Month: July 2023 (Page 2 of 2)

Weekend Notes

It was an extra-long weekend featuring many hours in the car.


Hoops in the Lou

L and I drove west to St. Louis for her first out-of-town tournament of the year.

The hoops were good. We went 3–1, winning the championship game by nine thanks to a 9–2 run in the final minute to put away a game we were trying to lose. We led by nine with 8:00 left, five with 5:00 left, but by just two as the clock ticked under a minute. Against a team we had blown a 15-point lead against on Saturday. Tense, but the girls got it done.

That team was a local St. Louis squad. The parents were a little rough. One dad just yelled the entire game Saturday. Mostly kind of positive things at his team with the occasional barb at the refs. But he just never stopped. And as we blew our lead, he was one of those dads who decides he needs to walk onto the court to celebrate when his team makes a big play. He was harmless as he never directed anything at us or our girls. But since he never stopped and thought he had all the answers, he was mega annoying.

We thought it was hilarious that between games he and the other parents from their team were in the parking lot sharing a joint. At like 2:00 PM on a Saturday. I checked and I don’t think this kind of use is protected under the new Missouri marijuana law, but I’m no attorney. I’m not sure if that chilled him out a little for their second game, as I was keeping score rather than in the seats and couldn’t hear him.

Sadly he was missing for Sunday’s championship game. He may have partied a little too hard Saturday night.

L had a good weekend. She scored 23 points across the four games, had 9 total rebounds, 9 assists, and had four steals alone in our Sunday morning game. Our second game Saturday was tight but she helped blow it open with a 3-pointer on one possession, then a bucket, foul, and free throw on the next. That helped push a two-point lead to 12 before we gave up three buckets in the last 30 seconds to only win by seven.

We were in St. Louis because our coach’s wife is from there, and her family was celebrating their mom’s 80th birthday over the weekend. So rather than go to the big GUAA tournament in Louisville, we went to a smaller, local tournament so he and his daughter could be with us. Good thing, since she scored six of our nine points in the last minute of the championship game.

Friday night we hung out at his wife’s sister’s house. I took some good-natured ribbing from a house full of Mizzou fans. I offered to show them the national champions sticker on my car and they politely declined. I spent a good chunk of the evening talking to the brother that played basketball at Central Missouri in the late ‘90s, mostly about the St. Louis high school scene he grew up in.

The big bummer of the weekend was our hotel. In a word, it was a dump. It was one of those places that might have been nice 20 years ago, but probably hasn’t had any renovations or deep cleanings since then. The rooms were all full of stains and disrepair. Some of the rooms – including ours – were only half-cleaned. The room across from us had two dogs in it, plus the humans with them seemed to be smoking a lot of weed. There was a room down the hall that definitely had birds in it. Several families couldn’t get their door keys to work properly. The overall vibe made you not want to touch anything.

The final straw came Saturday morning. We heard the shower in the room above us running and soon heard dripping in ours. The water damage to the ceiling I noticed when we checked in was a result of the tub on the second floor leaking directly into ours. I was off to the front desk to get a new room. Fortunately our second one had been cleaned and was away from the weed-smoking dog lovers.

We realized later that a big, municipal dump was right across the street, thus the terrible trash odor when we tried to sit outside.

A dump by a literal dump.

Hopefully we didn’t bring home bed bugs or anything, but at this point nothing would surprise me.

Also, on our trip home, the craziest thing I’ve ever seen on a highway happened. I’m honestly not sure how to describe it. Basically, it looked like a small cat fell out of the car in front of us as we were traveling at roughly 85 MPH. Like it dropped out of a wheel well or some other space underneath the car, not like it jumped or was tossed out the window. It was skidding and trying to get its footing as I went over it, definitely alive and not a stuffed animal. It was right in the middle of the lane so I sailed past comfortably but I’m assuming it met a horrible fate not too far behind me.

Thing is, I was traveling behind this car for awhile; for 10 minutes at least. Who knows when they had last stopped. Had this poor thing been hanging on for dear life for 30 minutes? An hour? Longer? Or did it come from a car further up? No one in front of me braked or swerved so I honestly can’t be sure where it came from.

Or maybe it was just all that passive weed smoke I breathed in at our hotel that had me seeing things.

There’s an obvious National Lampoon’s Vacation reference here but it feels wrong directly quoting it.

A mostly good, if weird, weekend in the Lou. We’re back-and-forth to Bloomington next weekend.


UC Orientation

Monday morning we were in the car bright and early to make the quick trip down to Cincinnati for M’s UC orientation. For the first time S rode along so she could finally take a look at campus. She approved.

