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Thursday, September 18, 2008

Smiley's first day of school and my nephew's too!

September 2nd was the first day of school for Smiley. It was also the first day of high school for my nephew. As you know, the kids were at my house that week so I took him to school. Yeah, he was nervous, but he seems to have adjusted well.

Wow, these kids look thrilled don't they?

Shall we try again?

Ah, the moody YaYa. Third times the charm?

Eh, better. Here's my nephew on that monumental first day of high shool. He ditched the bandana before I dropped him off.

And finally, here's the handsome and debonair Smiley on the first day of his second year of school (K3):


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Tuesday, September 16, 2008

The Gravestone of Franciszek Maczynski

Confession time: for years now I have been bothered by something I did on behalf of my Grandma and it's time to come clean.

Round about the turn of this century my Grandma became convinced that the gravestone of her brother would be stolen and sold for scrap. This was a  large metal cross that marked the grave of her six year old brother who'd passed in 1913, a full ten years before her birth. I'd gone with my Grandpa to paint and maintain it once upon a time and was very familiar with it.

There had been reports at the time of vandals hitting local cemeteries, but the more I talked to her the more I became convinced that this was largely a product of the paranoia that sometimes comes with age. [and possibly a result of the whispered suggestions of meddling family members.]

But it was upsetting her greatly, and she began to ask me to remove the marker before it came to harm. I refused, and refused, and refused. Finally one day a family member said my Grandma had told the cemetery she'd be replacing it with a common granite marker. I was again asked to remove it, and this time I agreed.

So in the middle of the day, in broad daylight, I attacked the cement anchor of the tombstone with a shovel and then pulled it out of the ground by myself. Looking back, I don't know how I managed. It was very heavy and still partially attached to the cement base. I was able to get it back to my car only with great difficulty.

Let me reiterate: everything was on the up and up. I'd been asked to remove it by one of the sole remaining relatives, allegedly with the approval of the cemetery office. The trouble is I didn't believe it. I was sure that my Grandma, all her wishes aside, was confused and had not/would not have been able to organize that effort. She was never senile, but she did have moments of time and areas of interest that were dominated by confusion and memory lapses.

It is a failing of my character that I did not have the stamina to brave the woman's tears and investigate her request.

Aside from that I am superstitious, and for years now whenever I drive by that cemetery I felt creeped out and wouldoften be filled with regret. Ok, let's be honest. Laugh if you will, but I've always felt it was a mark against my soul.

So when the family moved last month I came across the tombstone in the garage and my heart sank. An omen, to be sure. I could not let it slide any longer. I stopped helping my parents and with the help of my nephew loaded it into my car. [my memory of its weight was accurate. It was a bear.]

The cemetery office was closed that late on a Sunday. So my nephew and I carried it through the empty chill of the mausoleum and left it outside the office door with a note and my phone number.

It's now midway through the month so I called the office myself to see if it had been reinstalled. The office manager got on the phone and wasn't happy. Not for the reason you're thinking, however. No, she was annoyed that we'd returned it at all.

She clearly remembered speaking with my Grandma about removing the cross and (unofficially) agreed with her assessment of the risk if it had remained in the ground. To deter scrap metal collectors the cemetery had enacted a no-metal tombstone rule and her brother's grave was one of the few grandfathered markers that had survived.Of those remaining it was one of or the largest and well maintained - a perfect target. In fact I learned from the cemetary that the marker had been shipped in from Poland by my family and was deemed irreplaceable by the office.

{Time after time I find evidence that my Great-Grandparents appear better off financially then the generations that followed, despite being first generation Americans}

And so a tremendous burden was lifted, seemingly miraculously, in just a few minutes on the phone.

But by returning it we put her in a bind. It could not be put back, because by officially removing it it voided the grandfather-clause. And I was right about one thing. My Grandmother had either never made plans for a new marker or at least never followed through with a purchase. The grave has gone unmarked for the better part of a decade.

I asked about the price of a new marker, still feeling like I owed the kid a debt. If it could be classified as a child's grave, ~$550. But my great-grandparents had also pulled out all the stops to have him buried in the adult section of the cemetery, where the markers were more elaborate and better maintained. Thus the cheapest marker could be as high as ~$700. Again, it all depends on how the site would be re-classified.

If I go ahead with a new marker I'd obviously pass the hat around the family. It might be hard, given that he died 95 years ago and outside of his sole remaining sibling (now in his 90's and in a nursing home) few people have an emotional stake in the matter.

