout. Sooners with a big win at home.

There's six for this week. But wait...there's another one that's too interesting to pass up.
Illinois @ Penn State -14
The Illini are schizophrenic, witness the pain they caused in their showing against the Ragin' Cajuns of Louisiana Lafayette. Penn State has been tuning up on lesser opponents, but they haven't missed an opportunity, hammering every one by a big score. Happy Valley will be happy this week, it's going to be Penn State...by a little more than 14.




Thursday, September 25, 2008

NEW Yankee Stadium and Pink Floyd

Listening to George Bush last night makes today's topic seem insignificant. Today's post, researched several days ago, will go on as scheduled, as this info is pretty sobering in its own right. So if f you're angry and insulted about the big picture that the president dumped on the country last night, you're not alone. We'll talk about him another day.

The new Yankee Stadium will open across the street from the old one in spring of 2009. It’s all about numbers.
  • Cost: $1.3 Billion. That is a “B” for Billion. It is the most expensive stadium ever built—in the USA. Wembley in London cost more for the world title, but they have soccer hooligans to accommodate. Wembley cost 798 million pounds in 2007. That's around $1.43 billion US. There are about 104 Japanese Yen to the dollar, so Wembley would be about 150 billion Yen. Likewise, there's about 11 Mexican pesos to the dollar, which is about .9 Pounds, but they went to the Euro, so let's call it even.
  • Luxury Seats: There are 1,800 Luxury Suite seats. Prices start at $500 per game per seat. The most expensive are $2,500 apiece, for the front row, and they are sold out. There are 74 Club Suite seats at $250 apiece. Who the hell is paying this?
  • Construction began: August 2006
  • Seats: 51,600
  • Financing: $220 million from New York City, $1.1 Billion from the New York Yankees, but stay tuned for this part, it's pretty wild.
  • Site Planning: NYC gave the NYYankees $3 million back in 1998 for “site planning”. Chump change, barely get you a decent relief pitcher today.
  • Public Transportation: there will be a new $91 million transit station built to accommodate fans. If you can afford a ticket to this Taj Ma Baseball, are you likely to use public transportation? Or did you have to sell your car to get a ticket?
  • Public Park: how nice! No, how much. The old stadium site will be turned into a park. Renovation of existing parkland, $20 million. Building new park, $150 million. Why so much? Building the new park will happen on the site of the old stadium. T’aint cheap to tear down that old stadium. Oh, there will be some trees included in the price, too, planted in the shape of the old stadium. They ought to plant them in the shape of a big dollar sign.
  • Everybody pays: Whaddaya mean? Under baseball’s collective bargaining act, the cost of a new stadium can be deducted in part from the amount a team pays into revenue sharing. Revenue sharing is the deal where the rich teams have to share their bounty with the poor teams, or viewed another way, the way the big powerful guys pay the little not so powerful guys in order to assure that the little guys will continue to put cupcake teams on the field for the big guys to kick the crap out of every year. So some of the little guys won’t be getting as much loot because the biggest big guy built a new playpen. Yeah, sounds fair, no?
  • Are we done yet? Almost. The Yankees didn't suck up all the money. They share the Jablko Duzy (that's approximately "Big Apple" in Polish) with the Mets, who have played since 1964 in Shea Stadium. Shea Stadium is also disappearing this fall, since while all this Yankee Stadium stuff is going on there is ANOTHER playpen going up at the same time: the Mets’ new Citi Field. It’s costing a measley 800 million bucks. I’m sure there’s another goldmine of numbers there, but I cannot do any more of this.

Have you ever heard Frank Sinatra sing "There Used to Be a Ballpark There"? Don't get so emotional, there's a new song for this switcheroo. How about a little Pink Floyd "Money"?

Wednesday, September 24, 2008

Old Yankee Stadium

Yankee Stadium, the House that Ruth Built (Babe Ruth, not some muscular construction worker babe), is reaching the end of its life. Again and finally. Come next spring, the Yankees will get a new playpen. Facts and figures on that tomorrow. Today, the (mostly) original Yankee Stadium.

The park opened in 1923 and was closed in 1973 for remodeling. The 1923 building cost $2.5 million. The remodeling cost $48 million, maybe more, a lot more, with interest expense. With reconfigurations over the years, seating capacity has ranged from 54,000 to nearly 72,000. No telling if bathroom counts went up and down with seating counts.

The field dimensions have changed like crazy, fences in, fences out, fences high, fences low, it's a jumble of numbers. They're proudly saying that the new park will have the same dimensions as the old. They mean the old measurements from right now, I think.
The city of New York has owned the place since 1973.

Some of the baseball legends who performed here include the Babe (Mr. Baseball), Lou Gehrig (Mr. Endurance), Joe DiMaggio (Mr. Coffee), Yogi Berra (Mr. AFLAC), Mickey Mantle (maybe the best baseball player ever) and Roger Maris (Mr. Asterisk).

The Yankees have won 26 championships while frolic-ing in Yankee Stadium. I inserted the hyphen there because I don't like the look of the word "frolicing". Just looks weird...

There's plenty of monuments in and around Yankee Stadium, honoring Yankee greats...and 2 Cardinals. Who are the Cardinals? Stick around.

The All Star game was played in Yankee Stadium in 1939, 1960, 1977 and this year. Smallest crowd to ever watch a Yankee game was September 25, 1966, when 413 people saw the White Sox beat the Yankees 4-1.

