Month: March 2022 (Page 2 of 2)

Tuesday Links

As we come out of the age of Omicron and brace for whatever is next, this is a good reminder of how far we’ve come, and how quickly, in combating Covid–19.

If Covid vaccines had taken as long as the mumps vaccine to develop, the world would have had to face the Delta and Omicron waves with the vast majority of people on the planet armor-less against the virus that causes Covid.

“The previous fastest vaccine ever developed … would just be entering into the clinic now. And we’ve delivered 11 billion doses,” Hatchett noted. “That’s how much we’ve moved the needle.”

Why Covid–19 vaccines are a freaking miracle


Sometimes it takes awhile, but eventually the Internet asks all the good questions.

Norm’s tab, unlike Norm himself, isn’t a solid, unchanging, sedentary thing. Instead, it’s much more like the amount of beer Norm has in his glass. Sometimes it’s full, sometimes it’s empty and sometimes the set decorators make a continuity error and it changes without explanation.

How Much Was Norm’s Tab on Cheers?


I read a handful of pieces about Peter Jackson’s Get Back after I watched the series in December, but saved this lengthy piece until President’s Day weekend. It is worth the effort.

Art involves a kind of conjuring trick in which the artist conceals her false starts, her procrastination, her self-doubts, her confusion, behind the finished article. The Beatles did so well at effacing their efforts that we are suspicious they actually had to make any, which is why the words “magic” and “genius” get used so much around them…In Get Back, we are allowed into The Beatles’ process. We see the mess; we live the boredom. We watch them struggle, and somehow it doesn’t diminish the magic at all.

The Banality of Genius: Notes on Peter Jackson’s Get Back


I’ve never been to Montreal but know that winters there can be brutal. I had heard before how much of the city center (or centre) is built on a system of tunnels so you can navigate it on foot without ever stepping outside. I had never heard, though, of its snow removal system, which is designed to get the city functioning normally again incredibly quickly after a major snowstorm.

Déneigement Montreal


Finally, no matter what streaming service(s) you use, I’m sure they all frustrate/disappoint you somehow with their clunky, sometimes hostile, user interfaces. Apple geek John Siracusa pays out his wishlist for the minimum that these apps should offer us to improve their ease of use for the consumer.

An Unsolicited Streaming App Spec

Weekend Notes

Spring?

That first weekend each year when the weather turns warm is always a delight. Living in the Midwest you know there will be plenty of wild weather swings before spring completely arrives. Yet even in a year like this when winter wasn’t all that bad, these weekends are welcome.

Saturday it was in the mid–70s here, breaking a daily high temperature record. I did some yard work to prep for the growing season and sat in the sun reading a book for about an hour. I wore shorts all afternoon. Other than the rather gusty winds, it was an ideal afternoon, feeling more like mid-May than early March.

We had loud, nasty thunderstorms overnight Saturday. Sunday was a little cooler and more cloudy, but with less wind. Much of my day was spent in the car or gyms, as we’ll get to, but S and I were able to take a walk late in the afternoon and it felt really nice. Sunday night/Monday morning we got nearly two inches of rain, setting another daily record.

The weather has already turned, and this week will be much cooler. Snow keeps flipping into and out of next weekend’s forecast. But the warmth is coming, and better days with it.

A lot of important hoops this weekend. So much that I’ll make a (relatively) quick pass at it all. Which you all will probably appreciate.


Jayhawk Talk

Big 12 (co) Champs!

There is a tinge of disappointment over going from leading by two full games with five to play to needing a nervy overtime win at home to salvage a tie with Baylor. It’s still another notch in the conference title ledger, though.

I saw very little of the game, as S and I had not one but two adult social engagements Saturday. (Look at us!) We did reach our second spot of the night just as the game was nearing the end of regulation, and after saying hello to the folks we were hanging with, I scampered over to a big screen to watch. As the game went into OT, I rejoined our crew but kept one eye on the game. When David McCormack dunked to put KU up five I slapped the table and said, “OK, I’m ready to be social!” That got some laughs. I was with a bunch of IU people so they all appreciated my need to focus on hoops.