But like Lisa said when I told her later in the evening "We have to get a stone. It's not right to leave family in an unmarked grave." In the meantime the cemetary agreed to temporarily put a simple wooden cross on the gravesite.

Maybe by the spring this matter will - no pun intended - be put to rest once and for all.

Hit and Run by Lawrence Block - A review

                           

Lawrence Block's Hit and Run is the latest - and possibly final - work involving resident hitman and stamp collector John Keller. In his latest adventure Keller is lured west to complete a 'job' but told to cool his heels and wait for the go-ahead. When a prominent African-American politician is assassinated  it becomes clear Keller is the designated patsy. He hits the road in an effort to stay ahead of the law and even the score with the men who framed him.

If you go into this thinking it will be gloom and gore, ala Tarantino, think again. Block can do dark and heavy (the great Eight Million Ways to Die being an example) but at heart Block is a easygoing writer with more than a dash of humor and wit. Hit and Run is a brisk, easy read with a lighthearted air. Sure, Keller and company occasionally have to murder the odd gas station attendant or Jehovah's Witness, but that doesn't mean they can't have fun too.

I will say that the midpoint of the second act, when Keller finds love, seemed forced and rather predicable in the 'damsel in distress' mode. Other than that, and a relentless stream of trivia about stamps, I have no complaints. 

Will Keller be back? The end of this novel seems to shout 'no', but you never know.

If nothing else, there's always room for a prequel, right?

3.25 out of 5, 80 out of 100 

Fantasy Football - NFL Week 2

This was the first week of our fantasy football league, week one having passed us by because of the Thursday night game that preceded our draft.

I started Eli Manning over his brother, not fully believing Peyton had shaken off all the cobwebs. Good call that one. Not so my choice to start the San Diego defense, may their incompetent souls rot in hades.

Santana Moss gave me the only 'great' performance of the week and I needed it to even make the game a close one, since my running backs seemed to sleep through most of Sunday.

Going into the Monday night game I had a twelve point lead but my opponent, The Juicy Beavers, had Dallas' D on their active roster. [note: you'll note a trend among the names of many of the fantasy teams I play against. Don't blame me folks, I didn't pick 'em.]

I watched the Monday night game and did a victory dance once Philly passed 35 points. Our league uses negative points, and if a defense gives up that magic 35, see ya - automatic ten point deduction. The game was mine!

Except this morning I found out I lost by .23 points. Point two three points. At eight in the morning I called the Socialist, aka the Commish, to good naturedly(sp?) complain that I was slighted. No way, no way did the Dallas D rack up 12 points. They had only five sacks (1.5 points) a fumble recovery (three points) and one special teams TD (8 points). Subtract ten from that and you don't score twelve points, I know that much.

Twelve hours later he called me back. He had been confused too and questioned the total. It turns out a D is *not* penalized for any points scored directly off of turnovers. It makes a certain amount of sense, since the D isn't on the field to stop a safety from running in an interception, but it's still horse hockey. 

Sweet niblets, what does a man have to do to earn a win in this league?

Answer: I could try breaking the century  mark. That'd help. LOL.

Score Summary
SlapJacks97.97
Juicy Beavers98.20
 
     SlapJacks 0-1-0

        
    Points
    Pos
    Player
    Opp
    Status
    Projected
    Actual
    QB
    (NYG - QB)
    @StLW, 41-1314.2623.67
    WR
    (Cle - WR)
    PitL, 10-612.183.20
    WR
    (Pit - WR)
    @CleW, 10-612.9013.90
    WR
    (Was - WR)
    NOW, 29-248.5729.10
    RB
    (Cle - RB)
    PitL, 10-612.456.60
    RB
    (Jac - RB)
    BufL, 20-1612.345.40
    TE
    (Ten - TE)
    @CinW, 24-74.691.60
    K
    (GB - K)
    @DetW, 48-258.8712.00
    DEF
    (SD - DEF)
    @DenL, 39-3810.852.50
    Total   97.1197.97
        
    Points
    Pos
    Player
    Opp
    Status
    Projected
    Actual
    QB
    (NO - QB)
    @WasL, 29-2414.729.10
    WR
    (Ind - WR)
    @MinW, 18-1512.4417.30
    WR
    (Den - WR)
    SDW, 39-3810.9626.60
    WR
    (Atl - WR)
    @TBL, 24-98.466.10
    RB
    (SD - RB)
    @DenL, 39-3817.184.00
    RB
    (Ten - RB)
    @CinW, 24-712.3812.10
    TE
    (Phi - TE)
    @DalL, 41-375.961.00
    K
    (Den - K)
    SDW, 39-387.8310.00
    DEF
    (Dal - DEF)
    PhiW, 41-3713.4012.00
    Total   103.3398.20

    Seven kids, four cats, a turtle . . .

