Saturday, April 14, 2007
JORGE POSADA MIGHT HAVE A DIFFERENT REACTION: I keep a 2004 baseball card of Dave Roberts on my desk. From time to time it gets buried under the other papers. Then on days when I sort all the papers on my desk (such as today), I glance at the card and two thoughts immediately come to mind. First, I recall that amazing stolen base of his during Game 4 of the 2004 ALCS. That was perhaps the most important moment during the championship run of the Red Sox that year.
The second thought, though, is the one really makes me reflect. I am inspired by people who rise to the occasion when the stakes are high. There comes a time in all of our lives when we are on the spot and there is no gray area. A time when the outcome is binary: succeed and you are a hero; fail and your hopes are vanquished. A time when a true professional simply gets it done. With everyone in the world expecting him to steal, Dave Roberts pulled it off on the big stage. That stolen base is more or less the distilled essence of our lives. Dave Roberts is a hero of mine. As I gaze at his card, I remind myself that when such a moment comes in my life I want to be sure to do what Dave Roberts did.
{credit for part of this post belongs to one who prefers to remain anonymous}
Friday, April 13, 2007
As an example of how these kids and not-so-much kids (Timmy must be 40 years old by now) just get loopier and loopier, where previously it took at least a few episodes for Tina and Brad to get thrown out for punching people, this time sociopath CT did it -- totally unprovoked, except maybe by his own homophobia -- before the first challenge. Just great TV. Wish they made it in HD.
And yet: did they think I wasn't going to notice the hamhandedly plotty placement of the Fat Bitch poster where Who Dat Ninja? previously hung?
Meanwhile, the guy driving the pickup truck that ran Corzine off the road should really just step forward posthaste. Between the Jersey state troopers and the not-exactly-meager resources available to Corzine personally, it's not like he's not going to be found.
Thursday, April 12, 2007
As one TWoPer put it tonight, I'm afraid of how much I love this show.
Other than Jane Krakowski swinging from the ceiling, my experience with the 2003 Antonio Banderas revival constitutes a couple hours of my life that I can never get back.
Added: The L.A. Times has an excellent remembrance and Washington Post "Book World" columnist Michael Dirda hosts a chat about Vonnegut at 2 p.m. EDT today.
(Yes, Jack's lack of questions and the rationale underlying said rabid lack of curiosity is of course annoying, but I'm glad to see that for a change, there are people looking for answers. Even if they don't get them.)
More in the comments.
Wednesday, April 11, 2007
My desire to throttle The Complicated One notwithstanding, tonight's booting was absolutely the right one. Sometimes a pretty face is a model, but sometimes it's just a pretty face. (And sometimes it's not even all that pretty, but that's subject to personal taste.)
Sepinwall's got more, and Maureen Ryan has the transcript of Coach Taylor's St. Crispian's Day Speech.
Next week: country music, with Martina McBride.
In completely unrelated news, but I ought to throw it in somewhere, DC-area thingthrowers (hat-tip to Ms. Cosmopolitan) with nothing to do around lunchtime on Thursday can see me at an ACS panel on campaign finance law.
Gretchen requests something light and fun, but sufficiently well-written that she need not cringe while reading, and offers chick-lit and fantasy as potential genres. As for me, my tastes run toward historical fiction and cultural/social history, as well as fantasy. You may exclude anything that requires unduly heavy mental exertion. (As an example, I do not do Umberto Eco under any circumstances.)
Thank you for your attention to this pressing matter.
To Spoon's I Turn My Camera On. To Israel Kamakawiwo'ole's Over the Rainbow. Hard to explain, but mesmerizing.
Edited to add: Okay, I loved it already, but now that I know that Keepon was designed to help teach social interaction to children by modeling certain nonverbal social cues -- eye contact, awareness, excitement, curiosity -- Keepon is my hero.
It took me a while to think about this, but in the end the answer was clear (although I'll mention a strong #2 in the comments). For me, it is the central verse of Stevie Wonder's "As":
"We all know sometimes life's hates and troubles
Can make you wish you were born in another time and space
But you can bet your life times that and twice its double
That God knew exactly where he wanted you to be placed
So make sure when you say you're in it but not of it
You're not helping to make this earth a place sometimes called hell
Change your words into truths and then change that truth into love
And maybe our children's grandchildren and their great-great grandchildren will tell"
Refunds aplenty, free Insider subscriptions and free FFL teams are our compensation. You can chart the progress of A League With Thrown Baseballs here.We have explored and tested every possible solution and it is clear that the nature of the issues leave us with a single, necessary action to get the game back on track and ensure the integrity of the season. Late on Wednesday night the ESPN Fantasy team will:
1. Revert all teams to their opening day rosters (Sunday, April 1).
2. Set the starting lineup of each team's opening day roster as the active roster for all games played to date (April 1 - April 11).