The stadium has been the site of some historic boxing matches: Joe Louis v. Max Schmeling in 1938, Tony Zale v. Rocky Graziano in 1945, and Muhammed Ali v. Ken Norton in 1976. Many famed college football games were held here, and the NY football Giants played in Yankee Stadium from 1956 to 1973. They played pro soccer here, too, but I don't care and neither do you.

In 1950, the stadium began as the site of conventions of the Jehovah's Witnesses, with nearly 124,000 people showing up at the inaugural event. I still don't know about the bathroom count, but I don't think they guzzled a lot of beer at this event, so maybe it wasn't an issue.
Two popes celebrated mass in Yankee Stadium, and those are the Cardinals that are memorialized in Monument Park with the Yankees. Yeah, trick question.

There is a 138 foot tall baseball bat out in front; you've seen it on Seinfeld reruns.
The curtain came down Sunday, reruns are the only place to see this American monument.

Tomorrow, New Yankee $tadium.

Tuesday, September 23, 2008

Time in a Bottle, 35 Years Later

September 20th was the 35th anniversary of the death of Jim Croce, the singer/songwriter who did a bunch of hits, most notably "Bad Bad Leroy Brown" (which, for years, every crappy wedding band seemed bound and determined to perform, crappily) and "Operator" (which I don't think anybody has covered, thank heaven, 'cause it was done about perfect the first time) and "Time in a Bottle" (ditto the "Operator"). Croce and his performing partner were killed in a small plane crash after performing in Natchitoches, Louisiana.

I have steadfastly avoided listening to Jim Croce recordings for pretty much all of this time, since his death.

When Croce died, he was 30 years old and just beginning to taste commercial success. He and his wife, Ingrid, who was his co-writer and former performing partner, had an infant son named A.J., who is now a musician. Jim and Ingrid had worked for a few years in the late 60's touring , driving their VW bus across the USA, playing small clubs, colleges and coffee houses. They moved to NYC for a while, tired of it and then moved to Pennsylvania, where Croce worked ordinary, real jobs to pay the bills.

In 1970, Croce teamed with Terry Muehleisen, a classical guitar player who also sang background. Croce's career began to get some traction. He signed a deal with ABC in 1972 for three records. Those records would eventually make a pile of money.

Then Jim got dead.

After her husband's death, Ingrid Croce took her young son and headed south, eventually ending up Costa Rica, where she stayed for several years. She had to launch extended litigation to obtain the music royalties owed to her late husband--Jim and Ingrid were broke at the time of his death. When her young son was 4, he faced a life threatening medical situation, which , though he survived, compromised his eyesight.

In 1985 Ingrid opened the first Croce's, a restaurant/club in what was then rundown downtown San Diego. There are now 5 very successful Croce's locations. Ingrid is an author and motivational speaker, too.

And I listened to some Jim Croce songs again, and they're really pretty good. I had some very acceptable excuses for avoiding his music, but the truth of the matter is that I had a problem with a good guy getting dead early. Some people, bigger, more impactful talents, disappeared, but that wasn't a problem.

Case in point, Jim Morrison of The Doors, legendary performer, Morrison annihilated himself; I was OK with that. Janis Joplin, same, she was a train wreck just waiting for her turn. There were others like that, over time, e.g. John Belushi, broke my heart when I heard he'd croaked, but when I read his story, well, still sad, but ultimately unavoidable and therefore something to be accepted.

But this Croce guy, just a guitar player from Jersey with a wife and a kid and chasing his dream when bam, hegone! Not supposed to happen this way. So I partitioned it off, and left if there, where it stayed for a really long time. Not that hard, really; the songs aren't earth shattering in their importance or impact. They're nice music, just nice.

So, why the epiphany now? Best I can come up with is that you eventually need to conquer your fears. No matter how irrational ,or minor, or how long they've had the upper hand.

Monday, September 22, 2008

Week IV Roundup

Week IV (I think the Roman numeral classes it up a little, eh?) pretty much sucked (so much for classing it up).

Ohio +11@ Northwestern
NU 16, Ohio 8
The 'Cats go to 4-0 and I got it right, but this was not a happy win. NU star running back Tyrell Sutton got hurt, so did WR Andrew Brewer, QB CJ Bacher threw 4 interceptions and they didn't score in the second half. Yuck. But they still go to 4-0.
"W"
Wyoming @ BYU -28.5
Brigham Young 44, Wyoming -0-
BYU has a winning streak that dates back to the last game of the '06 season. Wyoming has a sore spot from the whippin' they took
"W"
Rutgers @ Navy +6
Navy 23, Rutgers 21
A field goal by the Middies put them ahead with 2 minutes to go. Then a Middie linebacker stepped up and intercepted a pass to seal the deal for the Navy...and still, no one sheds a tear for dear old Rutgers.
"W"
Iowa +1 @ Pittsburgh
Pitt 21, Iowa 20.
This is a kiss-yer-sister tie. Great handicapping by the oddsmakers, no blood.
"T"
Boise State @ Oregon Ducks -11
Boise State 37, Oregon 32
The highlight clips looked like they were looping the same play : TD passes by Boise while the Ducks watched in amazement. It wasn't the lack of a quarterback for the Ducks. It was "no D in ucks".
"L"
Central Michigan @ Purdue -10.5

Purdue 32, CMU 25
Purdue couldn't shake the Chippewas, who had this game won when they went for and made a 2 point conversion with a minute to go, taking a 25-24 lead. Purdue then shook loose a 50 yard TD run and made a 2 pointer of their own, but no cover here, and a loss for me.
"L"
South Florida -28 @ Florida International
South Florida 17, FIU 9
Say goodbye to that #12 rating, SoFL. FIU gave a big FU to SFU and in the process, handed yours truly another loser.
"L"

