Search This Blog
Monday, October 13, 2008
Our Trip to the Cave of the Mounds - August 2008
As a child the one and only time we went on vacation was 1982 or '83, when my Dad won some tickets for Wisconsin Dells from a radio station. We went there on a day trip, ate at a A&W, toured a mock-up of an old fort, and saw Tommy Barlett's water show in the evening. As once-in-a-childhood vacations go a 12 hour in-state trip isn't exactly gay Paree, but I still remember it with a smile.
That summer my folks also took us on a day trip to see The Cave of the Mounds, a 1692 foot long cave located in central Wisconsin. This I remember with great fondness, as I've always fancied myself a bit of a spelunker (were it not for my fear of the dark, close spaces, solitude, and dripping water. I kid, I kid.)
Really tho', I've always had a soft spot for the place and I've talked it up to the kids over the years. So this August the collective we (minus Lump) spent the day on a trip to visit the National Natural Landmark.
The cave, which was discovered accidentally during some quarry work in the Depression, has an entrance/exit that neccessitates you passing through an extensive gift shop.
Tours leave every half hour and there are always more than one group in the cave at a time. We barely made it to the start of our group in time, but I almost wish we'd been tardier. The tour starts with a video presentation on the cave's history and geology, and good luck having three kids sit through that without squirming. When the video was done it was time for the fun to begin.
Obviously a cave is difficult to photograph properly and I didn't have much time to perfect the art, so bear with some of the pictures.
Many areas of the cave are accessible to the public and well lit, with concrete paths and ample elbow room (considering you're in a cave). Not so in some areas.
During some of these tight spaces I marveled at the fact that my Mom was once limber enough to complete the tour. The kids began to get a little claustrophobic, especially LuLu, and I'll forever be grateful to a woman in the party who talked LuLu through one twist and turn with kind words of encouragement.
This is the 'end' of the cave. Not the end of the tour, but of the navigable area of the cavern. Past this point the cave exists but in an unstable condition unsafe for human exploration.
Here's a baby seal made of stone. See it?
The kids sure did.
These next few are of . . . something or another. Sorry, the pictures don't match the brilliance of the cave so it's hard to match them with my memory. Still, I'm pretty sure the first shot is a zoomed picture of a huge fossil that's visible in the roof of the cave. I can't recall its stated age, but I believe it's up there in the three digit millions range.
Here's a stalagmite formation that looks like a parrot. (StalaTITEs hold tight to the ceiling, StalagMITES might get there someday. I remember that from '82, and they rattled it off again on the tour).
You're not allowed to touch anything on the tour, lest you damage or interfere with the natural processes at work. (any photo of a broken formation is due not to man but to an ancient flood. Photos of the cave's initial exploration show the same damage)There is only one well-rubbed formation visitors are allowed to touch.
On the tour they like to take you into a dark area and then turn on the lights, darzzling you with the hidden majesty of the cave.
At the end of the tour there's a little alcove and both Lisa and I couldn't wait to show it to the kids. It was dark, but when the lights turned on an entire Smurf villiage would be revealed. I remember it clearly from my prior visit, as did Lisa.
But sadly (and stupidly) the Federal Government made them remove the 'commercial' display in order to qualify as a landmark. What a crock, and what a wasted opportunity to seal the trip forever in the kids minds.
On the way out we spent a lot of time in the giftshop, and each kid walked away with a fancy stone or two and some Girl Scout patches for the Lu and YaYa, while Lisa and I picked up a black stone elephant to complement the African carvings my Dad handed down to me.
After the giftshop we took part in activites outside, but that's another post.
We all walked out of the cave suitably impressed, and everyone agreed this *can't* be the only time we visit the Cave. We'll cerainly have to bring back Lump when she's older. What a great way for the family to spend a day.
Sunday, October 12, 2008
Like Joe Mac says, it's officially ovah
Like the lyric's say, it's officially over.
Yesterday I added the 123 comments from my off-site guest book to the corresponding entries, threw the pictures of the Inauguration on three posts I did in January of '05 . . . and then I sat around looking for something else to do, some reason to stick around and delay leaving my beloved AOL site.
In the end there was nothing, and I realized I was hanging around solely for sentimental reasons. I logged onto Blogger and portered the site over, then spent some time trying to gussy up the site. It's still pretty plain, but I'll work on it.
So that's it. Just like that 3 years, 11 months and a week of blogging is kaput. Sure, I'll carry on and I don't want to make this into more than it is, but AOL was the scrapbook for a HUGE portion of my life. Not chronologically of course, but in terms of pure value.
Looking over my old entries I saw YaYa's first ever day of school, pictures of LuLu as a rambunctious toddler (man, do you forget how they change when you see them everyday!), and shots of Smiley as a baby - in fact, I remember running home from the hospital to post a picture of him the very day he was born.
[Last night I showed him those posts and he argued, in Smiley-speak, that I was wrong. 'Bay-bee!' he said forcibly, time and again. Apparently he believes he was put on this Earth fully formed as a toddler ;)]
There are comments about my Grandma's reactions to posts, and there is the post about her passing away. There are posts about big events like that and small but special things that I'd long forgotten, like LuLu having a rare accident on the floor during her potty-training or stopping for a burger in D.C.
During the four years this blog chronicled our family grew by two children, we bought our own home, I was promoted and left third shift, and most importantly the New Kids on the Block reunited (I kid, I kid - that's no more than the 10th most important item from those years).