That was pretty much the highlight of the day. Since M had already attended admitted students day and gone through virtual orientation plus done her advising appointment and made her schedule online, there wasn’t a ton of new information for her. They didn’t have the dorms open for tours, which was a bummer, as S really wanted a look to help focus our shopping.

M is supposed to move in the weekend of August 12. She will find out in a couple weeks what her official move-in date/time is. Because UC is such a tight campus you have to request a window for your arrival. Things should be a little easier for her as she’s going down a week before official move-in day for rush, but we still won’t know our time until the whole process does its thing. She’s hoping for August 12, as there are rush events the evening of the 13th. There is a chance, though, we could be moving her in during the day on the 13th.

Friday Playlist

“Police On My Back” – The Clash
I watched like my 60th documentary about The Clash this week and dove into their music for a bit after. I maintain they are the greatest cover band of all time, taking songs by other acts that were already great and elevating them as they made them their own. Here’s a perfect example, originally written and sung by Eddie Grant with his band The Equals in 1967.

“The Sky Is Melting” – Alex Lahey
This song is either about Monday, apparently the hottest day in Earth’s history (assuming during human occupation of our planet) or Lahey taking some edibles in the desert one night. She says B but I think A.

“I’m Free (Heaven Helps the Man)” – Kenny Loggins
The best – by far, fight me – song on the Footloose soundtrack. It’s a damn shame it peaked at #22 on the Top 40. That’s what happens when you release a single in the middle of the greatest summer for music ever.

Why am I including it? Twice this week – Monday and Wednesday – while popping into my local grocery I heard it on the in-store music stream. Which seems pretty random. Especially when the next song was different each time, so it’s not like they were stuck in a loop or something. If it plays again on my next visit, I’m going to think something is up.

“Basketball” – Kurtis Blow
L and I will hit the road shortly for a week of hoops in the Lou.

“Brainless” – The Urge
Speaking of the Lou, Spotify has spit this out twice in the past couple weeks. Arguably the greatest non-Nelly song to come out of St. Louis in the mid-to-late 90s.

“Show You The Way” – Thundercat with Michael McDonald and Kenny Loggins.
I watched [a summary of Michael McDonald’s career](https://youtu.be/Yna1ZN7AdOg) this week. It’s pretty amazing how often he appeared as a guest on other artist’s hits. This song was referenced as one he’s appeared on lately. Since McDonald is from St. Louis, seems right to include it. And, holy shit, Kenny Loggins too!

“Summer Nights” – Van Halen
Man, it is all coming together. In July 1986 I visited a friend who had moved to St. Louis. We listened to nothing but Van Halen for the 36 hours I spent with him. I think the Van Hagar song of the moment was “Dreams.” But I’m sure my love for this song is connected with that trip. I always thought Eddie’s mini guitar he plays in this video was cool as shit.

Thursday Links

Good news for those of you with video game collections: you will soon be able to buy an actual new game for your Atari 2600!

’Mr. Run and Jump’ will be the first official cartridge for the Atari 2600 since 1990


Not sure I buy this writer’s argument, but it is an interesting counter to the conventional wisdom about season three of Ted Lasso.

Kindly allow this brief dissenting opinion: Perhaps Ted Lasso isn’t broken—we are. The show hasn’t stopped working: It’s merely changed to meet the moment.

In Defense ofTed Lasso


The Believer used to be one of those cool magazines I would pick up before a work trip. It was filled with great content plus it made me look hip and well-traveled. I did not know it had gone away for a bit and then returned.

This piece from the April edition is a bit dated, as David Eggers visited Ukraine last December. Still, his report from that war-torn country was enlightening.

I believe that in the West we have not gotten a full picture of life in Ukraine during war. It is infinitely richer and more alive and inspiring than we are led to believe.

Sketches From Ukraine


I’ve read so many pieces about season two of The Bear. I liked how this one explored how “Fishes” tapped into the many emotions of the holiday season.

That’s what makes this Christmas so tragic. The love is there, but they’ve just gotten a little too comfortable showing each other the ugliest versions of themselves.

The Christmas Episode of “The Bear” Is an Instant Classic

Weekend Notes

A lot to get caught up on after a long holiday weekend.


July 4th

Our standard family pool party for the Fourth of July. Almost all the locals were over for a daytime gathering. I smoked rather than grilled burgers for the first time and they turned out pretty good. All the young ones were well behaved, and it seems like both generations of sisters got along for the day, too.

We had neighbors over for drinks in the evening after the family had cleared out. No driveway fireworks this year.


Kid Hoops

Thursday was the last night of summer league games. CHS played a team they lost to by six earlier in June, and both coaches agreed to stack their rosters so that it was a true A game. Which got L excited.