3. Retroactively apply scoring for the entire season to date based on that roster.
4. Void all transactions to date (trades, waiver pickups, roster moves, etc.).
Tuesday, April 10, 2007
- Lovell House, Richard Neutra, or Lovell Beach House, Rudolph Schindler
- Robie House, Kauffman House (Fallingwater), and Ennis-Brown House, Frank Lloyd Wright
- Chemosphere, John Lautner
- Gropius House, Walter Gropius
- Monticello, Thomas Jefferson
- Johnson House (Glass House), Phillip Johnson, and Farnsworth House, Mies van der Rohe (thanks, Adlai)
- Vanna Venturi House, Robert Venturi
- Gehry House, Frank Gehry
- Gamble House and Blacker House, Greene & Greene
- Case Study House #22, Pierre Koenig, or if you prefer, Charles Eames's Case Study House # 8, or if you're still not decided, Koenig's Case Study House # 21
Fienberg weighs in: "Melinda's voice is, as always, flawless, but J-Lo told us that this week's theme is all about passion, which is where Melinda goes a little flat. She seems to confuse 'Squinting' with 'Being Sexy,' which is a fairly common mistake, particularly on Idol."
And I agree with him: LaKisha's in trouble this week. This may have been her "New Attitude".
Simple Pleasure, American Style - New York Times
Any advice for this journey would be appreciated.
Monday, April 9, 2007
And I'm looking forward to the part of the season where the Mariners and Indians try to find enough room in the schedule for four doubleheaders. Maybe they can just pick a warm day and play a quintupleheader.
Bibliography: Deadspin; USS Mariner.
A Fictional Video on MySpace Puts a TV Show’s Promotion Into Hyperspace - New York Times
Tom Shales - 'Thank God,' Eventually It Ends - washingtonpost.com
Sunday, April 8, 2007
e.t.a. Matt Zoller Seitz too: "Sunday's action was all about enforcing hierachies and deepening the status quo; it was a demonstration of Tony's inability to escape being Tony even when escape is the whole point."
- The biggest problem is in Act II--the two ballads "Legally Blonde" and "Find My Way" stop the show, and not in the good way. The former in particular is one of those Songs That Goes Like This, and I understand the narrative purpose and all, but it needs to be more upbeat. "Find My Way" is better, but it suffers from being the finale--given that the show is all about pep and joy, it's kind of odd to close on a low point. There' s an easy fix to that one by tacking a reprise of "What You Want" in at the end.
- The sets are a tad minimalistic, especially in part of the "Legally Blonde" number--a fair amount of barren stage and such. You can get away with this for a small show in a small house (e.g., The Apple Tree) or when the show itself calls for it (A Chorus Line), but in a big house for a big show?
- The sound mixing needs to be fixed. I found it hard to hear a number of the lyrics.
- Michael Rupert is fine as Professor Callahan (the Victor Garber part, and I'd love to see Garber take a crack at it), but needs a bit more venom to him, especially in "Blood In The Water."
- There are still a few minor choreography and lighting snafus, particularly in the Act II opener. Iron these out ASAP, and this should be a contender for best choreography--the jump rope number and, yes, "Bend And Snap" are spectacular.
- Overall, the show and its performers are at about a 7 on the energy scale. I was in the (half-empty) balcony, and for the show to truly take off, I think the energy needs to be amped up a bit. I might have had a different read from the orchestra, though, and that's a tough balancing act. In particular, Laura Bell Bundy (as Elle) needs to just push it a little harder, since she has to carry the show.
I'm sure several of those (the mixing and the tech issues at least) will be fixed by the end of previews, and I think the show can look forward to decent notices and a decent run. ALOTT5MAites who are fans of theatre and legal stuff will be well served.
Today, again, you need to read him, because, wow, what an experiment: Weingarten convinced world-renowned classical violinist Joshua Bell to play his Stradivarius at the L'Enfant Plaza DC Metro Station during forty-three minutes of the morning rush hour to see what kind of reaction it would draw. Would his greatness be recognized out of context?
It wasn't exactly stage fright, but there were butterflies," [Bell] says. "I was stressing a little."Read the article. Contains video.
Bell has played, literally, before crowned heads of Europe. Why the anxiety at the Washington Metro?
"When you play for ticket-holders," Bell explains, "you are already validated. I have no sense that I need to be accepted. I'm already accepted. Here, there was this thought: What if they don't like me? What if they resent my presence . . ."
e.t.a.: Weingarten's live chat is now online. Comprehensive and cool.