Two things I notice from the old posts: I had a consistent and public desire to improve the product that was AOL Journals, dating back to posts of April of '05. Many of the items I groused about led to the insular, niche mentality that doomed these journals, and it's sad to see the writing on the wall even then. Second, while I look more or less the same ol' same ol', my wife looks 10,000 times hotter than she did when we were in the midst of expanding this family. That may sound like a half-assed compliment, but trust me - I thought she was hot then, but I'm a much bigger fan today :)
Anyhow, adios AOL. To paraphrase whoever, we really knew ye.
You can find me now at www.slapinions.blogspot.com
If you typically enter via www.slapinions.net, it will still direct you here until the end of the month, when I'll have it start to point to Blogger.
See you on the flip side and remember - last one out, please turn out the lights.
Goodbye!
Tags: The End
Saturday, October 11, 2008
Jonah's Wail
In my haste to transfer material to blogger I almost forgot 'Jonah's Wail' an AOL Journal my nephew kept (briefly) in 2005-2006, when he was eleven years old. He quickly abandoned it for myspace, but I figure I'll preserve his words here for posterity.
* * * * *
Super Bowl
Yea !!!!!!! the Steelers won the Super Bowl, I knew they were going to win the whole time .I went over to my uncles house and watched the game at his house we had a good time.He mentioned it in his blog which you can go to if u click on the link.Well I had a good time all the way until the Half time show,and I know I'm not the only one who thinks it sucked .My aunt made a good point and said "It should entertame kids my age ." And I'm only 11 yrs old. Well I had a good time and I hope you had a good time watching the Super Bowl yesterday (if you care for sports). Bye
goofbar54 at 4:59:01 PM CST Permalink | Blog about this entry | Add to del.icio.us | digg this
This entry has 2 comments: Show Recent | Add your own
Monday, January 16, 2006
Sk8ting
Hi again, for the past month or so my friends and I have been skting .We have alot of fun we all have speed skates expect one kid but he barely goes....I'm a pretty good skater and I like going fast on skates not slow (expect for when its a slow song)Before I used to go skating like every Friday,and then I stopped going because it got boring.So then like 10 months later my friend convinced me to go and now I go alot.So I guess Its a new start of an old hobbie.Well thats all I have to talk about on this topic so I'll see you people later.
Bye
goofbar54 at 9:31:38 PM CST Permalink | Blog about this entry | Add to del.icio.us | digg this
This entry has 0 comments: Add your own
B-Ball game
Hi,people on New years Eve I went to a Harlem Globetrotters game,at the Bradely Center.I went with a few kids at school and it was really fun.My friends and I had a good time ,and we just tried to embaress ourselves in the following ways:Yelling out crazy things, trying to start he wave ( it didnt work) and wearing funny things on our arms and head and alot of other stuff. (I'm sure)I have a question for you people......How was your New Years Eve ?,and what did you do ?
Bye !~
goofbar54 at 9:25:30 PM CST Permalink | Blog about this entry | Add to del.icio.us | digg this
This entry has 0 comments: Add your own
Lack of Posts
Sorry for the lack of posts I've been hanging out with friends and stuff latley so ice been busy
goofbar54 at 9:15:49 PM CST Permalink | Blog about this entry | Add to del.icio.us | digg this
This entry has 0 comments: Add your own
Thursday, November 10, 2005
Floridia Trip
Hi people,
Ok starting sunday morning I'll be in Florida,the trip is good and bad at the same time.....how you ask well I'll have fun in Flordia but back at school my homework is just gonna be pileing up and up.So I just wanted to tell youso The lack of posts so you do think i quit putting up posts. Ok bye !
goofbar54 at 3:19:39 PM CST Permalink | Blog about this entry | Add to del.icio.us | digg this
This entry has 2 comments: Show Recent | Add your own
Sunday, October 30, 2005
Happy Halloween !!!
Happy Halloween people,
how was your Halloween ? Halloween is kinda mostly a kids holiday but some adults goo around witha mask r something scaring children or other adults. I like Halloween for a few reasons: 1: Free Candy ! (what kid doesnt like that ) 2:Scaring people and wearing costums,and thats all I can think of at the moment but...you get the idea. Also for thoose who decided to play the game runescape , well heres a little tip .... ok now jagex(creators of the game) on holidays they put like a chacter on the game and they hand out free stuff and tomarrow I think there gonna have the holiday drop .So if you play it u can get the fre item. Well thats all I have to say so i hope you have a good Halloween !
Bye
goofbar54 at 8:53:45 PM CST Permalink | Blog about this entry | Add to del.icio.us | digg this
This entry has 2 comments: Show Recent | Add your own
Saturday, October 29, 2005
late entry
Hi people,
Im very sorry for not posting any entrys in a while. I've Just started playing a game called runescape. I guess its kinda a kid game but I saw alot of adults who play it.The game is mostly a giant chat room,where u can talk to any one in the world (who plays).well the website is www.runescape.com go to this site to play the game.Ok so if you decide to play it tell me and ill make another post and update you on any new up grades ,or update you on how im doing. Also if you play the game make a comment and I'll talk about it in a post. So again sorry for a delay of posts.