She played pretty well in an eight-point loss. She hit a shot right before halftime to give us a 20–19 lead. But we were on the wrong side of a 9–2 run to start the third quarter that was pretty much the game. L was not on the court for any of that run. When she played, it was an even ballgame. When she sat, our offense bogged down and the defense was disconnected.

She scored six for the night on 3–4 shooting, and had a rebound, an assist, a steal, and a turnover.

She wasn’t super pleased with her play afterward, but I told her about my rough +/- numbers and how I saw her affect the game. There are definitely girls better than her on the team. There are girls with more potential or who are better than her in individual aspects of the game. But of the girls in the 20-ish player pool the JV teams pulled from this summer, no one organizes the game better than her.

Her first summer of high school hoops was a success. She fit in, she got more confident as the season progressed, was high scorer in at least two games, earned the coaches’ trust, and most importantly, she made some new, good friends. I’m excited to see how she improves once fall practice kicks off.

Not much rest for her. The travel team goes to St. Louis Friday for a tournament.

Over the weekend we went to the Y to shoot three times. She came up with a new workout that required her to make 300 shots. Mid-range, floaters, and 3’s. Off-the-catch and off-the-dribble. Lots of free throws. It took roughly an hour to get through it each day. I worked up a good sweat rebounding and passing.


Weather/Power

What a weird weather week.

We began with a terrible bout with the Canadian wild fire smoke. A couple times we had the worst air quality of any city in the US. Wednesday morning we were up to #2 in the world. Never say that Indianapolis can’t compete on the world stage!

It was much worse than our first run with the smoke a month ago. Two days the sky resembled the winter sky right before a big snow storm. Those days we couldn’t even see the sun, let alone take eerie pictures of its light refracted by the smoke. There was also a strange, metallic smell to the air.

Then Thursday a Derecho storm blew through with winds over 70 MPH. Our power went off at 3:57 and did not come back on until 3:00 Saturday afternoon. We filled up coolers with ice and transported our important items from the freezer to a relative’s home, but lost pretty much everything else from our fridges and freezers. S said it was time to replace a lot of our condiments anyway. Our house got pretty toasty each afternoon, but at least our basement remained cool. It was completely comfortable sleeping down there.

At one point nearly 80,000 people in Indianapolis were without power. I was obsessively checking the outage map and watched it slowly tick down a few thousand at a time, only for it to shoot back up after more, if less intense, storms came through both Friday night and Saturday morning.

When our power came back on there were still around 20,000 people in the city without power. I think most of them were back up and running by Sunday evening.

We had zero damage at our house. The neighbors to either side of us kept their power. It was just a thin row of 7–8 houses behind us that all come off the same line that got knocked out. Obviously the big downside of living in an area with tons of old trees and old power lines.

The big surprise was that our pool survived without turning bad. I was worried that sitting in the heat, covered, with zero circulation or filtration would be a recipe for stuff to grow quickly. It has turned cloudy in less time before. But Saturday night it was clear and tested out fine. I shocked it and ran the pump a little higher than normal and it was fine to swim in on Sunday.

In a related note, our refrigerators are very clean and organized.


Taylor Swift

I mentioned in Friday’s playlist that M was off to Cincy to watch Taylor Swift perform. She said the show was awesome.

M just got her tickets a week before the show. She received a text saying that some new tickets had been released. She was worried it was a scam, but noticed the message came from the same number her other Ticketmaster texts came from, so she decided to quickly buy two tickets and hope they were legit. She messaged some friends and they asked if she could try to get two more. The link indeed worked again so she bought four total tickets at face value 10 days before the show. She checked the secondary market and seats in her section were going for more than $2000. Pretty crazy. She was in the lower level in the Bengals stadium, with a great view of the main stage.

The grandparents of one of the friends that went with her live in Cincy, so the girls stayed at their house. The grandfather also met them near the stadium so M could park in a good spot hours before the show, took them to his house to drop their stuff, then back to the stadium. She’s living right these days.

Just a nice bonus this trip allowed her to miss out on about 24 hours of our power outage.


Football Recruiting

I will not address KU football recruiting until December.


Home States

Finally, not only did I just pass my 20th wedding anniversary and my 20th blogging anniversary, but also marked my 20th year living in Indiana. A few years ago I went through the exercise of figuring out how long I spent in each of the four states I lived in.

That was harder than you would think because of the college years, splitting time between two states. I decided to give Kansas ¾ credit for my first three years at KU, then full credit for the last couple after I gained residency and stayed there most of the summers. I’m not sure if that works out exactly right, but it seemed close and fair.