Without seeing most of the game I can’t make any judgements. It’s concerning that Ochai Agbaji played one of the worst games of his career. The entire offense seemed to suck. But, hey, the defense was solid, they rebounded, they took care of the ball. I guess if you’re not going to score, you better do those other things.

I will be interested if Bill Self rests any of his players this week in Kansas City. I’m not sure it will provide any benefits in the NCAAs, unless guys have legit injuries they need to rest to heal. But it might be good for Ochai not to play 35 minutes two or three times this coming week. And, hey, perhaps let Remy and Yesefu play more than five minutes and give them a chance to get through mistakes and build some rhythm and confidence going into the games that really matter.

Then again, if I don’t expect a deep run in the NCAAs, maybe the Jayhawks should pull out all the stops to win the Big 12 tournament.


Duke/Coach K

HAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHA!!!!

When we got home Saturday I LOVED reviewing Twitter to see the sheer joy from around the country at the KU-Texas game going to overtime and ruining ESPN’s early coverage of K’s last game. Mark Titus even suggested that Self blew the end of regulation intentionally to ensure overtime and overlapping coverage.

And then for Duke to lose, their coaches to act like pricks to the Carolina staff, and K to scold the home crowd? It was the biggest chef’s kiss I can imagine. Just beautiful, beautiful stuff.

Listen, he’s the greatest coach in the history of the game. I’ve said that before. He’s won five titles playing at least three different styles of basketball. He’s adjusted as the game has changed, often quickly. But he’s always been a sanctimonious prick who puts himself above the game and acted like he hasn’t benefitted from a corrupt system more than any other coach.

Ya’ll know I had some issues with Roy Williams. But, dadgummit, he had the decency to announce he was done and disappear and not turn an entire season into an ego trip, and then get mad when his fairy tale ending got upended. I just hope someone beats Duke before the Final Four so K’s farewell tour doesn’t cloud the entire tournament.


KU Rumors

Just before we left the house Saturday some KU-NCAA rumors broke. They are just rumors at this point, and incomplete rumors at that. By the time you read this some real news may have arrived that renders the next paragraph or two meaningless, so keep that in mind.

The biggest rumor is that Bill Self and Kurtis Townsend will each serve two-year postseason bans. There was uncertainty whether that ban will begin this week or next March. As the rumor spread, there were a lot of “This could be Bill Self’s last 20/10/5 minutes of the season” Tweets. Hmmmm…

The key to the rumor was the insistence that this was just the top headline of the potential punishment, not the entire penalty. There could still be much more, like reduction in scholarships, recruiting limits, forfeiting games that Silvio De Sousa played in, etc.

I had to laugh at myself scrambling through Twitter once we got to our first stop of the evening looking more for confirmations/expansions of the NCAA rumors than the score of the game being played at that moment.


Awards SZN

The Big 12 coaches awards came out Sunday night. Ochai was the unanimous player of the year, to no one’s surprise. Despite his rough final week, no player ever challenged him for the award.

Much grousing in the KU Twittersphere about Ochai being the only KU first team pick. I don’t think it’s worth the time to argue. You can make a case Christian Braun or Jalen Wilson (and, to some people, both) deserved first team honors. But each player had stretches where they struggled, KU faltered late, and their numbers weren’t dramatically better than the guys you have to argue against to put them on the first team. Be thankful for the recognition and use the “snub” as fuel for the next month.

I think Mark Adams should have won coach of the year, and it shouldn’t be close, but Texas Tech losing two of their last three did take some shine off his season. Still, did anyone expect the Red Raiders, who lost their head coach, some decent talent, and brought in second and third tier transfers instead of marquee names like Remy Martin and Marcus Carr to challenge for the league crown until the final week?

I guess you can make a case for Scott Drew. He did have to get this team through a ton of injuries. But I think him winning the award was more about him, and Baylor’s PR team, winning the battle of narrative, making the Bears’ entire season about those injuries. Conveniently ignoring that he still had two (likely) lottery picks and a bunch of guys who won a national title last year even when they were battling through the injuries.