Bye
goofbar54 at 2:34:36 PM CDT Permalink | Blog about this entry | Add to del.icio.us | digg this
This entry has 0 comments: Add your own
Tuesday, August 16, 2005
State Fair
Hi again,
last week i went to the Milwaukee State Fair,I went with my frined and his family we went on like every ride again again and again we had so much fun.The Wisconsin State Fair is best known for it cream puffs,cream puffs are like bake dough with whip cream in the middel.I dont have much more to say about this post so i can say anymore,so
Bye
goofbar54 at 10:15:34 PM CDT Permalink | Blog about this entry | Add to del.icio.us | digg this
This entry has 1 comments: Show Recent | Add your own
Thursday, July 28, 2005
B-Day
Hi people,
On July 20th was my B-day I turned 11,I had my b-day at this place called MegaQuest. The place is so big it has a mini ferris wheel,go karts, tilt-a-whirl,lil rollercoasters,arcade and a 2 gift shops.1 is where you use tickets to by stuff 1 is where you use money buy stuff, at the money giftshop you can by brand name stuffbut it costs alot.Then I had a sleepover at hotel and we had alot of fun.
bye
goofbar54 at 11:20:48 AM CDT Permalink | Blog about this entry | Add to del.icio.us | digg this
This entry has 3 comments: Show Recent | Add your own
shot post
sorry about the delay of post's I've been pretty busy
goofbar54 at 11:13:46 AM CDT Permalink | Blog about this entry | Add to del.icio.us | digg this
6 Flags Great America
Hello,
This weekend I went to 6 Flags in Illinois ,I went for my birthday and went with my Dad,sister ,step-brother,aunt ,and her boyfriend.One day we went to the theme park the second day we went to there new water park ! We had a lot of fun at the theme park and at the water park,but the water park gets really really crowed and its has extremely long lines.But people who like amusment go to 6 Flags Great America!!!!
Bye
goofbar54 at 9:27:14 PM CDT Permalink | Blog about this entry | Add to del.icio.us | digg this
This entry has 2 comments: Show Recent | Add your own
Tuesday, July 12, 2005
special events
Hi people,
Today was the All Star game ,the National League v.s Amercian League {if your not the biggest baseball fan}. I went over to my uncles house and he and I watched the game ,and we also had a bbq before the game so it was like we were at the game but we really weren't.
In Milwaukee W.I we have the worlds biggest music festival called SummerFest.It began Jun. 30 which at like 10:00p.m they had something called the Big Bang, and they set off tons of fireworks.Then it ended on the 10th of July.If you have any events you know of in your state or any where send it in to me and I'll write about.
Bye.
Wednesday, October 8, 2008
Blogger Progress, Smiley, Runway
I portered over my test blog to blogger today and it went very well. As for Slapinions proper, there is still housekeeping to do before the move. As a 'for instance' I'm adding pics to my posts from my time at the Presidential Inauguration in '05, and I need to move over all the comments from the non-AOL comment site I used for a few years. I could do it post-move, but I'd rather wrap it up nice and tidy in a format I'm used to working in.
* * *
On a personal note I'm eating like SH*T - well, not quite. I haven't had a candy bar in two months and I have avoided pizza in recent weeks, but I've hit the brownies and starches hard. Argh, scratch that. At work (where the problem seems to be the worst) I had pizza the other day, nasty greasy eat-it-with-a-spoon pie :(. I also chowed on ice cream cake today, but we'll explain that later on in our program.
I have, however, kept up the exercise, taking the kids out for bike rides even as the weather grows harsher. Today, for example, I tossed the three youngest in the bike trailer and headed out for a brisk 15 minute ride. Hills that used to stop me now fly by with barely a notice, which is great, and I've grown rather fond of the 'burn' in my calves after a bit. Now I just have to find a good winter activity to keep me at a 'reasonable' size .
* * * *
Great family night. LuLu, who really enjoys helping in the kitchen, helped Lisa make breaded pork chops and scalloped potatoes. We had to pass the pork off as 'chicken' to the kids, even the assistant chef. They tore it up, but tell them it's anything else and they'd go 'ewwww'.
Afterwards the bike ride and some time in the backyard, where Smiley gently scolded Lump by saying 'Bay beee', which floored me. When I asked him to repeat it he couldn't, but it was clear as day.
Later the whole family (minus the sleeping Lump) cuddled on our bed to watch Project Runway. LuLu is a big fashion nut and nearly every morning it's an ordeal to get her dressed because she wants things 'just so', so we knew she'd love Runway.
YaYa and Lisa rooted for Leanne, Lu and I for Kenley. Both girls wanted Jerrell voted off because of his gender and got their wish, but I'd have kicked Kato (sp?) to the curb myself.
[I was proud of Lu for identifying Kato by saying 'the woman with the dark skin' rather than as 'the black girl'. It seems a miniscule point in print, but out loud it was a nice confirmation that, at least as of now, she views color as a secondary or minor trait.]
During the show Smiley sat fidgeting, bored out of his mind. And then again, out of nowhere, he said 'Bay beee', and this time could repeat it on command. Lisa and I gave him a big hug and told him we were proud of him, and you should have seen the grin on that kids face!
A teacher at the girl's school said Smiley would do fine there next year. I'd have bought the argument if she hadn't gone ahead and said she'd had 'lot's of kids that didn't talk at the start of the year' but wound up jibber-jabbering by spring. I like the woman and she's a fine teacher, but I'm about up to my neck in yahoos writing off his problem as 'something that'll just go away' or that came about because we don't 'make' him talk.
My vote - and Lisa and I differ here - is that he stays where he is, not only because they know him and his needs, but because the girl's school is at times a vain place, and I won't have my son singled out as an 'oddity' by anyone.
We'll see.
Tuesday, October 7, 2008
NKOTB at the Allstate Arena 10/4/08 - Part I
You know the hardest part of arranging the trip to see NKOTB in Chicago wasn't finding a hotel, paying for the tickets, or finding a babysitter; it was deciding who we'd ask to use the third ticket that Jolene had forfeited.
