Month: July 2022 (Page 2 of 2)

Friday Playlist

“These Are The Days” – Inhaler
I had not heard of this band until this week despite them having a #1 album in Ireland and the UK last year. They are a four-piece from Dublin that sound a little like the most famous band to ever come out of Dublin. That’s no coincidence: lead singer and guitarist Eli Hewson is Bono’s son. He isn’t exactly Julian Lennon, who sounded exactly like his dad, but there are certainly common traits between Hewson’s voice and his father’s. The band has some of the energy and grandness of classic U2, but they aren’t mimics either. Not a bad song, so they are on now on my radar.

“GOOD TIMES” – Jungle
Like the previous song, I discovered this via baseball writer Keith Law’s monthly playlist of his favorite songs. I generally like Law’s writing, his views on politics, and enjoy his reviews of movies and books. I guess I have to add music to that list now. I don’t know that we are in good times at the moment, but this song can change your mind for three minutes.

“Skulls” – Peter Matthew Bauer
It must be strange to have been in an “important” band and realize no matter what else you do, you’ll always be labelled by that part of your career. The Walkmen have been on hiatus over a decade, and show no signs of coming back, but Peter Matthew Bauer is seemingly always introduced as “founding member of The Walkmen…” This is another fine addition to his collection of solo work. I’m sure it’s a coincidence, but the organ that drones throughout this entire songs recalls an organ in another song about skulls from awhile back.

“The Night Before Your Birthday” – Andrew Bird
Bird released a new album a few weeks back. As with just about every album in his long career, I doubt the entire thing will connect with every listener. But the key is that at every listener will find one or two songs they can connect with. Here is one of mine.

“Storm in Summer” – Skullcrusher
The rain all went north Tuesday and Wednesday, mostly south on Thursday. But looks like we might get some storms today, over three weeks since our last significant rain. Let’s hope the forecast is right and we get some summer storms later.

“Velvet” – The Big Pink
English electronic band The Big Pink released their first single in a decade last month. It wasn’t my favorite but made me dig into the archives searching for which of their old songs I had listened to in my iTunes days. It looks like almost exactly 11 years ago I included this song on my old music podcast. It is still a jam.

June Media

Movies, Series, Shows

Tokyo Vice
I heard mixed things about this, but when I realized Michael Mann was involved, I decided to give it a try. It’s classic Mann: visually stunning with some high highs and low lows.

My favorite part about the show was Ansel Elgort, the actor who plays main character Jake Adelstein. The real Adelstein is from Missouri and attended Mizzou. Elgort has a slight resemblance to, and sounds a little like, Charlie Tahan, who played Wyatt Langmore on Ozark. Wyatt, of course, was trying to get his shit together so he could go to Mizzou at one point. I liked to imagine that the shows were flipped chronologically and Tokyo Vice was an Ozark spin off that showed where life took Wyatt if (spoiler alert) he hadn’t gotten killed by Javi Elizondro.

B

Roadrunner: A Film About Anthony Bourdain
This was exactly what I expected it to be. The first hour or so is a wonderful recounting of an amazing life lived by one of the coolest people ever. Then the last hour should totally fuck you up if you admired Bourdain and his work, and/or have had someone you were close to commit suicide.

A-

Top Gun
If I was going to see the new Top Gun flick, I figured I better watch the original again. Even if I watched it approximately 8000 times between the summer of 1986 and the fall of 1987. Just good, clean, cheesy, 1980s fun.

A

Barry, season three
I believe I’m obligated to say, HOLY SHIT!!!!

Barry spent the first two seasons balancing laugh-out-loud humor with often intense violence, and that balance always made the show work.

Season three lost some of that humor as the show veered into much darker territory. At times I wondered where it was headed. But it all came together amazingly in the final two episodes. The season finale is one of the most intense, disturbing, yet fulfilling half hours of TV I can recall. It was brutal to watch but, afterwards, I couldn’t help but admire how the season arrived at its ending and how many absolute powerhouse acting performances it took to get there. I don’t know where the show goes from here, but I will certainly watch as Bill Hader and his compatriots have yet to disappoint.