Drew winning didn’t bother me. Until someone reminded me that he won Big 12 coach of the year two years ago. When KU went 17–1 and won the league by two games. Yep, Scottie and the Baylor crew definitely have pictures and emails that they aren’t afraid to use against other coaches and the media.


High School Hoops

Cathedral won their first sectional title since Jalen Coleman-Lands was a sophomore. Friday night was their big battle, against rival Tech. The Irish trailed by six late in the third quarter before going on a 14–0 run that helped them pull away and win easily. In Saturday’s final they beat Lawrence North, who had ended their season three of the past four seasons, comfortably.

Cathedral is now the best team left according to the computer ratings, and have the highest odds with win State at 26%. They do have to beat a team they lost to two weeks ago to get out of regionals this weekend. But they seem to be coming together and playing to their talent level at the right time.


Kid Hoops

L had three games this weekend.

Saturday, while we were out, her winter league team played for their tournament championship.

I honestly have no idea how they came up with this tournament, which was just a little four-team bracket. Three teams were from the pool they played their regular season games against. The fourth team was a fifth grade team from L’s travel program. I asked her travel coach if he knew how they came up with that combination. He said the fifth grade team is really good; they won a national tournament last summer. They probably beat the hell out of some sixth grade teams in the regular season, he said, so they moved up another level to play in our tournament. He also believed the four-team brackets were done to get the tournaments over before travel season began this weekend.

Seems weird to me.

Anyway, L’s team played those fifth graders Saturday for the title. We watched the fifth graders beat an eighth grade team in overtime in their semifinal Tuesday. They have a girl who is almost six feet tall who hit a couple 25-foot shots and a bunch of shooters around her. I told L “Watch #33,” a shooter who camped out in the corner waiting to launch threes all night. “If you guard her, don’t ever leave her.”

Another team dad texted me updates throughout the game. At halftime he said L got a steal and layup right before the buzzer to put us up 8–7. We were up the entire second half between 1–3 points. Every few minutes he’d send me another picture of the scoreboard. Finally he sent one with all zeros on the clock and us winning 28–27.

Champs!

Well, watered down, weird bracket champs.

They actually got rings, although as the last game of the night no one who runs the league stayed to hand them out and L’s team got the ones that said “Finalist” not “Champion.” I guess no one looked at which bag they handed to which team. Oh well.

When we got home I asked L about her game. She said she had eight points, at least 10 rebounds, and “I shut 33 down! She only had four points!” The dad who sent me in-game updates confirmed all that.

So a great end to what was, at times, a frustrating season. The weird schedule (playing more 6th grade A teams than 7th/8th B teams), the lack of practice time, the absence of any organized offense. Flags fly forever. And I guess cheap championship rings last forever. Or at least until they get wet and tarnish.

Sunday it was straight into the travel season. Her team played in a two-game shootout. They are the third rated seventh grade team in their program and opened with a game against the #2 team. That squad has one girl that is a stud. She has size and can do almost everything. The only thing that stopped her were the refs who called anything remotely close to a travel a travel. I think they were a little harsh on her, but it was to our benefit so I didn’t complain or anything. We were down 12 at one point but made a great run late and trailed by one with under 2:00 left. We just couldn’t get the stops and scores needed and lost by five. It was a great effort, though.

In the second game we played a team that had a lot of size and knew how to use it. They took threes when open, but generally just punished us inside. L somehow drew the low block on free throws and gave up three-straight offensive boards in one sequence. It was demoralizing. We were down 13 at half. We got behind by as many as 22 in the second half to fall into running clock territory, and never got it closer than 16.

L had a weird day. She came off the bench in both first halves, started both second halves. She was scoreless in the first game, scored three in the second. But, man, she was as aggressive as she’s ever been getting to the basket. Before we left the house she told me she has a spin move that has been working. I rolled my eyes a little because I had never seen it. Sunday, though, she kept getting by her defender with it. She just could not finish. She was probably a combined 1–15 in the two games. Almost all those misses were either off that spin move or on runners. The runners were all forced and didn’t have much chance. But that spin move…it worked almost every time! Well, expect for making the shot. She even recognized when the defense caught onto the move and made a sweet pass out of it to a cutter. Who naturally missed. It was that kind of day for our team.