We asked my nephew, but he had a date for homecoming. Our niece KayKay briskly turned down what would have been her first ever concert, unquestionably out of the inherent anxiety/fear that runs through my gene pool. Her claim that she didn't like them was absurd, since she's even used NKOTB for a music class project. Whatever.
We thought about YaYa but weren't confident she'd keep her cool. So in the end we decided to give the ticket to our friend Chris. Saturday morning we did the standard routine with swim class, dropped the kids off, picked up Chris and headed for Chi-town.
We got to our hotel and I went in to check-in. The lobby was already filled with New Kids fans, mainly young women with an assortment of homemade and official shirts declaring their love for one or all of the group. There was a married couple checking in at the same time, and they were attending the concert, so at the very least I knew going into it I wouldn't be the only guy at the show.
The three of us headed down to Chili's for dinner but it was packed to the rafters with New Kids fans, none of whom were probably older than ten when the band broke up. One shirt read 'MILF', and another 'I'm Legal Now', so there was little doubt what they hoped the guys would be doing after the gig. We headed out for a neighboring restaurant, then picked up some booze and headed back to our room to get ready.
Man I hate pictures of myself. They just sooooo fail to capture the rugged glory of my features.
[overheard in the liquor store: a cell phone call where the guy in front of me was ridiculing his friend for not coming to the concert with him. "You screwed up man, there are THOUSANDS of chicks here and every one of 'ems gonna leave that arena dying for a man . ."]
When the time came we walked to the Allstate Arena, a five minute stroll down the road.
We got there plenty early and spent a good half hour walking around trying to get to the front of the already crowded merchandise stands. I had more success than Lisa and Chris - a man of my size typically doesn't make a beeline for the pink baby-doll 'Click Click Click' shirts - but the one item we had our eyes on was sold out in everything above 'medium'. It was a black hoodie with NKOTB across the back shoulders and the number 08 below it - $75 I think.
Anyhow, Lisa and Chris got some more drinks while I went to the restroom. As you can imagine the men's room was rather deserted while the ladies room line stretched on forever. As I was standing at the urinal doing my business a group of women, sick of waiting, came in and walked right past me. "Hi," one said. "Hello," I said. It was he first and only time in my life I've thought a companion in a men's room was hot (minus that time at band camp of course).
Later I brought this up to a security guard I was chatting with and he promised swift retribution. "Why?" I said laughing. "For a second I thought I was in the opening scene of a porno. It's all good."
Our seats were Section 216 Row Q Seats 58-60. Not great seats by any means, since Jolene's original plan to attend meant finding three and only three consecutive seasts, but they were aisle seats and with a good view of the stage and a video screen. Since it lacks a zoom my camera phone does a lousy job of capturing the true distance, but here goes:
While the opening acts were on stage (Colby O'Donis and Natasha Bedingfield) I wandered off to a now deserted merchandise stand.
I bought a poster ($10), a tour book ($25), a keychain ($5) and passed on the tees. I asked for a set of $10 magnets first and foremost but the girl left that to last, and in the meantime another customer had requested the last one on the table - uh uh sister. I had a hissy and said that I'd ordered it first. You better believe I walked away with them.
At 9 o'clock the lights dimmed again and it was time for the New Kids to take the stage . ..
Fantasy Football Week 4 (NFL week 5) and Baseball Predictions
Well I squeaked out a five point victory in my fantasy football league, bringing me to an even 2-2 record and sixth place in the league. A nice improvement, sure, but I still only racked up seventy lousy points. Yikes.
* * *
Note that Aaron Rodgers did what I predicted and played through the pain rather than give in to the crazy pro-Favre propaganda in Wisconsin. It was a gritty performance marred by a costly interception, which if nothing else should bring back fond memories of the Favre era for those blowhards.
* * * *
My baseball predictions:
Dodgers vs. Philly = L.A. in five games.
Boston vs. Tampa Bay = oh, this breaks my heart. As a Yankee fan I've always despised the Red Sox but I think they're a damn tough team and will be hard to stop this year. Boston in six, although I hope I'm wrong.
The Series (I reserve the right to re-pick if the teams change). LA over Boston in five games, largely as a fluke.
* * * *
Anyhow, here's how my fantasy football team scored this past week.
Points | |||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Pos | Player | Opp | Status | Projected | Actual |
QB | @Hou | W, 31-27 | 18.16 | 17.03 | |
WR | @Jac | W, 26-21 | 9.57 | 17.00 | |
WR | (Was - WR) | @Phi | W, 23-17 | 8.68 | 0.00 |
WR | @Hou | W, 31-27 | 6.69 | 3.20 | |
RB | Pit | L, 26-21 | 8.85 | 2.50 | |
RB | (Mia - RB) | SD | W, 17-10 | 7.89 | 3.90 |
TE | @Bal | W, 13-10 | 4.66 | 9.50 | |
K | (GB - K) | Atl | L, 27-24 | 8.11 | 9.00 |
DEF | (SD - DEF) | @Mia | L, 17-10 | 17.62 | 8.50 |
Total | 90.23 | 70.63 |
Titanic 2: Jack's Back
Monday, October 6, 2008
Quotes of the Day
YaYa to me: "You know that New Kid [On the Block] Mom likes? She told me that if he liked her she'd dump you. For real Daddy!"
My sister C. "YaYa that's not true! Your Mommy said that if Jon (Knight) wanted her she'd feel bad because she loves Daddy but that she'd have to dump him to move up in the world. That's all."
Oh, is that all? :)
* * * *
LuLu to me, as we headed out on a bike ride tonight and saw the moon.
"It's only a half moon!," she said. Then after a moment. "Daddy, if spacemen were going to the moon and they, um, they didn't remembered that it was only half a moon like um, if they like go to the other side where it's not a moon would they fall off?"