A

No Time To Die
First home viewing. Still good, although Léa Seydoux’s performance struck me as not great this time.

A


Shorts, Etc

Inside Demolished Ukrainian City
Inside Underground Bunker During Bombing in Ukraine War
Inside East Ukraine War Zone
More of Indigo Traveller’s trek through Ukraine.

Adventures of A+K
My (sometimes) favorite Millennials continue their trek to Alaska. They’re into Canada now, so making progress.

The Last Ski Maker in Scotland
A beautiful little film about an amazing craftsman.

Homewrecker
Beau Miles’ videos are usually filled with humor (or “humour” to him). This one has some bits of that, but it’s far more about his obsessions, what causes them, and what he hopes to accomplish through them. We need more people like him in the world who view a moment of destruction as an opportunity to repurpose rather than toss aside materials that still have functional value.
Searching the bush for my cameraman’s wallet
And then here is some of his normal bullshit. I’m going to start using the term “rice bubbles.”

Solo Camping in the Rain
My outdoor video viewings have led me to this: a combination camping and ASMR video. I watched this after 11:00 one night and it nearly put me to sleep. Which was kind of cool.

NLU Film Room: Soly 2022 U.S. Open Local Qualifying
Take a really good “regular” golfer and put him in a US Open local qualifier with a film crew following him and fun ensues.

I watched an NBA game from every decade
This was dope.

J. Kenji López-Alt
The algorithm suggested one of this guy’s food videos and I quickly got hooked. Informative, not too complex, and the results all look delicious. I had a Barnes & Noble gift certificate lying around and used it to grab one of his books. I might finally use our 19-year-old wok more than three times a year.


Podcasts

Plain English
This podcast is part of The Ringer’s network. I listened to a couple of his episodes about our current economic situation and got hooked.

Holiday Weekend Notes (Heavy With Cooking Content)

We’ve reached the midway point in academic summer, an occasional always highlighted by our family’s July 4th celebrations.

This year’s was a little lower key than recent ones. We had no out-of-town visitors this time, so fewer cousins, aunts, and uncles running around. It was as hot as it’s been any recent year, so it was probably good we had at least 10 fewer people in the pool this year compared to the last three.

Our family gathering was on Sunday this year. This was a big moment for me as it was my first time really using my new Traeger smoker/grill. I’ve used it a lot for pretty standard grilling, but this was my first true smoke. In fact, it was my first real smoke in at least a decade, back to whenever I got fed up with the idiosyncrasies of my old electric smoker.

For the holiday I first smoked an 8+ pound pork butt. I read a bunch of different recipes to prepare mentally. Consensus was it would take me 10–12 hours to smoke the pork, and I also wanted to do some chicken after then wrap up with grilling some hot dogs. So my plan was to get up at 5:00 AM to start the process.

In all that planning I forgot one thing: to set my alarm. Fortunately I awoke with a start right around 1:00 AM Sunday and realized I never turned the alarm on. You know how that goes, though. Even after setting my alarm I was waking up every hour or so to check the time just in case. That alarm went off as planned but I was a little wiped when I came down to take my fully-rubbed slab of pork out of the fridge.

After sitting on the counter to warm, it went into the smoker at 6:00 with the temperature set to 225. The smoker temp held pretty steady all day, although once the sun really got hot it ran about five degrees warmer than set. I spritzed the pork with apple juice every hour until it hit 160°, right around 12:30. Then I took it off, triple-wrapped it in foil, and put it back on.

If you’ve smoked you know the time between 145–165° is the longest time of the cook, as the moistures begin pulling from the center and fights the cooking process. That was the case Sunday. It seemingly took forever to get over the 165° hump, and I was sweating whether it would be ready in time for a bunch of hungry people. Fortunately once it got to 170° it took off like a rocket and I removed it at 4:00 when the pork hit 202° and threw it into a cooler to rest for an hour.