They start real practices tonight and I’m excited to see them learn the offense, get comfortable playing together, and improve over the next few months. They don’t play again for two weeks, but I’m expecting better things then.

Jayhawk Talk: TC-Whew!

March is here! The days are getting a little longer, brighter, and warmer. Spring break is three weeks away. We’ve had a few geese in our yard already, the onslaught to come. The City of Indianapolis is fixing potholes! Baseball is about to start.

And KU fans are freaking out.

My experience with the Jayhawks this week was tempered by not being able to see much of Tuesday’s TCU game in Ft. Worth. L had a game at the same time and we made it home in time for the last 10 minutes or so. Which turned out to be the worst 10 minutes to see. At least her team won. 53–7!

I was able to watch all of Thursday’s rematch in Lawrence. It had everything. A big KU spurt early, fueled by 12 quick Ochai Agbaji points. A LOUD AFH crowd. Defensive lapses, poor shot selection, and getting bullied by a more athletic team. A six-point deficit early in the second half accompanied by thoughts of hopelessness and anger at pissing away a two-game lead in the conference race thanks to getting swept by TC-freaking-U. An eight-point lead with under 2:00 to play that was nearly thrown away.

Basically the 2021–22 Jayhawks distilled into their essence.

But the dub is the dub, and a win Saturday against Texas means KU gets a share of the Big 12 title.

I can’t freak out too much about the TCU games since they are the epitome of a bad matchup for this year’s KU squad. Every team has those, and it sucks that KU had to play the Frogs back-to-back, at the end of the season, because of Covid issues in January. I was disappointed at how little fight KU showed when I was watching Tuesday. I was heartened by the fight early and late Thursday. I was concerned about how many dumb mistakes they made in the middle 20 minutes Thursday.

And, let’s be honest, KU people freaked out this week because it was TCU. It didn’t matter that they beat Texas Tech last Saturday. That was their only impressive Big 12 win. It wasn’t until we saw them, and saw how long and athletic they are, and that for the first time maybe ever they actually play decent ball, that we realized, “Oh shit, these guys are good.” Not sure what to make of a world where TCU is solid in hoops.


KU got a very friendly whistle Thursday. I can’t decide if that was because “KU gets every call at Allen” or just that KU was so freaking bad on defense that a ton of TCU’s shots were so wide-open KU didn’t have a chance to foul.

Well, it was a friendly whistle other than the ridiculous technical on Mitch Lightfoot. College refs are such clowns. In the NBA, if guys start yapping at each other, and continue to after being warned, both players hit get with a T and you play on. College refs always have to make an example of a player to give the impression they’ve taken control of the game. It wasn’t just the T itself. It was how the ref called it, signaling the foul EIGHT TIMES as he walked to the scorer’s table. An absolute “Look At Me!” clown show of an effort by that guy. Big 12 refs have called so many garbage T’s on players this year for things that happen on dunks, I guess KU was due.

That said, Mitch has been in college for 18 years. He knows how refs are. Take your dunk, run up court, and talk your shit when you set up for defense when – maybe – the ref has other things to worry about. Although that guy was clearly itching to call one. It likely wouldn’t have mattered.


My brother in Jayhawk-dom E$ said Jamie Dixon looks like a guy who doesn’t wash his hands after he uses the restroom. I laughed hard at that, because it seems like a pretty fair assessment.


I seriously can not figure out what this team’s deal on defense is. The athletic guys get lazy. The heady guys are constantly putting themselves in bad spots where their limitations kill them. Dave McCormack is perpetually trying to block shots that aren’t lockable, leaving the lane open for offensive boards. They all make poor/wrong rotations. They all communicate poorly. They just can’t seem to figure it out.

I wonder if it is all a matter of trust, and the lack of trust in the guys to their right and left mean everyone is constantly cheating one way or the other, and end up in a bad spot.