* * * *
After listening to more than my fair share of her complaints about this that and the other thing (largely things I've done) I told Lisa to knock it off and buck up. She looked at me appalled.
"Hello! I"m a woman. This is what we do," she said.
* * * *
YaYa has been a pompous pain in the as* lately and I angrily tried to put her in her place tonight.
"Listen here YaYa Middle Name, quit thinking you're the bomb! No matter who you are in this world there's always going to be someone smarter, or luckier, or better looking. You understand?," I said. Then I winked.
"Unless your name is Dan Slapinions of course."
YaYa's interest in Titanic
I hate to disappoint, but either AOL or my computer is acting funny and denying me access to a folder of pictures. So I'll put off the NKOTB post for a day - please, no tears - and keep mum about it until then.
* * * *
If you've known me awhile you know Titanic is one of my favorite movies of all time. Lisa and I saw it thirteen times in the theater, beginning on opening night. I'm not afraid to admit I cried each and every time during certain scenes: the wide angle shot of the 1500 victims screaming in the water, Jack's death, seeing the Statue of Liberty as the Carpathia docks, and Rose's reunion with Jack in death.
I've held off watching the movie for years now because I wanted to preserve that emotional impact. But last week YaYa came up to us and began asking questions about the Titanic - the ship, not the movie. It's not hard to see where the interest came from as we have bookshelves devoted to texts on the White Star liner, including some gorgeous coffee table editions.
We let her take Robert Ballard's Discovery of the Titanic to school for show and tell and Wednesday after school she asked to watch the movie. We had some concerns about the content . There are boobies, as you know, although it isn't in a sexual context and YaYa's been in a locker room before. Obviously there's a lot of death, but we thought we'd play it by ear and perhaps cut off the movie as the ship began to make its final plunge.
In the end she sat spellbound and we let her watch it begriming to end. She asked some good questions, as did LuLu (who did not view the end) and two days later she invited a friend over to watch it again (with that Mom's full approval).
Did it hit me with the same impact? I didn't tear up for the Statue of Liberty, and Jack's death brought barely a trickle, but the reunion scene made me plain ol' bawl like a sissy.
"What the heck is it with you? You didn't cry when . ." Lisa said.
"Yeah, yeah, when the kids were born. Get over it already. I tear up at goofy things. I think that's been established," I said.
The first time I saw it I marveled at Cameron's deft at making us engage with the people on board, turning the dry historical event into something we felt a personal stake in.watching. I recognized that in his desire, his need, to show all of a ship physically divided by class he had to reach for a character on both ends of the spectrum. That combination automatically brings to life either a prince and the pauper or a Lady and the Tramp scenario, and of course he would choose the latter to increase our connection to the characters. He's got the treasure hunter out there as the Average Joe, full of knowledge about the ship but short on emotion for the loss of life so long ago. Future/past/youth/aged - it's got it all.
That said I also winced a little, even in '97, at some of Cameron's script. The class division was far more divisive and stereotypical than need be, painting the wealthy as cold and weak in character while the poor are honorable to the last and just darn good folk. The Picasso crack always stuck out to me like a sore thumb (by poking fun of Picasso we're supposed to think Cal is an idiot. We get it James.) and I still, after all this time, boggle over why Rose tossed the diamond overboard. Why Rose, why?
Upon review DiCaprio did a much better job than I remembered, handling the duty with finesse and looking much more robust than I recall (in my memory he was a scrawny peach fuzzed kid. Not so.). Kate . . ah, well Kate's occupied a soft spot in my heart for a decade now. When she raised her face to the camera for the first time I literally gasped in the theater. It's odd seeing her use an American accent, but who cares - it's Kate.
At any rate, here's hoping there's another generation of Titanic buffs in the making at our house :)
* * *
I believe I've mentioned my silly/crazy/whino belief that being remembered after death, in almost any positive or neutral capacity, no matter how small, is the equivalent of saying a prayer for that person's soul.
But you can then understand why I was ecstatic to find the Encyclopedia Titanica. The site has biographies for evey crew member, survivor, and victim of the disaster. It goes so far as to list every passenger who disembarked when it stopped in France, crew members who deserted, failed to appear for duty, or were sent home for illness, and the poor souls who were sent in as substitutes to work the fatal voyage. There are dozens of names there of people who had the faintest brush with the ship and lived on to be forgotten by history, only to have their names once again called out long after their own passing.
Here's an example from the victim's list.
Mr Mauritz Nils Martin Ådahl, 30, was born 15 June 1881 the son of Elna Ådahl and her husband. Ådahl had worked as a carpenter in Asarum, Blekinge, Sweden but moved to the USA in 1903. His fiancé Emelie came 1906 and they were married on 14 September 1907. A daughter, Vera, was born 1908 and a second child, Georgia, in 1910.
Emelie started to long for home and she returned to Sweden in 1911. Mauritz's father died in May 1911 and because his mother had difficulty in supporting herself Mauritz returned to Sweden that Christmas. A few months later he planned to return to America for a couple of years to earn some money. The family had bought a piece of land in Asarum and he was going to build a house.
Mauritz travelled with John Holm. On their way to Denmark they met Adelia Landergren from Karlshamn. None of them had originally planned to take the Titanic but due to the recent coal strike they were transferred. They boarded as third class passengers in Southampton. Nils held ticket # C 7076 for which the fare was £7 5s.
After the collision they helped Adelia up to the boat deck and shoved her into lifeboat 13, but the men did not follow.