Craptacular week. Started 10-13, now 13-16-1. I'm depressed

Friday, September 19, 2008

Football Picks, Week 4

I'm starting out this week with a record of 10-13. If I were a big league pitcher, a 10-13 record right now would mean that I could shop for a multi-million dollar long term contract for my meager skills. Since I work for a living and this is a hobby, I need to get cookin'. Here goes.
Ohio +11@ Northwestern
Ohio comes to Evanston with an 0-3 record and a highly aggravated state of mind, having lost to Wyoming by a single point, then giving powerhouse Ohio State a run for its money before knuckling under 26-14 and then losing a tough one to Central Michigan, 31-28. My beloved Wildcats are 3-0 and on an upswing, but they haven't really looked like they've put everything together yet. Forgive me, 'Cat Nation, I'm taking the points.
Wyoming @ BYU -28.5
Lots of points to give, but the Mormons beat the daylights out of UCLA last weekend, 59-0. Wyoming hasn't played this caliber of opponent yet. They're going to get clobbered.
Rutgers @ Navy +6
Rutgers, without graduated star running back Ray Rice, has been whupped by Fresno State and double whupped by NC State so far this year. The Middies have beaten cupcake Towson and lost to Ball State and Duke. With the points, it's Navy...and no one ever shed a tear for dear old Rutgers.
Iowa +1 @ Pittsburgh
Dave Wannstedt, the stammering former Chicago Bears coach, leads Pitt, who has lost to Bowling Green and beaten the Buffalo Bulls. The Hawkeyes have rolled over Maine, Florida International and screwed me with the last minute safety en route to a victory over intrastate rival Iowa State. I think Iowa's for real, so they're my pick.
Boise State @ Oregon Ducks -11
Boise State, 2-0, has wins over Idaho State and Bowling Green. The Ducks beat Washington 44-10 in game 1, beat Utah State 66-24 in week 2, and beat Purdue in OT, 32-26. The Ducks also have their #1 and #2 QB's on the injured list. I think that QB3 will have enough resources to cover the points.
Central Michigan @ Purdue -10.5
I was schooled last week by the Boilermakers. They are a good team, they're angry about last week, they're at home and that's enough to cover the points here.
South Florida -28 @ Florida International
The Bulls of South Florida are mui bien. Florida International is mui crappy. The Bulls also have a pretty cool logo on their helmets, though it just doesn't say "Flahriddah" to me. They're gonna kick the snot out of FLint'l, who is, by the way, the Golden Panthers.

Thursday, September 18, 2008

Visualization Exercises

There was a short story the other day in the newspaper that made me laugh, and I think it's worth sharing. Gary Coleman, the diminutive former child TV star who has had a rather unspectacular adult life, was the subject. Gary (who is 4'8" according to the chap who looked it up for me) was arrested after he got into an argument at a bowling alley. The topic of the argument wasn't disclosed in what I read, so I'm taking submissions for what you think would have been a likely topic. Anyway, the argument appears to have continued on into the parking lot (bad sign for any argument, going long enough to end up in the parking lot, even worse arguing with a 4'8" guy outside a bowling alley) where Gary got in his car (pause here for visualization #1) and backed over the foot of the other guy.

Now, it's unfortunate enough that the other guy, who wasn't named, but I will call him, um, let's see, let's say "Willis", was incensed enough to keep going at it with Gary, but then to get his foot under Gary's Goodyears, well, that just stinks for him. And probably for Gary. But not for us.

When your day starts to suck, later today or tomorrow, or the next day, go to visualization #2:

Gary Coleman bowling.

You can't help but smile.
**********
Topic 2 for today comes from Mrs. PFOS. She went to the McDonalds in our town the other day for coffee. The power was out at McD's, so you had to drive up and order at the window.

The real problem was that los empleados, having no pictures of hamburgers or fries or apples pies to push on their cash registers, were having a devil of a time processing orders. They had no idea how much to charge, so they were asking customers how much the items should be.

Then they had to ask how much change to give. Then they had to figure out how to count it.

The rest of the details about who they were/are, I will leave up to you to infer, and to shake your head, and then go back and visualize Gary Coleman bowling.

Wednesday, September 17, 2008

Abandon All Hope, Ye Who Enter Here

The recent actions of the people charged with the care of Chicago's public school students accentuate how dire the situation has become for that system.

First, there is Illinois state senator James Meeks and his traveling medicine show. Senator Reverend Meeks, or Reverend Senator Meeks, or both of him, took a bunch of students up to New Trier High School, supposedly to try to register them in order to draw attention to what RevSen believes is an inadequate funding system for the Chicago Public Schools. Congratulations to the New Trier community that received the uninvited guests without incident. Showboating RevSen Meeks chose to stage his self-serving stunt on the first scheduled day of school for those children who spent their day riding buses and being used as pawns in Meeks' absurd theatrical production. Part of the funding mechanism for the schools is based on days of school attended, so by driving the kids around instead of sending them to school where they belonged Meeks was actually working against his supposed mission of improving the financial support for the schools. This guy is squirrely.

The other grandstand play in the CPS is the announcement of the program by which students are going to get paid for grades. It's like the tooth fairy decided to get involved in the Chicago Public School system. There are qualifying conditions and partially deferred payments and it's tarted up to look like a corporate incentive program, but this pay for grades program is one of the most pathetic schemes that has ever been foisted upon the education system.