I smoked some chicken breasts next. Bone-in would have been best, but we had a freezer full of Costco boneless breasts that I decided to use. I always brine chicken that I plan on grilling to keep it moist. I just forgot about that step in all the other activities of the day, so the chicken came out a little dry. It also didn’t help that I kept the heat very low and then cranked it at the end when the chicken didn’t seem to be progressing. But it’s good with some sauce and we’ll have quesadillas and/or barbecue chicken pizza with it this week.

I turned the Traeger off at 5:45, so 11:45 of total cook time.

All-in-all a pretty successful first experience. I got lots of compliments on the food. The rest of the family added some tasty stuff to the spread and it was a fine family holiday meal.

I did have to take two naps during the day. One 20-minute nap after the meat went on at 6:00, and another 30–40 minute one around 11:00 because I felt like a zombie after the tossing-and-turning from the night before. The second one, and a Cherry Coke Zero, seemed to do the trick.

The rest of the day was solid. As I said, it was hot. We drained and replaced some water in the pool to try to cool it and that dropped the temp a whole degree. But the kids didn’t seem to complain. We had the five local nephews here and they had fun splashing.

Everyone was winding down in their own way well before our planned 10:00 fireworks, so we did them a little early despite it not being dark. We bought our standard, $35 at Target package of fireworks. That was good enough for the kids. Waiting for the year when one of the boys asks why they aren’t bigger and we explain how Aunt S is a pediatrician and hates fireworks and if they want bigger ones they need to ask their parents to take them someone else.

We had planned on having some friends over on the Fourth for another hangout, but Covid hit their house so that fell apart. We sandwiched our Sunday celebration by cleaning out the garage and power washing the driveway on Saturday (L helped power wash) and then cleaned out the pool house and added some new shelving to it on Sunday. There was a trip to Lowes in there. Exciting stuff!

Now it’s suddenly July 5 and I’m already thinking about making sure we order any new school clothes early enough for them to arrive by August 10 and 11 when the girls go back to class.

Independence Day Playlist

Only one change to the playlist for this year, which is now four years old. The dark tone that carries through many of these songs seems more appropriate this year. I hope you all have happy and safe gatherings.

Emergency Sports Post

Some MASSIVE sports news dropped on Thursday. With Monday being a holiday, who knows what can happen between now and when I get around to sharing some thoughts. So a quick-ish, emergency post about…


UCLA/USC Jumping To Big 10

WHAT?!?!!? Where the fuck did this come from? I have to say, I am utterly amazed that the UT/OU to SEC and UCLA/USC to Big 10 stories remained so quiet right up until they became done deals. It really doesn’t make much sense to me that there weren’t more leaks in each case.

Texas and Oklahoma to the SEC makes sense in a lot of ways. But the two LA schools joining the Big 10 is pretty fucking nutty. I know this is all about money, both grabbing as much TV revenue as possible and about balancing out money athletic departments are going to start losing as NIL funnels money directly to players. But this seems like a way to massively increase AD expenses in the new Big 10, with some schools literally having to fly across the country to play conference games. I suppose you can have the LA teams make an east coast swing, and Maryland/Rutgers can do the opposite. But are you really going to take the women’s soccer team out of class for a week a couple times a season to play conference games, and then pay to fly them and put them in hotels for that stretch?

I guess this is just another step closer to the power athletic schools ending up in one or two giant leagues, renegotiating all the TV deals, then splitting into geographic divisions that look a lot like the old conferences we knew and loved.

Strangely, for the first time since this wave of realignment began over a decade ago, KU is actually in good shape. The Big 12 made good moves to grab Cincinnati, Central Florida, Houston, and BYU and seems stable. Now whoever ends up being leftover from the Pac–12 will be ripe for the picking. The Big 12 would always be the third or fourth strongest of the power conferences, in terms of TV revenue potential, but the conference would stay alive.

Plus there are the persistent rumors that KU is one of a handful of schools sitting pretty for if/when the Big 10/SEC decide to expand further.

Then there was the ridiculous rumor floating yesterday that KU was looking to join the Big East and go independent in football. I say ridiculous because that makes absolutely no financial sense when the Big 12 is still an option, KU football is not in any position to go independent, and the guy pushing it had a number of college hoops “scoops” that were very wrong. Then again, there have been a lot of rumors that seemed absolutely dumb that have come true during this whole process, so I guess you never know.