Or maybe they just suck. It is maddening, whatever the explanation is. And since it is March, it ain’t changing. I feel like the offense will be fine when they get away from Big 12 teams. I’m already having anxiety attacks about them scoring 79 but giving up 84 to some team that hasn’t scored more than 70 in two months. Or being up nine with about 3:00 to play and collapsing to blow a game that was won. You can’t play a junk defense for 40 minutes, but KU’s base defense isn’t stopping anyone at the moment.

Of course the 2006 Indianapolis Colts had an atrocious defense, and got gouged by Maurice Jones-Drew for approximately 400 yards in the season finale. Then they got their shit together and won the Super Bowl. You never know.


KU has played eight of its nine Big 12 home games. Four of those games were blowouts.[1] The other four were all games that either went to overtime or were decided in the final 10 seconds.[2] For those of you who gamble, that offers some interesting options for Saturday’s game against Texas.


Finally, KU fans, I admit I cursed Ochai last week when I wrote about how efficient he was, and how he never took a shot that I questioned. He’s scored 27, 13, and 22 since in the three games since. But even those 20+ point nights came taking way more shots than he’s taken this year. He’s forced some mid-range stuff he hasn’t forced all year. And he’s missed too many shots at the rim.

He’s had such a beautiful and remarkable season. I hope he’s not running out of steam as the weight of the last four months gathers on his shoulders and the pressure of March awaits.

My bad for the jinx.


  1. West Virginia, Baylor, Oklahoma State, and Kansas State  ↩
  2. Iowa State, Texas Tech, Oklahoma, TCU  ↩

Friday Playlist (With Bonus Album Review)

Flipping the script this week, putting the video up top so my album review can land at the bottom of the post.

“Seventeen Going Under” – Camp Cope covering Sam Fender
I love everything about this. Including lead singer Georgia Maq’s Frightened Rabbit tattoo on her left bicep.

“Old White Church” – Arthur Dodge & The Horsefeathers
Most of this week’s Spotify playlist will be old songs. This one is from 1997, by a forgotten band from Lawrence, KS. I think this was their only “hit,” and that was probably only a hit on KLZR radio. It remains a jam, and I was pleased to find it on Spotify last week. Just outside our old neighborhood in Carmel was a little church that was built in 1853 called the White Chapel Church. Every time I drove by I thought of this song.

“Now We’re Getting Somewhere” – Crowded House
I have probably dozens of writing ideas that have been rattling around in my head for years, most music-related. One of them is an ode to the first Crowded House album, specifically side one. It is a near-perfect set of tunes that sounds more like it came from a veteran band than one putting out its first album. You should go listen to it.

“Squares” – The Beta Band
We don’t have Apple TV+ at the moment, so I’ve not had a chance to watch Severance yet. I look forward to the next time we turn that service on. I did very much dig that Apple used a section of this great track off the Beta Band’s 2001 disk Hot Shots II in the ads for the show.

“tend the garden” – Gang of Youths
“the man himself” – Gang of Youths
Gang of Youths, specifically their lead singer David Le’aupepe, can be a lot to take. He has all the big energy and earnestness of a young Bono or Eddie Vedder, but cranks that up beyond what those guys did in their primes. His songs should often be shortened by a few minutes, his albums should often be trimmed by a few songs. Because of that, reviews of GoY’s work are often mixed, with some critics loving it and others asking the equivalent of “What the hell, man?”

I struggle to connect with some of their music because it can be..Just…So…Much. But the stuff that does connect connects hard. And their new album, angel in realtime., has been delighting and slaying me for the past week.

Le’aupepe has taken on some heavy subjects over his career. The death of his first wife after battling cancer. His suicide attempt. General heartbreak. World politics. It seemed right that he would honor his father, who died in 2018, on GoY’s next album. Shortly after Teleso Le’aupepe’s death, David learned his father had a secret life he never shared. Teleso was born in Samoa, not New Zealand, ten years earlier than he had told his family. He had two sons in New Zealand that he abandoned when he moved to Australia. Those sons had believed, for most of their lives, that their dad had died, not jumped across the Tasman Sea to start a new life with a new family.

angel in realtime. is Le’aupepe coming to terms with all of that. He details his father’s life, honors his memory and background, explores the meaning of family, and expresses guilt for having his father in his life when his half-brothers did not. Almost every one of the album’s 67 minutes are brilliant.