Ã…dahl's body was later recovered by the MacKay Bennett (#72). On him they found his watch that had stopped at 2.34, 14 minutes after Titanic sunk. He was buried at sea 24 April 1912.
Check out the site if you have time and an interest. You won't be disappointed. It's fascinating.
Sunday, October 5, 2008
Rambles
I'm sorry if I hurt anyone's feelings with my post about the Cubs. I'm not retracting it, since I still felt the emotions I wrote about, but in hindsight I might have been a bit more diplomatic, even if it was all in fun.
* * * *
In the latest issue of People (Newman cover, NKOTB two-page spread inside) Jon and Kate Gosselin, parents of twins AND sextuplets and stars of Jon and Kate plus Eight, say that they want to adopt another child.
I'm all for kids and the more the merrier, but the eight in their show's title includes at least one little girl who is bitter and jealous of her six newsworthy siblings (aka the YaYa of the bunch). Adding another child to the mix won't diminish those feelings and I think that's something they need to consider.
Or they could tell me and everyone else to F off and do what they want. Fine by me.
* * * *
For the record, once again, I am not interested in endorsing anyone for that congressional seat. I don't like Moore and almost anyone's an improvement, but I just wanted to make people aware of an additional option on the ballot.
* * * *
Regarding that congressional race, you'll notice one of the 'issues' listed on Sebring's website is term limits for politicians. Generally I'm against term limits. I don't want to go into the rationale here, as it can get longwinded, but an easy answer is: you want them out, vote them out.
Rather, my point is to bring up my continued exasperation with the arguement that our political forefather were men who took up the yoke of leadership as an obligation to their country and then discarded it, as 'proper', to go back to a 'normal' life.
What crap. Washington, for all the fanfare over his self-determined two term limit, was a leader in the employ of either Great Britain or the Colonies/US during a huge chunk of his life. John Quincy Adams served as President and then had a lengthly career in the House. Lincoln spent much of his adult life either in office or in the quest to be in office. Face facts: most of the great figures in our nation's history have devoted their lives to one office or another.
I don't thinkthere's anything wrong with that, in and of itself. Even if you disagree, at the very least stop using those figures as a misguided ideal when pitching term limits.
End of rant.
* * *
I was just watching a show on HGTV, Property Virgins I think, and the featured young couple was dismayed when their lender refused to give them a loan without an additional downpayment on the $500,000 home they wanted. They promptly got a loan on their terms from another lender. The male half of the couple made a point of bragging about the new lender and how 'experience in this business really pays off'.
Ladies and gentlemen, while this couple may be financially solvent to their dying day, may I present to you a perfect example of how the mortgage crisis came to pass .You're 24-25 and want to buy a half million dollar home. You don't qualify under the terms you were hoping to get. Instead of backing off and considering the wisdom of stretching your finances, you go and find a yahoo who will hand the money out without concern for your ability to pay.
The pot calling the kettle black, I know. Back in 2006 there was no reason in the world for someone to hand over house keys to me, not while I was still in the midst of repairing some credit miscues.
The bubble worked in my favor, and I acknowledge that fact. I wouldn't go back in time and tell them 'no thanks', but I can still point out the foolishness of the lenders that pulled the trigger.
And apparently they were fools - they went under six months ago.
* * * *
Why did Ty Pennington become so popular? I've been watching old Trading Spaces episodes and in every one in which he appears he's gruff, behind schedule, and taking shortcuts on his projects. I know he's considered 'cute' - he's not - but is that really enough to have overcome his faults?
I guess so, eh?
But what if they *don't* win it all?
I had a great time in Chicago at the New Kids concert, and you can expect a post about that soon enough. But what capped off the beautiful day was that I got back to the hotel room in time to watch the last inning and a half of the Cubs/Dodgers game. Man, when Soriano failed to check his swing and the Dodgers took the series I yelled 'yes!' and pumped my fist.
There is nothing sweeter than to end a day knowing the Cubs will suffer (at least) 101 years of futility - especially when you celebrate it in their own backyard ;)
Ah, but wait! My Yankees didn't even make the playoffs. (count the rings) and the Brewers lost their playoff series too (yeah, but in four games, not three, and expectations were lower)
Life is good. :)
That is all.
Friday, October 3, 2008
The $700 Billion Bailout
Today I watched in dismay as the House passed the Troubled Asset Relief Program bill aka the $700 billion bailout of our financial institutions.
I understand the rationale behind the move, even if I articulate it poorly. The correction of the housing market has generated a host of bad loans and foreclosures, creating instability among financial institutions. This leads to large corporations wisely moving their funds out of banks and into Treasury bills, which of course are backed by the government. But this leaves banks with fewer capital reserves, which means they have less money to loan out. That leads to less of an income stream for them which only further increases their instability and feeds the cycle. Stay with me now - the lack of funds means that banks have to be extra careful about who gets a loan and in what amount, thus freezing out many average Joes and healthy companies, freezing growth in the economy. Just to put a cherry on top, all this has shaken investors and screwed up the stock market.
Whew.
I still oppose the bill, for all the good that does now (or yesterday for that matter). Believe it or not this is the first time I stand in complete opposition to Dubya - and just as a poke in the eye, it's also the first time many Americans seem to agree with the guy.
This is a plan designed to provide an after-the-fact safety net for investors on Wall Street. On principle this is wrong. Investing involves both risk and reward, and with the price of fortune comes the chance of losing it all. No one was volunteering to return the profits that were created in the boom years that fueled this mess, and it's unreasonable to suddenly change the rules and ask for a do-over. That isn't 'tough love', it's a reasoned and long standing practice.