    When the house was sold my sister C had difficulty finding an apartment, only securing one with three or four days to spare. Unfortunately the landlord was in the midst of replacing the carpet, thinking the place would sit vacant another month, and couldn't get it ready in time. So on the day of the move her items went into the storage locker in that building, she went to crash at my Mom's new digs, and her three children came to stay with my family.

    Through a series of delays and a variety of reasons they remained through this past Sunday the 14th. For fifteen days my household consisted of seven children, four cats (two of theirs), a turtle, three grasshoppers, a walking stick and a praying mantis.

    Oh my.

    Honestly, we adjusted very well. We quickly absorbed the kids and their routines into our daily life, and rather seamlessly too. Sure, we only Bernie Mac'd it for two plus weeks, but I think we could have pulled it off permanently if (God forbid!) we had to, and with aplomb to boot.

    Every morning I'd roll out of the house at 7:10 with a full van, drop my nephew off at high school, swing by and drop my kids off at their school, head over to drop my nieces off at theirs, and then head over to work.

    Lisa would pick up our kids after school and I'd pick up my nieces (my nephew took the bus back). Sometimes my niece would have volleyball practice and we'd head there, and on one occasion she had a school dance.

    We'd have the kids sit down after school and complete their homework, then set to work on a decent dinner. Come nighttime my youngest niece would sleep on a foam couch in Lu's room, as would Lu herself, while niece KayKay grabbed her bed.

    In Smiley's room the new twin bed we'd gotten him was now occupied by my nephew, while the toddler bed we were set to get rid of was put back into use for Smiley.

    YaYa, being the prima donna she is, slept alone in her room.

    They put a dent in my pocketbook as my grocery bill grew, but other than that it was fine. Oh YaYa went through a period of 'You love them better than me!" but that passed, and soon enough she was content with hanging out with her cousin.

    Meanwhile Lu and KayKay bonded and Smiley became my nephews Number One fan. He should be; they are the only two males in the generation that includes not only our extended family but also our friend's children. X chromosomes appear to be in stark supply 'round here.

    One great thing about having the kids here: it gave us a little wiggle room to 'go mobile'. Lisa's at work and I'm out of eggs? Egads! Oh, never mind. I'll have KayKay stay with the kids while I go. Lisa took my keys to work with her, stranding me? Pay no mind, I'll send J. on my bike to retrieve the keys!

    {plus both of the older kids really like the New Kids new CD, with KayKay even using it for a class project. How cool is that?}

    Following a long day we even took advantage of their presence to go visit the speciality drink bar I once wrote about here. It was met with their scorn mind you, as in my family letting a drop of alcohol pass your lips is just a notch below smoking crack in a synagogue, but whatever. They need to learn that responsible adult behavior is just that - adult, and responsible.

    I was sad to see them go, I really was. Smiley seemed the most upset, but at his age he forgets quickly. 

    At least now Lisa can't refuse to *ahem* becasue she's afraid they'll hear us ;)

    Six Flags Great America

    Around (on?) Lump's birthday Lisa took the family, minus yours truly and Lump herself, to Six Flags Great America in Gurnee. Our friend Chris and her kids also went along. 

    I can't believe I lucked out and didn't have to go this year. I'll go on roller coasters but I don't enjoy them much, and the idea of a crowded park and lines stretching to eternity make me want to curl up in a ball and call for my Mommy.

    Lisa, natch, loves roller coasters and theme parks, so the kids will never be short a volunteer chaperone.

    The family loved the parade at the end of the day, were forced out of the waterpark area for an hour because of a 'Code Brown' (a fecal accident in the pool), and YaYa rode The Eagle, the old wooden roller coaster that's the park's oldest attraction, without blinking an eye. They returned home close to midnight.

    A great day for everyone - including me :)

    Monday, September 15, 2008

    Ned Yost is Toast

    After winning a lousy three games out of 14 midway through September and dragging a 5 1/2 game wildcard lead down to zero, the Brewers dismissed manager Ned Yost today. 