I’m a big fan of albums that are structured well; LPs that have a clear narrative arc with carefully selected beginnings and endings. angel in realtime. has that structure. “you in everything” is the mission statement up front, placing us at the moment of Teleso’s death and the journey it sends David on. Near the middle comes “brothers,” which hits with a devastating impact as Le’aupepe sings about his siblings over a spare piano accompaniment. The first time I heard it was in the midst of doing some housework and I came to a screeching halt as the lyrics hit me. The album ends with the majestic duo of “hand of god” and “goal of the century,” an 11-ish minute suite that closes with one of the most amazing lyrical runs I can recall ending an album. I have to make sure I don’t listen to it with my girls around, lest they see me wiping tears away.

There are plenty of other great tracks in between. Some uplift while others stomp all over your heart.

As part of the writing process for the album, Le’aupepe worked backwards to discover the truth of his father’s life. He met his two half-brothers in New Zealand. He traveled to Samoa to visit his father’s birthplace and dive into a culture he had never been exposed to.

Along the way he learned of, and became entranced by, field recordings of native music from the Pacific Islands made by British musician David Fanshawe in the ‘70s and ‘80s. Those recordings have a profound influence on the album’s sound, both through direct samples and by GoY mimicking them in their playing. The sweeping strings that are present on so many tracks evoke the sounds of the waves crashing on shore, adding to the Pacific feel.

I’ve listened to the album almost non-stop for the past week. Although there are some moments that get a little tedious – it wouldn’t be a GoY album if they weren’t there – it has wormed its way into my head and heart, and each time it ends I’m ready to play it again.

You don’t have to have lost a parent to be able to tap into the feelings Le’aupepe sings about. He tells a fascinating story, one that could really have overwhelmed him and turned him bitter, with grace and honesty. In the end, he still loves, and greatly misses, his father. That love is celebrated across these 13 tracks.

I’ve been bouncing around all week trying to decide what song(s) to share here. Especially when you can just go listen to the album for yourself and pick your own favorites (I recommend doing that). I decided on these two because they share two different sides of the album’s story. “tend the garden” is offered from Teleso’s point-of-view, with him talking about the decisions he made and the path he took. “the man himself” is Le’aupepe realizing he must carry on through the rest of his life without his father. It is one of the tracks that most directly uses Fanshawe’s recordings. In this case, it begins and is built upon singing by the people of the island of Mangaia, in the Cook Islands. It is a perfect meld between the ancient and the modern, creating a timeless, glorious sound.

February Media

Shows and Movies

Ozark, season four, part one
Throughout Ozark’s run, I’ve been unable to keep from comparing it to Breaking Bad. I know I’m not the only one. And I’ve often felt that Ozark did not quite reach the same level as BB. Partially because BB came first, partially because there isn’t a single character in Ozark that you are rooting for.

In the first seven episodes of season four, the show finally bridges much of that gap. BB is still a better show – and Better Call Saul has surpassed BB – but Ozark is so damn good and so insanely intense that it has become as compelling as either of those shows. Most of the lead actors give incredible performances. There are almost no moments of relief from the tension that is constantly building through each episode. And you kind of hate everyone involved, although Ruth has surely become the Jessie Pinkman of the show: someone who despite her flaw you hope makes it through this mess.

A

Being James Bond
Barbara Broccoli, Daniel Craig, and Michael Wilson talk about Craig’s years as Bond.

A

Mission Impossible
GoldenEye
I came across an article comparing the MI and Bond series (I didn’t save the link), so one night decided to watch the first MI and the Bond movie that was closest in timing to it for comparison. I watched them in reverse chronological order, 1996’s MI first and 1995’s GoldenEye second. Which came across strangely because GoldenEye felt newer. There was a surprisingly low-budget feel to MI. How both movies dealt with the technology of their times – this was just as the non-techie world was discovering the Internet – was both interesting and hilarious. MI was also at least 32% cheesier. At this point, Bond was better. Not sure I’m going to dive into the rest of the MI series or Brosnan’s later works to continue the comparison.