Ostensibly, this program has been introduced to encourage and reward students. Practically, the CPS gives the appearanance of having abandoned hope and decided instead to bribe students to do what students are supposed to do. Forget about learning, get kids focused on the grade. Because the payment amounts are based on grades, the pressure to earn grades is very likely to be turned into pressure to give grades, transferring the responsibililty from the student to the teacher.

Imagine the argument when the student finds that he or she has received a "C" instead of a "B". The discussion won't be about GPA, it will be about COD. Seeing Arne Duncan sporting a big foolish grin as he endorsed this program was a fitting punctuation mark.

The annointed "community leader" is driving kids around in buses and stealing their classroom time, while the man running the system is throwing cash at the them.

Johnny still can't read, but he got a nice ride up Lake Shore Drive, and some spending money to boot.

Tuesday, September 16, 2008

Weekend Football Wrap Up

Oregon Ducks –7 @ Purdue
Ducks didn't cover. I was very surprised by Purdue's team speed and power. Oregon won by 6 in OT, but Purdue is a team to keep an eye on.
"L"
Iowa State @ Iowa –13.5
Iowa 17, Iowa State 5. The Hawkeyes took a god-danged safety with 26 seconds left in the game to provide me with the agony of defeat. I am crushed...
"L"

Central Michigan –3.5 @ Ohio
CMich 31, Ohio 28. That gives me a 1/2 point loser. This stinks, this is total b.s........
"L"

California –14.5 @ Maryland
My prediction was "they’re going to shell Maryland". Instead the hard shell Terrapins beat up the Berkeley boys, winning straight up, 35-27.
"L"

Ohio State @ USC –10.5
Always take the Trojans. USC beat up Ohio State, simply beat them up. Thank heaven, a winner for me!
"W"

Louisiana Lafayette @ Illinois –25
I said the Illini wouldwin by 40. They suck. The Ragin' Cajuns of LA Lafayette nearly caught up to the Flighty Illini, final 20-17. Illinois is schizophrenic, I can't bet on them anymore.
"L"

Penn State –27 @ Syracuse
I said they'd win by 40, Penn State actually won by 42. Hooray for me, I got one right.
"W"

What a train wreck this week was, 2 wins and 5 losses. Let's all go read somebody who knows what the hell they're talking about! I can take no solace that three of the five losers were by an eyelash, a loss is a loss. For the season to date, I'm now three under even, W 10, L 13. Time to get the shovel ready; 'gotta dig my out of this quickly!

Monday, September 15, 2008

Today, A Guest Author for Sarah, Part IV

Football scores will have to wait for tomorrow. I'm pleased and proud to present here the work of one of my favorite writers.
***********************************
Here is an open letter about Sarah Palin from your left-leaning daughter. I almost left it at “I don’t think you can trust anyone who attends a church service at which people legitimately think the Holy Spirit overtakes them and causes them to speak in tongues. Haven’t you seen Borat?” but one thing led to another, and I got rather long winded.

5) She resembles a real-life version of Martha Generic, the mom from the cartoon Bobby’s World. If you don’t know what Bobby’s world is, watch this You Tube Clip: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=w5eDlwcm95I. (She appears approximately 15 or so seconds into the clip.) I realize this is a superficial reason, but after 8 years with a President that possesses communication skills that pale in comparison to Koko, the signing gorilla, a VP that might legitimately yell “Fer cryin’ in the mud, Putin, can’t you just relax over dair in the Caucasus? Dontcha know we can all get along?” genuinely turns my stomach.

4) She praised her daughter’s “decision” to have her baby. Wait just a tic there, Sarah, aren’t you fervently pro-life? What decision are you referring to? If it were up to Palin, the decision would be that of the government. Palin’s stance that sex ed classes in schools should be sacked in favor of abstinence-only teachings seems a little ridiculous when her daughter went out and got knocked up as soon as she was old enough to venture out of the igloo alone. You’d think Palin would have tried out her abstinence-only education at home before preaching it to the masses as a solution for teen pregnancy. Currently the evidence seems to indicate that this method of sex education is entirely ineffective. (And, as a side note, why does John McCain insist that he knew that Bristol was preggers and chose Palin anyway? Come on, he’s a republican for God’s sake, of course he didn’t know! Well, in his defense, he may have known at one time and forgotten…he is 72 years old.)

3) Palin opposes gay rights. So, she essentially thinks that the government should not only be able to tell women what they can do with their bodies, but it can also tell people whether or not they can marry the person they love. Let’s see here. I think one of the principles that lie at the foundation of this country is the separation of church and state. The assertion that marriage is between a man and a woman has its basis in religion, and this belief has woven its way into our laws, which seems a little contradictory. Now, ignoring all I’d like to say about Palin’s Pentecostal past, she has adamantly stated that she won’t let her beliefs affect her policy (wait, didn’t she ask churchgoers to pray for the Alaska pipeline (before she switched her stance on it)?), so her religious beliefs shouldn’t overshadow the fact that opposing gay marriage infringes on the human rights of gays, and as marriage is a legal institution, it really doesn’t matter what the Bible says about it.