    They appointed Dale Sveum as interim manager and I guess they also reassigned bench coach Ted Simmons. I disagree with that part of the deal and think Simmons should have got the nod.

    It's an unusual move, firing a manager with twelve games left in the season while you're tied for a playoff spot. But while I've been a Yost-backer for years I have to say I agree with this decision. There's no excuse for their recent play, and small sample size be damned Yost has shown himself to be a manager that fails to 'close' the deal in the fall.

    Am I alone in this viewpoint? Obviously not. At work this morning an employee was complaining about her husband's 'childish' reaction to the Brewers double-header loss yesterday. Her husband had boxed up his Brewers memorabilia and threatened to burn it in his backyard.

    That's a little extreme, but I defended him. I'm sick and tired of the Brewers and this year in-year out pattern of F*ing with their fan's emotions. We are not Chicago or Boston. With all due respect to those fans I don't think this city can stomach celebrating a century of failure..

    And people wonder why I like the Yankees. When they have one season, one season, where they don't play in October their fans act like the sky is falling. Good. It shows they care about winning.

    Meanwhile, we have the sausage races.

    Win the wildcard and visit the postseason, or for all I care they can pack up and go fill the void in Montreal. We'll still see baseball at Miler Park whenever weather screws up the schedule (a tip of the hat to Zambrano on the no-hitter against Houston here yesterday).

    Bleeping Brewers.

    * * *

    BTW, congrats to my favorite player, Alex Rodriguez, for crossing the 100 RBI mark for yet another season. In 128 games, including some hindered by injury,  he's hit .307/34/100. Yikes, the guy can swing a bat.


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    The Last Day at my Childhood Home

    When I last talked about my parent's home I mentioned plans to have a last dinner together there with the family. If nothing else it was a very touching thought, as was my obsessive desire to have a final game of catch there with my Dad. Neither one took place.

    As the 31st arrived I issued repeated but polite warnings that the move would be difficult. The family had been in the house for 50+ years and the last time my parents had moved was 30 years ago; my sister K had never moved. In contrast I'd moved four times in my first three years on my own, and another two times since then.

    "We helped you move," they'd say to refute their lack of experience.As I'm sure you know, that's like saying you know what it's like to have kids because you used to babysit. 'tis not the same thing at all.

    Come the 31st both my Dad and I had to work until 2pm, leading to a late start on the day. It was not until 3 that my Dad returned with a rented truck and the fun began.

    Lisa loaded up our van repeatedly and took my sister C's items to her apartment, while my nephew and I unloaded an entire truck of furniture to my parent's new place after my Dad showed signs of fatigue. In the process I tore my shorts from belt to hem and was forced to ask passerby's for a safety pin. Finding help lacking, I tied an electrical cord around my leg to hold the garment together - at least until I felt the circulation stop ;)

    By evening we were well behind schedule and more and more items appeared from corners unseen for years. This final truckload, compiled mainly of my sister K's items, was destined for storage. It was a decision I argued against (in my mind, paid storage is for the rich or the fool, and no one in between. It seems a worthless sap of resources best spent in the present)

    My sister K quit on us early, saying an old injury was acting up. Instead she spent the night directing our efforts. Several times I good naturedly ribbed her about it, because I think the work just overwhelmed her, but to both our credit it did stay good natured, against our traditional yin and yang relationship.

    On the other hand my meek and conciliatory sister C went off on me in a foul mouthed tirade. It was worth it for the entertainment value, like seeing a shy person sing karaoke when they're drunk. Priceless.

    By ten o'clock I felt it was time to get my Mom moved to the new apartment and so began planning our exit. My sister C asked if I thought they could get more time from the new owners to finish the job. I shook my head. "This place is ours for two more hours only," I said. "When that clock strikes midnight, it's over."

    Near the end my Dad pulled me aside and told me to take whatever tools I wanted. These were items handed down from my Great-Grandfather's on both sides. My Dad had hung onto them zealously, and I find it hard to put into words the emotions that ran through me when he made that offer. It was  . . well, it felt like the most sincere 'Love you' I'd heard from him in a long time.

    [not that we don't have a good relationship, but most days the man talks less than Smiley]

    When I was in the attic a wave of nostaligia took over me. I remembered cleaning the attic with my Dad one night, the radio barking out the play by play of a Big Mac at-bat at the All-Star game. I looked around and realized the new owners had had the roof redone; the wood I was looking at would no doubt stick around for decades to come.