MI B-; GoldenEye B+

Sing 2
Our family movie night choice for the month. Our girls, especially L, loved the first Sing movie. I think she has it memorized. This one didn’t seem quite as good, but I’ll admit I zoned out a couple times.

B

Judas and the Black Messiah
A powerful look back at Illinois Black Panther Party leader Fred Hampton. Daniel Kaluuya is amazing as Hampton. Just another reminder of how shameful this country has treated Black people.

A

Murderville
A quick (six episode) series with a fascinating concept: the entire cast, including star Will Arnett, are working from a script while each episode’s guest star must figure out the story on their own. The guest is charged with helping Arnett, as Detective Terry Seattle, solve a murder mystery. Sometimes, mostly with Conan O’Brien, this works. The Conan episode had me in tears. Other episodes don’t hit as often or as well. Not essential, but there are terrific moments in just about every episode.

B

In From the Cold
A series about a former Russian spy living in America who is forced back into the world of espionage? Yes, please! I had no idea going in that it had a Marvel-like twist, which I didn’t exactly love but also separated this from your standard spy series. There was some clunky writing and a couple spotty performances. But Margarita Levieva in the lead role is an absolute badass.

B

Body of Lies
Leo in the War on Terror, attempting to track down a terrorist leader. I’ve seen him put his southern accent to better use in several other movies. Kind of a hacky plot, too.

B-

Torn
Another in the run of climbing docs I’ve sampled recently. This one, focused on Alex Lowe, is an absolute motherfucker. Lowe died in an avalanche in Tibet in 1999, leaving behind a wife and three sons. His best friend survived the avalanche and eventually married Lowe’s widow. This film was made by Lowe’s oldest son, who was 10 at the time of his death. It gets into a lot of the awkwardness of their family situation, which is taken to a whole other level when Lowe’s body was finally discovered/recovered in 2015. There are moments in the film that are very hard to watch.

A-

Barry, season two
If season one was a “Holy Shit!” A, season two was a HOLY SHIT!! A+. It won’t work for everyone’s sensibilities, but if this fits yours, it is a damn-near perfect show.

A+

The November Man
It’s kind of crazy how Pierce Brosnan has made, arguably, better movies after his run as James Bond. Although he seemed destined to play 007, something always seemed a bit off about him in that role. Maybe it was the pressure, and the release of that pressure allowed him to perform better later?

This is a decent spy flick. It has some good action and interesting angles, especially now with Russia invading Ukraine. But it also had a lot of cheese, both in the writing and in the production. Bringing in former Bond girl Olga Kurylenko for a major role was a bold choice. I enjoy her on the screen.

B-


Shorts

Run the Rock: A half marathon wheelbarrow mission
There’s always an element of absurdity to Beau Miles’ missions. This might be the most ridiculous.
Haircut hater gets a makeover by wife
Whereas this one was more just funny than ridiculous.

A, A

The Seinfeld Theme Mixed With A Hit Song From Every Year Seinfeld Was On TV
There was something similar to this awhile back that seemed better.

B

How Did Portugal Happen?
I always wondered why there was a chunk of the Iberian peninsula that isn’t part of Spain.

B+

Polar bears on Kolyuchin Island, Chukotka, Russia
These are delightful. More about them here.

A

That Time the Mediterranean Sea Disappeared
Science!

A-

How James Webb Orbits “Nothing”
Too much science! Even this greatly dumbed-down explanation of how the James Webb telescope orbits an empty spot in space was over my head.

B+ for video, F for me

12 Minutes of Will Arnett Roasting Jason Bateman on Conan
As funny as the roasts are watching Arnett’s body evolve over the years. Paging Barry Bonds…

A-

Storm Eunice at London Heathrow Airport

There was a big windstorm in London a couple weeks back – gusts over 70 MPH at times – and this channel became a Twitter sensation. I’m a bit ashamed to admit how long I spent watching, or at least with it in its own tab over on the side of the screen. At one point nearly 187,000 other people were also watching, so I don’t feel bad about it. Who knew a British guy sharing his enjoyment of watching planes land in heavy weather as though he was watching a soccer game could be so entertaining? Not sure which was more fun: him cheering on a good landing – “Well done! Fair play to you!” – or yelling “GO ‘ROUND! GO ‘ROUND!” at pilots who bailed on their attempts. Or when he “conversed” with the horses that checked out his car. It was a little nerve racking watching the jets fight the winds.