Now I realize that this doesn’t directly relate, but I’m talking about marriage here, so I’d like to touch on the future union of Levi Johnston and Bristol Palin. Palin has actually exhibited some consistency in policy here. She contends that government should have the final say in who a person can and cannot marry. As governor of Alaska, I guess she has the say on whether or not Levi will take her daughter’s hand in marriage. You think that Levi wants to get hitched? Come on, we all know that Palin held her hunting rifle to the poor guy’s head and told him just how she’d field dress his corpse if he didn’t. (His Myspace page, before it was taken down, contained the quote: "I'm a f**kin' redneck who likes to snowboard and ride dirt bikes. But I live to play hockey. I like to go camping and hang out with the boys, do some fishing, shoot some sh*t and just f**kin' chillin' I guess. Ya f*ck with me I'll kick ass." Move over Bristol, this guy sounds like a catch!) Oh Levi, you should have chosen another young Inuit lady with whom to get your groove on.

2) She is trying to win votes by representing the “Everymom.” Excuse me, but I don’t know many women who would travel to Texas a month before giving birth to deliver a speech, despite the fact that she was actually leaking amniotic fluid at the time (graphic, but true). She returned to work a mere three days after giving birth to her youngest child. Three days! Someone needs to tell this woman that of all the air-tight excuses to not go to work, giving birth is one of the best. Now Republicans are crying “Double Standard! Sexism! No one would say these things about a man running for office!” Well, yes, that’s probably true. But face it, there is a double standard and I’m sorry, but it’s not going away. (This is why I refuse to participate in our Women’s Initiative. I’m sick of hearing the “You can do it all!” speech from high powered corporate women, when in reality, you can do it all only if you can exist on 3 hours of sleep and have the means to employ a full time nanny or have a stay-at-home-husband, and don’t really care if you do or do not see your kids before they go to bed each night. Of course, if you should choose not to have a family at all, doing it all becomes infinitely easier.) Furthermore, it would be a lot easier for a man to go to work three days after his child was born, than for the woman that actually birthed the kid to be back at it. Further, let’s be honest here, she’s not at the apex of her political career – she’s been governor for like ten minutes – why throw her family into the spotlight now? If she waited four years, her newborn would be a toddler and Bristol would be married off, without anyone batting an eye at her shotgun wedding. To be honest, I think that the poor timing issue is applicable because she is a parent, not because she’s a female.

1) Republicans complain about Obama’s lack of experience. Palin even made fun of it during her speech at the RNC. She ridiculed the time he spent as a community organizer. That was 20 years ago! She was running a fishing business and attending PTA meetings. She was a mayor of a small town up until 3 years ago. Obama might be inexperienced but at least he was in the Senate when she was building her resume as the mayor of Wasilla. As mayor and as governor, she says she has experience with budgeting and dealing with bureaucrats. Sarah, we’re talking lower-48 here. I don’t know what you consider budgeting, but we use the dollar down here - we won’t be financing any major projects by bartering with pelts or whale blubber. Further, Palin has ties to the Alaska Independence Party, which has pushed for Alaska’s secession from the U.S. And she’ll be our VP? (McCain, I thought you put your country first? Did you overlook Palin’s association with the AIP, or forget?) Also, why does she think she can claim she has foreign policy experience, just because she’s in charge of the Alaskan National guard? Hey lady, just because you are next to Canada, and somewhat close to Russia, does not automatically give you foreign policy credentials. Finally, McCain has admitted himself that economics is not his strongest suit (great, since the economy is in fantastic shape!), and Palin doesn’t strengthen his ticket in this respect either. Speaking about the Fannie / Freddie takeover, Palin stated the lending companies “had gotten too big and too expensive to the taxpayers.” Palin, I’m sorry that the pre-VP-debate cram session hasn’t gotten you up to speed yet, but prior to the takeover Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac were private companies, and the $50 or so billion takeover is what will cost taxpayers. You should probably take an econ class or two.Now, I understand that people justify Palin’s lack of experience by saying that she’ll be #2 on the ticket, whereas Obama will be #1. That’s true; however, let’s not forget that John McCain is 72. Nine of 44 VP’s have become president during their time in office. Further, the average male life expectancy is about 75. McCain would be about 72.5 years old when he took office if elected, and if he lives an average-length life, he’d only make it through 2.5 years of his term. So, really, she’s #1.625 on the ticket. Hopefully, Palin’s a quick learner. (Now I realize that McCain’s mother is 96, and based on how she shot out of her seat at the RNC, she seems to still be quite spry. However, if you looked closely, she looked kind of like she might be an animatronic figure from a Disney ride, operated by someone behind the scenes to fool us all. I bet they even were able to make her say “Down with pork-barrelling and corruption!” and “John McCain would rather lose an election than let his country lose a war!” in case anyone doubted she was a real person.)
In summation, Obama-Biden 2008!

Friday, September 12, 2008

Week 3 Football Picks

Football today, PFOS tomorrow and a guest on Monday!

Oregon Ducks –7 @ Purdue
Purdue is looking decent, but it’s going to be Ducks and cover.

Iowa State @ Iowa –13.5
The Cyclones come spinning into a higher power. The Hawkeyes have too much power, lay the points.

Central Michigan –3.5 @ Ohio
Dan Lefevour and Company got spanked by a really good Georgia team last weekend and they are going to work out their frustrations on Ohio.

California –14.5 @ Maryland
The boys from Berkley will have to travel cross county to face off against the Terrapins (don’t you love that, a team named after turtles?) and they’re going to shell Maryland.

Ohio State @ USC –10.5
This is going to be the very best game of the week. Power vs. Power. Speed vs. Speed. Buckeyes vs. Trojans. Take the Trojans. Always take the Trojans.

Louisiana Lafayette @ Illinois –25
The Illini will win by 40.