    So I left my mark behind.

    I began to take my Mother out of the house. "Say goodbye to the house Mom," I said.

    "Goodbye house," she said, and I cracked up.

    "What?" she said smiling.

    "Nothing, nothing. I just didn't expect you to be so literal," I said.

    I got her in my van and went back for something or another. My last sight of the house (in our family's possesion) was of a brightly lit downstairs and my Dad sitting on the concrete steps outside.

    And then I got in my van and drove away.

    Saturday, September 13, 2008

    Nothing to Lose - A Review

    Nothing to Lose is the latest of Lee Child's novels featuring Jack Reacher, an ex-MP turned wanderer. Reacher is forcibly removed from the town of Despair, Colorado on a charge of vagrancy and quickly forms a bond with a female deputy from neighboring Hope. You heard me right - Hope and Despair, one good town, one 'bad'.

    I'm not going to beat around the bush. This was awful tripe, a true waste of my time. I was so very bitter when I looked up and saw I was on page 357, with fifty more to go. "Why are you reading it then?", my nephew asked.

    "Inertia," I replied.

    Lee Child is a hell of a writer. It might seem odd given this mess, but he is. The man can craft a sentence that will make you weep. But that's irrelevant here, like saying a batter has a pretty swing as he goes 0-4.

    Forget about the cheesy Hope/Despair thing, which was actually explained cleverly. The plot here is non-existent for most of the novel and then haphazardly latches onto a dastardly deed so ludicrous it wouldn't pass muster on an episode of Voltron. 

    Near the end of the book Reacher launches into a strident anti-Iraq War, anti-Washington spiel. You would think that alone would ruin the book for a Republican like me, but you'd be wrong. Child has a right to his goofy opinions, which thankfully are expressed so poorly as to tick off even the leftists he's courting. That's not the problem.

    Political rants are fine. Breaching a characters 'self' is not. Reacher's father was a Marine, his Mother a member of the French resistance.He spent 13 years in uniform as an MP. Time and again he has stepped forth as a champion of the military structure and attention to duty.

    It is therefore impossible for me to believe that Reacher would abandon all of that, ALL of that, to aid illegal and arguably traitorous activity that is detrimental to the United States military.

    I have also had ethical concerns about this series for some time as Reacher descended more and more into caricature. He is now pompous, all-knowing, and apparently invulnerable to attack as he quickly dispatches six men at once in one scene. He burns down a police station for reasons that boil down to nothing more than his own ego and destroys the town police force. He injures a man so severely as to put him near death and shrugs off the wounds.

    Throughout the book he comes across as an oversized bully, throwing threats of violence and harassment around, and why? Because he was (correctly) classified as a vagrant and asked to leave town.

    I hesitate to even bring up the strident anti-Christian bent of the book. I'm Catholic and put about as much thought into the Book of Revelation as I do the owner's manual of my vacuum cleaner, but I do not appreciate the constant  ridicule of fundamentalist Christians in Child's work.

    At one point he dares a preacher to commit suicide and when he does not (duh!) he calls him a coward and a hypocritical non-believer. What f*ed up philosophy is floating in Child/Reacher's head to explain that? Will Child follow up with a book slamming the 'Religion of Peace',  Islam? Let's see if he has the guts for that.

    1 star out of 4, 20 out of 100.

    Friday, September 12, 2008

    Just a little housekeeping

    First to baseball. The Brewers have just flat-out sucked this month. By my unofficial count they've won all of *two* games in September and now lead the Wild Card standings by only three games over Philly. Worse yet, we're in the midst of a Phillies series now. They better pull their heads out of their [redacted] and get to winnin'.

    Second, Angel pitcher Fransisco Rodriguez (I refuse to call him K-Rod) tied the single season saves record last night. Congrats to him, but if I'm honest I have to say it's one of the most overrated 'records' in baseball. Granted, I'm influenced by sabermetric philosophy on this point, but I think saves themselves are more hype than actual value. There's something wrong with a stat that enables a pitcher to go out to the mound for a single inning with a two run lead, load the bases, bring in one run, load the bases again, and then finally get out of the inning and 'save' the game. Blah.

    Since the stat is currently celebrated we should acknowledge the record and tip our hats, but I think in my grandchildren's time closers will be far diminished in perceived value.