Kevin Durant Demands a Trade

I literally laughed out loud when I got the text from a friend sharing this news. After a week of drama about what Kyrie Irving would do got squashed by Kyrie announcing he was returning to the Nets, KD drops this big ass bomb in the NBA, bringing the free agency market to a screeching halt just as it opened.

I get the old man bitching about how players angle to play with their buddies and create super teams. I generally don’t agree with that line of thinking, because I believe when you become a free agent you’ve earned the right to choose your own path, even if it’s different from how superstars would have traveled in the 80s or 90s.

That said, I think when you sign a contract and recruit guys to play with you, you can’t jump ship halfway through your contract when you sour on the situation. You have to live with it and do your best to make it work, even if that means some pain along the way.

Still, I kind of love what a drama queen KD has become. He’s one of the most fascinating players in the league, because he’s different that almost everyone else. He’s not as “crazy” as Kyrie, as ruthless as LeBron, as adept at social media as Joel Embiid. But he’s close to each of them, and when you put it all together, you get an absolute content machine, which makes everything he does insanely compelling. Even if it can be exhausting at times.


Basketball Camp

I missed most of this breaking news as it happened because I was at L’s final day of basketball camp. I got there a little early to watch the scrimmages and the awards presentations.

She had a good week. She met some new girls and became friendly with them. You never know what girls will actually end up at a private school, but she is hopeful a couple of them are in her class in a little over a year. She told me on day two the head coach talked to her about the travel program L is in, how she thinks it is a great one, and how she thought it had made L better (we aren’t sure if she’s seen L play before, although the two local Catholic school coaches do pop into CYO games when they have time). When I dropped her off on Thursday the head coach greeted L by name and several of the varsity players came over and said hello.

Anyway, they got to the awards and went through a few for performance in individual drills and stuff before getting to the final award, Teammate of the Week. When the head coach called L’s name, all the high school girls went nuts, with the best player yelling “YEAH L!!!!” really loud. On our way home she told me how that girl, who is in M’s class but was new to CHS last year so they don’t really know each other, kept following her around all week, giving her pointers. So she made a connection with the head coach, with the current players, and with the girls who could be in her class when she gets to high school. It was a successful four days.

Friday Playlist

Over halfway through the year; that’s kind of nutty! Be looking for my annual bonus playlist on Monday.

“Rubberneckers” – Christian Lee Hutson
A perfect mid-summer song in tone, this is about how many people you run across in LA who have made messes of their lives. It doesn’t take much to extrapolate that to our entire country right now. Add this to Phoebe Bridgers’ quiver of excellent music she has a hand in, too. She produced Hutson’s latest album and, I believe, provides backup vocals here.

“Up to My Elbows” – The Stroppies
Nearly ideal Aussie jangle pop.

“Silenced” – The Brian Jonestown Massacre
I watched Roadrunner, the film about Antony Bourdain’s life, a couple weeks back. In it there’s a moment when one of his friends mentions that his favorite song was “Anemone” by The Brian Jonestown Massacre, and made a comment about what that indicated about Bourdain’s state of mind late in his life. I listened to “Anemone” later and saw TBJM had just released a new album. I checked it out and while their heavy, psychedelic sound can be a bit much (apparently if you are using, or have ever used, heroin it makes a lot more sense) a few songs, including this one, sounded pretty good to me. I think the key with TBJM is not to take them too seriously, or listen to them too much, and then their heaviness can’t get you down.

“Vision Boards” – Good Looks
Steven Hyden listed Good Looks’ album as one of his favorites of the first half 2022. I had never heard of them and gave it a listen. It fits in an odd space in the music world, not really indie, not really alt-country, not really heartland rock, but with enough elements of each of those genres that you could make a case for any of them. I like this track’s slightly messy sound, which again defies categorization but, to me, has some classic Rolling Stones in it.

“Last Day of June” – The Finn Brothers
OK, a day late, but still relevant.

“Summer’s Cold” – PHONY
Holy late ’90s sound, Batman!

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