Penn State –27 @ Syracuse
Penn State will win by 40, too.

Thursday, September 11, 2008

Sarah Palin, Part III

Sarah Palin is 44 years old, a Protestant, she’s been married for 20 years, she has five kids (including one that is just a few months old) and she may become the next Vice President.

Sarah has a degree in journalism from the University of Idaho. She switched colleges six times en route to her degree.
I think she looks like Peggy Hill.
She served two terms on the Wasilla City Council (’92-96) and then two terms as Wasilla’s mayor (’96-’02). In 2002 she ran for Lieutenant Governor of Alaska and was the runner up.
She appears to have entertained the notion of Alaska seceding from the USA.
In ’03 the governor appointed Sarah as Panel Ethics Commisioner of the Alaska Oil and Gas Conservation Commision. She resigned the following year in a brouhaha over –what else—ethics.
From 2003 to 2006 Sarah served as a director of a group whose stated purpose is “to increase the number of Republican women in elected offices and in appointed governmental and political positions…through training and education”.

In 2006 Sarah Palin defeated the incumbent governor in the primary and defeated a former governor in the general election. Her platform was “clean government”. In 2007, Governor Palin presented the Alaska Gasline Inducement Act to provide for the construction of a natural gas pipeline from the North Slope.

She’s a lifetime member of the NRA, a hunter and fisherman.

My take: I thoroughly enjoyed her speech at the convention. She’s obviously very determined, bright and clever. She appears unlike any candidate I’ve ever seen, in a positive way. On the other side of the coin, she also appears to be a loose cannon, has no foreign policy experience and she’d be the proverbial heartbeat away.

Ain’t all bad.

Wednesday, September 10, 2008

Sarah, Part II, Alaska Facts

Alaska was discovered by Vitus Bering, a Dane in the employ of Russia, in 1741. I didn’t check, but I guess he discovered the Bering Sea, so he would ultimately be responsible for the Deadliest Catch on Discovery Channel. That's good. If he is also responsible for Ice Road Truckers, that's not so good.

The U.S. bought Alaska from Russia in 1867 for $7.2 million. The 1880 census reported a population of 33,426 who were presumably included in the purchase.
The Prudhoe Bay oil and gas reserve was discovered in 1968. The Alaska pipeline was completed in 1977. It is 800 miles long and it cost $7.7 billion.


Native Alaskans include Eskimos, Indians and Aleuts. Inuits are Canadian Eskimos. Canadians are not voting in the US election this year. Just sayin'.

Alaska is dead last among the states in agriculture.

Alaski is number one among the states in commercial fishing and commercial fishing reality TV shows.

Petroleum and natural gas are Alaska’s most valuable industry.

25% of Alaska’s oil royalty goes to the Alaska Permanent Fund. The fund pays “dividends” annually to residents. The 2007 payment was $1,654. To qualify you have to live there all year and intend to stay, or at least declare that you intend to stay.

Government is Alaska’s major employment source. Hmmm....may be another reality TV show here. How's Wilderness Moose Tracker Pipeline Rangers sound? Discovery Channel, you know where to find me, let's talk...

The population of Alaska in the 2000 census was 629,000.

Tomorrow, we’ll look at Sarah.

Tuesday, September 9, 2008

Sarah, Part 1

The Matanuska-Susitna Valley is formed by the Matanuska River Valley and the Susitna River Valley. The Mat-Su is over 23,000 square miles in size and includes the towns of Palmer (population 4,500), Houston (population 1,200), Big Lake (population 2,635) and Wasilla (population 5,469). The valley is bordered by the Alaska Range, the Talkeetna Mountains and the Chugach Mountains.

The Mat-Su was settled in the 1930’s as part of President Roosevelt’s New Deal by homesteaders known as the Matanuska Colony, an agriculture colony of 202 families.

The town of Wasilla, established in 1917, is a little over 12 square miles, 43 miles from Anchorage. The population is approximately 85% white, 5% Native American, 4% Hispanic, and 6% multi-racial. Included in the rounding is .59% black. That equals 32 black people.

The breakdown of Wasilla’s 1,979 households includes 50% married couples, 14% female head of household, 31% non-families and the last 5% apparently undecided.

35% of Wasilla’s population commutes to work in Anchorage.

Wasilla was incorporated in 1974.

In 1994 a vote to move the capital of Alaska to Wasilla lost, 116,000 to 96,000.

Wasilla has a Wal-Mart. It is Alaska’s largest store. In 2002 it sold more duct tape than any other Wal-Mart in the world.

Mapquest says it is 4,312 miles from Wasilla to Washington, D.C.

Today, Wasilla, tomorrow, some Alaska and Sarah Palin facts.

Monday, September 8, 2008

Football Recap Week 2

After two Saturdays of careful analysis and expert consideration (make that "considering the inputs of actual experts"), the result has been much ado about nothing in our college football wagering world.

South Carolina -9 1/2 @ Vanderbilt
This was a shwwwiiiing and a miss. Vandy covered the 9 1/2 by16 1/2...they won 24-17.
"L"

Akron Zips @ Syracuse -5
The Zips won 42-28, and I won, too.
"W"

Northwestern -6 1/2 @ Duke
NU goes 2-0 to start the season with a 24-20 win. A loser for me with the spread, almost a loser for the 'Cats when they allowed a closing seconds TD...that was called back.
"L"

Miami OH @ Michigan -14 1/2
Michigan won 16-6, a winner for me as I said Miami would stay inside the spread.
"W"

Miami FL @ Florida -21
The Gators 26, The Hurricanes 3. Winner!
"W"

Central Michigan @ Georgia -23.5
Georgia is the real deal. The slapped around CM 56-17. This wasn't my plan...
"L"

Stanford @ Arizona State -14 1/2
My call: "ASU is gonna put a beatdown on them this week." They did, 42-17.
"W"

Four wins, three losses this week. After a 4 and 5 opening week, we're back to even, 8 W's and 8 L's. Still better than my 401K, but all we have to show for two weeks' efforts is entertainment.