    * * *

    Something that irks me: when an employee's mother or wife or boyfriend calls on their behalf to report in sick, question their timecard, etc. I don't have teenagers working for me. There's no reason any employee should fail to speak for themselves if physically able.

    * * * *

    You'll note that on the sidebar I've placed a McCain logo (cue the boos) and have also chosen to display a graphic from Election Projection regarding the electoral college count. It automatically updates every few days to stay current and I think it'll prove a popular item.

    I've linked to EP and a similar site (Current Electoral Vote Predictor) from this page's 'favorites' since 2004. Truthfully, I like the layout and ease of use of  CEVP better and have enjoyed frequenting it since 2000. But while they've always leaned prominently to the left, this time around they've chosen to completely dump impartiality and spew some heavy negative vibes towards anything GOP. Since EP leans right but tries to play it down the middle I chose to go with them (and frankly, never even looked for a similar widget on CEVP).

    Have a good day.

    Thursday, September 11, 2008

    YaYa goes up North for a week

    Immediately following summer camp YaYa went up North and spent a week with the family we'd visited for the 4th of July. I freely admit bawling (secretly) the night she left, but the week passed quickly.

    Except for a bout of homesickness early on she did fine and spent the week biking, visiting the neighbor's farm, and swimming in the lake.

    Translation: Jolene's Home - I was at Jolene's home for a week. Their backyard is a lake. I like to swim in it and their neighbor is a farmer and we go to the farm a lot. We went to the Milky-Wikly [ice cream stand]. Their car has a TV.

    Thanks to Jolene and her family for hosting YaYa for the week!

    'My' pillows

    On this, the seventh anniversary of the 911 attacks, I thought I'd forego the solemn tributes that dominate the day and offer a glimpse of married humor.

    Arlo and Janis has long been a favorite comic of mine. Today's strip is stolen right out of our nighttime routine. Lisa is obsessed with 'her' pillows, which include a body pillow and of late 'big fat kitty'. Big Fat Kitty is the stuffed animal LuLu got at the same time YaYa purchased the long-haired cat that I mistakenly shrunk in the dryer. Apparently, he makes quite a good pillow.

    Then again, because of a pillow shortage caused by a houseful of guests, I slept with an alligator shaped stuffed animal as a pillow last night.  

    Tuesday, September 9, 2008

    Girl Scout Camp

    For a week in July Lisa volunteered for both YaYa and LuLu at the Girl Scout's Camp Silverbrook. Four days out of five it was day camp, with a single nights sleepover (and then only for YaYa and the older Brownies.). I had nothing to do with this event and simply enjoyed the relative quiet while Lisa ran the show.

    Everyone at the camp went strictly by nicknames. Lisa became Ruby, YaYa was 'Squirt', and LuLu 'Toto'.
    Photobucket

    They did oragami and made ragdolls, swam and did tye-die, and generally just had a blast.
    Photobucket
    Photobucket
    I can tell you this much: when they came home I was subjected to the sight of Lisa and the girls singing ridiculous songs about bananas and dancing around the front porch. :) I have a feeling they'll be going back next year.

    My Grandma's Painting

    This is a photo I took of a painting my Grandma did in high school. It won an award at the time (1939 I believe). She was always proud of it and hung it in her house. Anyhow, here it is.

    On Football and the Kids

    I had third pick in my fantasy football draft, and with the two best running backs gone I'd decided to go with a star quarterback. "Peyton Manning or Tom Brady," I thought to myself. I debated for much of the three minute time limit and then, largely on a whim, chose Peyton and left Brady on the table.

    Hee hee. Go Danny. Not that I wanted Brady to break his knee (but not that I'm crying for the Pats either)

    Pointless story showcasing the Holy Favre mentality in Wisconsin:

    An employee came up to me today and said she'd skipped the Packer game because she hoped they'd 'fall on their as*es' and that Favre would take the Jets deep into the playoffs.

    To me, this is like saying you want the U.S. to collapse because Kerry lost in '04. It's about more than just one guy, isn't it?

    "The hell with Brett Favre," I said.

    She was shocked. "He led us to the Superbowl," she said.

    "Yeah, eleven years ago. Whoo-hoo."

    "The Packers had no business saying they didn't want him," she continued. "That was lousy of them."

    Lousy? To take a man at his word (on retirement) and act accordingly? Like I said yesterday, a large number of people here are rooting against the Pack. It's sacrilege.