Regardless, it is unjustifiable to make the American taxpayer pay for the risks taken by investors, and it is not necessary for the government to do so to stabilize the economy. It's also a dangerous precedent. Even if it's succesful does the government now have the authority to step in and adjust the market when it sees fit? Saying 'yes' once to Washington usually forfeits your right to even be asked the next time, and it wouldn't surprise me if this is the start of the fabled slippery slope.
But what exactly is the government going to do? The bill gives the Treasury unparalleled ability to spend money without oversight. Quoting section 8 (how's that for a sweet coincidence?) of the proposal: 'Decisions by the Secretary . . . are non-reviewable and committed to agency discretion, and may not be reviewed by any court of law or any administrative agency.'
I know we're four weeks away from electing a Socialist President, but doesn't that just appall you? This is America is it not? Since when can a government body - especially one that just oversaw the creation of the mess it's going to 'fix - declare absolute, unquestioned authority?
Is the Treasury going to pay (low) market price for the assets, or as Warren Buffet fears will it fall back on artificially high hold-to-maturity prices? Why doesn't the government just agree to back some of these assets to inspire investors to purchase them? Where is the concrete aid for distressed homeowners (should you believe it wise to do)? Why doesn't . .. oh. Well, it doesn't matter.
Because the government, a single arm of the government, now has the power to decide what to do and we have no say.
I'm also suspicious of how quickly this bill was forced down our throats. Oh, it failed once - less than a week ago - and now we've greeted a 24% increase in our national budget with literal applause.
The pork that lubricated the passing of this bill is just mind blowing. Tax breaks for wool research, for litigants of the ages-old Exxon Valdez spill, for the District of Columbia, for film and television productions, auto race tracks, it just goes on and on. If this bill was so important for the safety and security of our country - which I deny - it should have passed as is, without sweetening the deal.
The cost of this deal is numbing to the senses, an all-out assault on the pocketbooks of the taxpayer and future generation that, again, represents a 24% increase in the federal budget. And all pushed through in a climate of fear and panic, with no one in power acting with anything resembling calm or rational thought, and everyone perfectly happy to reward incompetent watchdogs with even more responsibility. My God.
In the words of New York University economist Nouriel Rouubini "it is pathetic that Congress did not consult any [economists] that have presented . . alternative plans that were more fair and efficient. This is a case of privatising the gains and socializing the losses; a bail out and socialism for the rich, the well-connected and Wall Street. And it is a scandal that even Congressional Democrats have fallen for this treasury scam . . . .'
Amen.
Tags: blogplugs
Dan Sebring for WI 4th Congressional Seat
One thing I hate about my hometown (and state) is that far too often Democrats run unopposed for office. The Socialist Party ran Milwaukee until the late '40's and the Dems have had it since, and financially and politically I suppose it makes sense to avoid attacking the weight of that Machine. There are a scores of reasons why this practice is bad for democracy - disenfranchisement of the opposition, stagnant thought, no incentive for change, etc.
Well, golly gee, Congresswoman Gwen Moore (WI 4th District) is running unopposed for re-election this year. Unopposed until recently, that is, when my friend Tre told me a mutual acquaintance is now in the mix.
Dan Sebring is a mechanic that I've used a few times. Tre knows him far better than I do, but in our few dealings he's come across as intelligent, personable, and honest. He's been in business forever, and judging by what he charges he's making a good living at it. :)
Here's a link to his website where you can read more about him and his stance on some issues. [I disagree with a few, but what's new.] I don't 'officially' endorse him (as if the world gives a rat's as* about who I pick) but I think he'd work hard and push for what's right for Wisconsin.
And frankly, anyone's better than Moore, a Representative who's biggest talent seems to be doing nothing and hiding in the shadows.
Remember, he's a write in candidate, as he didn't realize Moore was unopposed until after the primary season. So if you do think he's your candidate of choice,
' write in Dan Sebring for Congress in the 4th Congressional District.
Don't know what district you're in?
If your ballot says "Gwen Moore" under "Congress" write in Dan Sebring!'
Thursday, October 2, 2008
Cleaning House: The Season
I wish I'd never written the following post. I never finished the book it yaks about and barely worked on it after a week or two of writing the post. Why? Largely because my then-new promotion wiped out my free time. In truth I'll probably never finish it, which means 70,000 words are permanently gathering dust on my bookshelf.
Yet another failure to piss and moan about. Thank God I'm so sexy that it balances the scales.
* * * *
(May 13th, 2005)
Back when I was a senior in high school a character popped into my head.
He was Polish naturally, and large and devilishly handsome like his creator.
One teensy difference between us: he made Babe Ruth and Willie Mays look like chumps on the baseball diamond, and I throw like a girl.
In time - and we’re talking more than a decade here - a whole roster of players came to surround him. I knew who his teammates were, where they were born, their career stats, and how they eventually made their way to the Great Diamond in the Sky.
About three years ago I decided it had simmered enough. It was time to get it on paper and out of my head.
The problem, as I saw it, was simple: it had all been done before.
All baseball stories boil down to two simple scenarios: The Bad News Bears, where a down and out team of limited ability sucks it up and wins it all: and the Crafty Veteran, where an old, battered player with a reverence for the game must pass the torch to a talented youngster ignorant of the game's beauty.
Some stories use these plots but craft a wonderful tale atop them, and I knew I’d resort to a bit of it along the way.
But my lead character wasn’t old and decrepit, he was in his prime and a force of nature. And the team wasn’t horrible, it was a recent World Champion with a roster that inspired awe in its fans.
So I had another idea. What if you said “screw this” and went 180 degrees from the norm?