Friday, September 5, 2008

Football Picks, Week 2

There's soooo much to pick from in week 2! We're starting at 4 up, 5 down from week 1. Fortunately, there were a couple of late adds to the investment portfolio to avert a week one financial crash.



South Carolina -9 1/2 @ Vanderbilt
We had winners on each of these last week, and now they're matched up against one another. South Carolina was quite convincing, they're the pick in this matchup.

Akron Zips @ Syracuse -5
The Zips beat the spread in week 1 against Big10 pretender Wisconsin, while Syracuse was slapped around by Northwestern. I follow Akron 'cause I like the name, and I like them to take Syracuse.

Northwestern -6 1/2 @ Duke
Both winners in week 1, NU is looking to avenge a loss to Duke last year in Evanston. They may be playing in the blow by of a hurricane down there. I like the 'Cats.

Miami OH @ Michigan -14 1/2
Miami lost to Vandy last week and Michigan lost its home opener to Utah. Miami will be inside of the spread. Michigan was pathetic last week.

Miami FL @ Florida -21
A fun intrastate brawl in the Swamp, this is must see TV. Floriday will pile it up.

Central Michigan @ Georgia -23.5
Downers Grove's own Chuck Lefevour, the CMU QB, gets the big stage as his team takes on national title contender Georgia. I think that CMU raises a national eyebrow by staying close.

Stanford @ Arizona State -14 1/2
Jim Harbaugh's Cardinal used up their current ration of overachieve last week. ASU is gonna put a beatdown on them this week.

Thursday, September 4, 2008

10 Worst Corporate Reputations

Yesterday we had the 10 Best Corporate Reputations. Today, the other side of the mountain, Harris Poll's 10 Worst Corporate Reputations.
10. Daimler Chrysler
A year after Daimler bought Chrysler, the combined companies' market value was the same as before the purchase. That meant Chrysler had no value. It has since been spun off and is apparently teetering on the verge of bankruptcy...again. They've made some great vehicles over the years, invented the minivan (and sold millions of them), the Viper, the Prowler. I had 2 Chryslers, beautiful cars, but junk.
9. General Motors
Their market share appears to finally be done shrinking, and there's a handful of GM cars that are world class. Why don't folks love 'em anymore? I had a few...including a Chevy V7.
8. Chevron Texaco
Imagine, an oil company that people don't like...
7. Ford
The worst marketer of the Big 3 American auto makers. Ford F-150, the most popular vehicle over the last zillion years. It must be fashionable to say you hate American car companies.
6. Sprint
Bought NEXTEL and messed it up, dumbasses. We switched to Verizon. A lot of others switched, too.
5. Comcast
Comcast is the reason people subscribe to Direct TV.
4. Exxon
I instinctively want to put "Valdez" after Exxon, or "announces record profits".
3. Northwest Airlines
I thought they were out of business already.
2. Citgo
Another oil company that people don't like.
1. Halliburton
These guys are an oil company and more, they've done business in countries they're not allowed to be in, bribed government officials, received no-bid contracts 'cause they're hooked up in Washington, and more. They're the poster boys for screw everybody big business.

Let's review: the Big Bad 10 has the three American automakers, three oil companies, the cable TV company, a cellphone company, an airline and a grand corporate pirate. The Good 10 has three computer/internet companies, three food/beverage companies, Honda, Google, a conglomerate and Johnson & Johnson.

On personal experience, it's hard to argue.

Wednesday, September 3, 2008

10 Best Corporate Reputations

I came across a Harris poll list showing the 10 Best Corporate Reputations in the USA. Here's the 10.

10. Microsoft
Part of our daily lives, and Bill Gates is fun to watch. Bill is a modern Rockefeller, as in "more money than Bill Gates".
9. Honda
They run and run, two wheels, four wheels, outboards, generators, race cars. I love Honda.
8. Coca-Cola
A real marketing success, 'cause it doesn't do anything that's actually good for you. Even so, just thinking of the old commercial with Mean Joe Greene and the little kid makes you want to pop the cap off a bottle of Coke. I'd like to teach the world to sing...

7. 3M
Scotch Tape and Post It Notes and a million other cool things. I like 3M.
6. Berkshire Hathaway
They are Fruit of the Loom, GEICO and Helzeberg Diamonds, and a lot of other stuff. Warren Buffet, too. The talking fruit and the gecko, gotta love 'em.
5. Kraft
Mac 'n Cheese. How can you not feel good about that?

4. General Mills
The Pillsbury Dough Boy, Cheerios, Chex and lots more. I'm getting hungry.

3. Intel
Look at your computer, there's probably a sticker that says "Intel Inside".

2. Johnson & Johnson
Baby products, skin care products and Band Aids.

1. Google
The world's answer machine and lots more.

I'm not sure how they assembled the grades for this poll, but the brands that these companies own have earned a very important place in our lives. The brands are personal, reliable, predictable, and generally connote a good value. We interact with these companies throught their brands every day, and they generally do a good job of not letting us down.