Naturally, there is an Internet beef that involves Big Jet TV.

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The dark history of the overthrow of Hawaii
White man gonna white man.

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Can an Average Guy Beat the US Olympic Curling Team?
Brilliant.

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Reader’s Notebook: 3/1/22

Anthem – Noah Hawley
Hawley can spin a story. Here he takes a little bit of everything going on in the world today and mixes it together: Covid, our former president, climate change, toxic discourse on social media, the Insurrection, and even Joe Rogan. He whips that up into the biggest possible mess. There is a total breakdown of society and what amounts to a second American Civil War. Then he throws in a very Stephen King angle: sending a bunch of kids on a quest in the midst of this. He even names one of his characters after one of King’s most famous characters. Hmmm…

It’s a hell of a story and keeps the reader turning the pages. Whether all of it makes sense or not is another discussion. But I was entertained.


Bloody January – Alan Parks
Damn, I read this two weeks too late!

This tale takes place in Glasgow in January 1973, as a series of murders take place and detective Harry McCoy takes lead on the investigation. McCoy isn’t the cleanest of cops, and his private life gets all intertwined with the search for truth. The story is bloody and dark.


How the Word Is Passed – Clint Smith
This is a difficult book to write about, for a couple reasons.

First, it is about the lasting effects of slavery on American society, and how we, as a nation, handle that history. That’s never easy to discuss.

Second, Smith has written one of the most beautiful non-fiction books I’ve ever read. I was constantly amazed at how gorgeous his language was, and the irony of that beauty being used to relate the most heinous part of our country’s history.

Smith travels to several different geographic locations to examine how the legacy of slavery is handled in each of them. Among stops in his travels are Thomas Jefferson’s home in Monticello; the Angola prison in Louisiana; Galveston, TX, where the holiday Juneteenth was first celebrated; New York City; and the island off the coast of Senegal that was a loading point for slave ships.

Smith reported this book before Covid hit, right in the midst of the last administration, when white supremacy was being encouraged from the highest office in the land. Some of the conversations he had are astounding. I can’t imagine being a Black man and having an open discussion with people who are celebrating the lives of Confederate soldiers. Hell, I can’t imagine having those conversations as a white man!

There were many points while reading that I would stop and stare out the window, thinking about what I had just read, forming thoughts about those passages. I should have written some of those down.

I do recall a couple of those thoughts.

First, there was the suggestion Smith made for why so many white people struggle to honestly look back at our country’s history of slavery. It is hard, he writes, to be told the history you grew up with was false. To realize you have to reevaluate your life, and the lives of your family members that came before you. You may have no connection with your great-great-great grandfather who was a slave owner, but you still don’t want to hear that he enslaved other humans and generations of your family probably thought that was fine. It’s just hard to get people to accept updated histories of any kind, whether they are directly affected or not.

Second was how the concept of freedom differs based on who you are and where you are from. For white Americans, freedom is largely about our relationship with the government. What can and can’t we do without being interfered with? Where can we travel? What can we say and believe? And so on. For all the heated rhetoric of modern politics, where some people suggest that being asked to pay taxes or wear a mask is tantamount to tyranny, white people are generally arguing about nuance.

Black people, on the other hand, view the concept very differently. To them freedom literally means the difference between being owned as property and living as free humans. Sure, slavery ended over 150 years ago, but because of how Black people have been marginalized since Emancipation, that truth remains strong within their community.

Unfortunately Smith does not offer us a clear path forward. He suggests that we will never get past slavery as long as broad swaths of the country – in all geographic regions – refuse to honestly address the impact slavery has had on our society.

Stats

February 2022

  • Eddie Vedder – 124
  • Gang of Youths – 93
  • Something for Kate – 40
  • Phantastic Ferniture – 27
  • The Beatles – 26

Complete stats available at my Last.fm page.

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