What if you had a team that not only won, but won big?
A team that not only won the Championship, but every game along the way - all 162.
Impossible, of course. No team has ever won more than 116, and anyone that cracks the century mark will be the odds on favorite to win the World Series.
But this was fiction, and what better way to give a Bronx cheer to the established formula?
Besides, the team in the story is my hometown Milwaukee Brewers. I have fond memories of ‘Team Streak’, the 1987 version that won 13 in a row and also featured Paul Molitor’s incredible hitting streak. If any team should play host to the streak of all streaks, it should be my Brewers.
Going down that road was risky. Not only did it strain the believability of the story, it risked alienating readers who had no inclination to root for Goliath as he crushed David.
Making it work meant relying on a whole new set of rules, including the needfor strong personal conflicts between some of the main characters.
But that’s a story for another day.
Work on the actual text of the novel began on July 23, 2003, with a targeted completion date of December 1st.
With the exception of two weeks where work interfered, I progressed pretty steadily through September.
By the 28th of that month I had 61,406 words on paper.
And then nothing.
I hit a snag where I felt like I’d lost my focus, throwing down every thought in my head rather than catering to the demands of a reader.
Remember, these folks were in my head a long time. I could fill a phone book with what I know about a single character. I was overwhelming the plot with useless little details.
Then the 2004 election, a move, my wife’s pregnancy, and personal issues delayed me even more.
I also failed because - primarily - I lacked the discipline to finish the gig.
In November of ’04 I created Slapinions, and the rigors of having to come up with 600 words every few days - words that were good enough to be read by strangers - helped restore my confidence.
Time to try again
Cleaning House: The Game According to [Dan]
For the record, that part about updating the thesis yearly was horse-hockey. I haven't amended that thing since 1998. I intended it to be the truth, it just never worked out. A shame too, as a chain of batting cages in Florida offered to sell the thesis based on this page. That too never worked out.
* * *
The Game According to [Dan] | |||
Baseball - Why I Love it I grew up with a diehard baseball fan as a father, which may explain why I didn't care much for the game until I stumbled across the great Twins/Braves World Series back in 1991. Since then, I have to agree with my Dad; it's a game that gets under your skin and never lets go. I was fortunate enough to have a SABR member as my major advisor in college, and under his direction spent my senior year working on a history of hitting instruction in the 20th century. Not exactly Pulitzer material, but a nice insight into baseball's past and present. | |||
Hitting - The Most Difficult Act in Pro Sports? Hitting a baseball may not be the hardest act in professional sports, but it's certainly in the top three. In its simplest form, you have to hit a round ball with a round bat - squarely. Throw in the fact that the ball is coming at you with varying speed and motion from only 6o'6" away. Mix in wind, air density, turf, and the 9 guys getting paid to take away your hit even if you DO make contact. In short, that's why they pay well for failing 7 times out of 10. | |||
Hitting Instruction Hitting tips have always appealed to both publishers and advertisers. Hitting tips have sold soap, sports equipment, even Pizza Hut pizza (remember the Griffey pamphlet that came with your order?)While early manuals bordered on the mundane - get a good ball to hit, swing hard, don't read it's bad for the eyes (unless, of course, you were reading that players book) - Ted Williams' 'Science of Hitting' took the opposite course, breaking down the act of hitting into detailed components. While Williams' work is justified in being called a classic of hitting instruction, it opened the door for the heavy handed, highly detailed manuals that seem better suited to graduate students than the youth that are learning the game. | |||
Great Links | |||
My Favorite Products | |||
Cleaning House: [Dan] Recommends . .
I should mention that the reason I'm copying other other sites here is that AOL has promised to move the blog to another platform, allegedly in its entirety, whereas the Hometown pages will be left to wither.
I think I might have reposted this here before, or at the very least cannibalized it once upon a time. None-the-less:
[Dan] Recommends . . . | |||
Why should I read your picks? Well, you don't HAVE to. I'm not a professional critic, and I don't have an English degree on my wall. | |||
My Picks - FICTION ROBERT B PARKER - From the first time I read Parker, I was hooked. While I read everything he writes, the Spenser novels remain his calling card. EARLY AUTUMN is arguably my favorite book of all time, and aside from the ever-annoying | |||
NON-FICTION AND MISC. BRUCE CATTON - The man knew the Civil War inside and out, and his writing made you want to read everything he had to say about it. As the subject of his books sometimes overlapped a repeat reader will see some repetition, but overall, a master of his art. Pick up MR. LINCOLN'S ARMY or GRANT MOVES SOUTH to start. | |||
My Favorite Reading Links |
Cleaning House: 'NKOTB Footage'
AOL is shutting down not only the journals but all of the member websites that have been created over the years through AOL Hometown. Both my wife and I have a few of these one-page wonders floating around, and rather than lose them to history I'm going to copy them here (if/when possible). Feel free to ignore any further posting with 'Cleaning House' in the title, unless you're curious.
* * * *
NKOTB FOOTAGE | |||
ABOUT US We are huge fans of New Kids on The Block, Joe McIntyre, and Jordan Knight. We have a large collection of video tapes available to fellow fans. We dub on a double deck vcr with new vhs tapes for quality recordings. Let us know what you have to offer - we respond to all legitimate email! | |||
NKOTB GROUP FOOTAGE The following is a breakdown of what we have available: | |||
JOE/ JORDAN FOOTAGE #1 - Joe McIntyre Press kit (videotape) from the Fantasticks Includes sound bites, songs, trailers, film clips. The best you're gonna get short of the film.... | |||
My Favorite Products | |||