Thursday, the 10 Worst Corporate Reputations.

Tuesday, September 2, 2008

The Labor Day Telethon

I continue to be amazed by the Jerry Lewis MDA Telethon on Labor Day. It is a reflection of its host, that is, I find it unusual, entertaining, bizarre, corny and it does a lot of good things for people.

I found an error in one of my previous facts within a minute of so of Jerry's arrival onstage. This was the 43rd telethon--and it is real weird Americana.

We began locally with Dean Richards, who is a very likable guy, Dina Bair, who creeps me out, and Bart Connor and Nadia Comaneche. Nadia is pretty scary, and Bart is one of those lucky people who appears to not age. Dean promised 24 hours of telethon, Bart promised us 20, and the website said 20 1/2. Whatever.

Then the coverage headed to Vegas, yeah, baby, Vegas, and to...South Point? It looks like a nice place, it's a couple-three miles south from the airport, in an area that I've never visited. Their website starts by advertising $49 rooms and an equestrian center. Nice looking, but this ain't Bellagio.

The show opened with the Cactus Cuties singing the national anthem. I did not make this up. They were four little girls who sang really nicely, if you ignored that they sound just like the Chipmunks. The Cactus Cuties were followed by a big tap dance production number, with a few dozen dancers tapping and flailing away to Stars and Stripes Forever. This was apparently a leftover from someone's Fourth of July show, with Sousa blaring as the dancers stomped away with all the false endings that every tap number gets and the crowd waving flags and how this landed here in Vegas on Labor Day is a mystery.

Jerry came out then, but he was having a lot of trouble catching his breath. They cut away to one of those public service announcements for MDA, this particular one by a smiling blond with big knockers, and who doesn't like that. Then, back to Jerry, now seated and breathing better, but before he could speak there came a disembodied voice, a female voice. Jerry looked flummoxed, the voice began to laugh about having screwed up so early in the broadcast, and Jerry introduced the owner of the voice, a used-to-be-a-hottie announcer chick named Jan Karl. Jan did that phony Vegas shtick, laughing off her mistake with feigned embarassment, and then interviewed an MDA family who her as "Jerry". The firefighters came to the rescue, dropping off a check for five million smackers and giving Jerry and some old firefighter guy a few minutes to kibbitz on stage. Classic telethon.

Celine Dionne was next, with a taped spot that was testimony to Jerry's ability to hit up the big stars. I'm not a Celine fan, but it was a fine performance. After Celine, Ed McMahon was introduced once again as official sidekick. Ed, as you may know, was about to be evicted from his Bel Aire home when Donald Trump stepped in just a few weeks ago with a personal bailout. Pretty cool move by Donny T. Ed looks and moves like an 88 year old guy, which is how old I think he is. Jerry, on the other hand, looks really, really good. For a while, Jerry needed steroids for some ailment he suffered, and his head ballooned up, creating some bizarre telethon images for a few years, like the Charlie Brown balloon from the Macy's parade had commandeered my tv. His head is normal sized again, so there's no telethon fright night. He's 82 years old, and he's still fun to watch. Jerry trots out some ancient comedy stuff, like spitting out his candy when the camera "surprises" him, and doing weird old man stuff at other times, contorting his old Jewish guy face for who knows what, maybe he's got gas or something, and his dentures must slide around, 'cause he starts sh-sh-shing words in the middle of sentences.

So all this weird stuff hits us in the first 40 minutes. Then I look up the numbers, and (insert drum roll) this man has raised nearly $1.5 BILLION for Muscular Dystrophy. Billion. So I think that even if the telethon isn't the star studded must see event that it used to be, there is no one single person who's done as much as this 82 year old guy has done for many, many people, and I'm feeling as if I shouldn't be so nasty.

Then comes the weird Chinese arm waving act, and the return of Nadia Comaneche, who looks like Boris Badenov in drag and reads just the donation amounts but not the name of the donors ("I have ten dollars, and fifty dollars, and twenty dollars and ten dollars and back to you Bart"), then starts hollering at someone to anwer a phone that's started ringing.
I love the telethon.


Monday, September 1, 2008

Lazy Labor Day


I'm not working today, other than rendering my scorecard for the weekend games.

Vanderbilt @ Miami Ohio -3, I took Vandy +3
Vanderbilt 34, Miami Ohio 13 "W"

NC State @ South Carolina Gamecocks -12, I took SC and gave 12.
South Carolina 34, NC State -0- "W"

Oregon State Beavers -3 @ Stanford, I picked Stanford +3
Stanford 36, Oregon State 28 "W"

Syracuse @ Northwestern -12, I said 'Cats but no cover.
NU 30, S'cuse 10. I never win on the 'Cats, no matter which side I take. "L"

Utah @ Michigan -4, I picked the Wolverines.
My Cousin Vinny says "two utes...radder, Utes by 2". "L"

Akron Zips @ Wisconsin -27, I took the Badgers.
Wisconsin won by 21. Jerks. "L"

Northern Illinois @ Minnesota -8.5, I took the Gophers.
What a stupid name for a team, Golden Gophers. NIU lost 31-27 and had a chance to win up to the very last play of the game. "L"

Illinois @ Missouri -8.5, I took MO.
I fell asleep. The morning Sun Times says I called it right, but who expected a 52-42 shootout?
"W"

USC -20 @ Virginia, I took the points.
HAHAHAHHAHHHAAAHHAAA, Mr. KnowItAll, dumbass... USC 52-7. "L"
Week 1: Won 4, Lost 5.