    * * * *

    Anyhow, here's some random pics of the kids.

    Aaron Rodgers 1, Critics 0

    Tonight I hosted the D. family for dinner and the Monday Night Football season opener. Naturally the matchup was Pack-Vikings up in Green Bay. Great game. A sloppy contest, and one where I question the conservative play calling of the Pack, but a great game none-the-less.

    Aaron Rodgers had so much to lose tonight. Lots of fools, er, 'people', were just itching for him to screw up so they could mourn Favre and curse the Packers GM. Heck, you know Favre was sitting at home hoping for a Pack loss too, although I'd hope he harbored no ill will for Rodgers. 

    Instead Aaron gave them all a solid, no-nonsense game. 18 for 22, 178 yards passing with 1 TD and no interceptions, and 35 yards and a TD rushing. [There was also a great passing TD that was called back on a penalty and does not show in the stats]

    The kid can play, and he is cool and calm under pressure. There was a great downfield pass that should be on Sportscenter rotation tomorrow, and after his rushing TD he attempted the Lambeau Leap (pictured above). The sincere affection the crowd showed him was heartwarming.

    Is he Steve Young to Farve's Montana? Waaay to early to say, but I'm happy for the guy and proud of his proverbial day in the sun.

    Sunday, September 7, 2008

    NKOTB Videos

    My [permanent] recording capabilities have been hanidicapped by - oddly enough- the presence of my Time Warner DVR. If anyone out there can record a DVD of NKOTB's appearances on The View, The Today Show (both appearances), and any/all other clips, PLEASE let me know.

    Meanwhile here's a few clips off the album to stir your interest. This first one is The Today Show appearance promoting 'Single' with Ne-Yo. The actual video is available on You-Tube but unavailable for embedding.

    Here's 'Full Service' w/ New Edition

    A great ballad called 'Don't Cry'

    The funky 'Grown Man', w/ the Pussycat Dolls

    and finally 'Offically Over'

     

    Saturday, September 6, 2008

    My Fantasy Football Draft

    I took part in a fantasy football draft tonight at Puddler's Hall, a bar established in 1873 and now owned by a friend of Socialist. It's a nice place, bright by bar standards and friendly. Stop by if you're ever in Milwaukee.

    It was a 15 round serpentine draft that took the better part of two hours for our 10 man league to complete. I hate serpentine drafts. There's no reason for my #3 slot to have to wait through 14 other picks before it was again my turn.

    Overall I think I did well. I got a few big names and a finagled a couple of sleepers. The key to knowing you've done well with a pick? When you announce your player and one or more of the other guys yell  out a frustrated 'F***!'.

    Here's my team. You can play 1 QB, 2 RB, 3 WR, 1 TE, 1 Kicker and 1 Defense per week.

    QB: Peyton and Eli Manning

    RB: Jamal Lewis, Fred Taylor, Ricky Williams, A. Peterson of the Bears

    WR: Hines Ward, Marvin Harrison, Braylon Edwards, Santana Moss

    K: Mason Crosby, David Akers

    Def: San Diego and Seattle

    TE: Crumper

    I like my pics of Williams and Peterson. I think both have something to prove and will do well. Or not. It's a head-to-head league, so I'll know some immediate results as soon as this weekend.

    My team name: SlapJacks

    Friday, September 5, 2008

    Beneath - A Review

                                          

    In Beneath Nora Zehetner plays a young woman who as a youth was responsible for the fiery accidental death of her sister. Haunted by images of her sister clawing at her closed casket and plagued a history of (perceived) mental illness, she returns to visit her estranged family. Her niece claims a 'Dark Thing' in the walls is responsible for deaths in the family, and in the labyrinth that is their family home a terrible secret might dwell . . .

    Beneath is  MTV's first foray into the horror market (yes, I know. MTV. I almost shut off the DVD the moment I saw the logo on the screen.). It's not a bad movie. Nothing terribly original, but on the other hand nothing overly cliche. Well, excepting the traumatized young woman with the scary visions; been there, done that.

    If you go into it with the right mindset the ending is a legitimate twist, although my suspicious nature jumped to the right conclusion a few minutes ahead of the mark. There is one thing - the action of the niece - that makes the finale a little morally troubling, but overall a positive effort.

    Oh, and not too bloody or gory, save for one scene of the burn victim. Suitable for viewing by tweens and older.

    2.75 out of 4, 68 out of 100.


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