Anyway, my 20th year in Indiana means I’ve officially lived here longer than any other state. That still doesn’t sound right. My current tally looks like this:

Indiana 20 years
Missouri 19 years
Kansas 12 years
California 1 year

Independence Day Playlist, 2023

It is my fifth year offering a playlist to celebrate the day in my own, unique, musical way. There are two new songs this year, one of which I can’t believe took me five years to add.

June Media

Movies, Shows, etc

Severance
OK, this was the strangest, most messed up show I can recall watching. The way the finale ended – SPOILER ALERT – without resolving anything and instead setting up the next season was maddening. As a lover of the color blue, I did enjoy how many different gorgeous shades were integral to the show’s aesthetic.

B

The Hateful Eight
I didn’t like this as much as Tarantino’s other Western, Django Unchained, mostly because it felt a little long (and I did NOT watch the extended version). But the final chapter pulled all the parts together and made it worth the time.

B+

Spider-Man: Across the Spider-Verse
Faaaaaaaaantastic. One of the most jaw-dropping visual experiences I’ve ever viewed in the theater. I hadn’t read anything about the movie before we saw it – or rewatched the original – so I was floored when I got to the final moment of the movie.

A

Tour de France Unchained
This, errr, formula worked for F1, why not try it with the biggest bike race in the world. I wonder if this year’s Tour de France will get more interest thanks to this insider look at last year’s edition. I expect to watch more than I did last year, which was less than I had in other recent years. Even with me having to pony up for a month of Peacock+ to watch. If NBC owned Netflix I would say this was brilliant marketing.

B+

Fight the Power: How Hip Hop Changed the World
This has only been on my DVR for three months? Four? Not sure why I even record stuff anymore, since it tends to sit there for months before I get to it.

This was really good, although it was less about music the closer it got to the present day. Which is ok since I’m way more into old school hip hop than the new. But it felt like they kind of missed the point talking about how the modern political age and how hip hop has reacted without sharing a lot of music from this era.

B+

For All Mankind, season three
Looking back, season one was an A-, season two an A. In season three we jump to the mid–90s, with the US, USSR, and a private company racing to be the first to land on Mars. A former astronaut is elected president and has a big secret, which eventually comes out to the shock of the nation, especially their supporters. The huge twist at the end of season two was actually kind of slow-played through this season. Until the very last scene of the year when, holy shit!

In between all that I thought this season meandered a little too much. But, once again, the final two episodes make up for any shortcomings in the first eight. The writers are not afraid to go big when it comes to twists and surprises. Looks like we jump to 2003 for season four. I wonder what they’ll come up with for that.

A-

The Bear, season two
Best show of the year (so far).

A+


Shorts, YouTubes, etc

Italy on Film
Again, I’m super satisfied with how I documented our trip to Italy last year. But if I ever go back, I wouldn’t mind taking a camera a little more technical than whatever iPhone I’m rocking at that moment.

98 Family Members Fly to Italy for 10 Days
This is not related to the video above, although this guy also has a short called “Italy on Film.”

Travel is hard enough. Imagine flying to Italy, hitting three cities, and doing so with nearly 100 of your relatives. Somehow these folks pulled it off.

Bill Hader discusses cut Casey Kasem sketch with Kevin Pollak
I probably would have thought this sketch was pretty funny.

Brian Lagerstrom
I haven’t updated the foodies I’ve been getting recipes from in awhile. We’ve had a few things from this guy’s collection of recipes lately.

Perfect One-Pot, Six-Pan, 10-Wok, 25-Baking Sheet Dinner
How To Make Slow-Cooked Russet Potatoes That Fall Right Off The Bone
And then there are these, a perfect parody of so many online cook accounts.

Line & Air
Towers Of Tigray
North Face content of the month. Maybe I should buy some more of their gear. It’s been awhile since I have.

Lisa: Steve Jobs’ sabotage and Apple’s secret burial
Weird how much content there has been lately about Apple’s Lisa computer system. This piece is about the development of the line and then how a Utah business took them over when Apple had largely abandoned them, only to be forced by Apple to send them to a municipal dump.

Where Were the U-Boats on D-Day?
Interesting history augmented by fantastic stock footage of submarine warfare from that era. There’s even the obligatory scene of stuff flying off a table as a sub does a quick dive.

Colleen Ballinger Is Running Out of Excuses
This was featured on Vulture’s What to Watch This Weekend section one Friday. C was really into Ballinger’s videos at one point so I decided it was worth 20 minutes of my time. My big takeaway is it confirms pretty much all of these internet famous people that make random videos are total weirdos.

Why every radio station sounds the same
Corporate radio sucks.

How “The Bear” Filmed An Entire TV Episode in One Take
10 Things The Bear’s Jeremy Allen White Can’t Live Without
’The Bear’ Star Chef Matty Matheson’s Brutally Honest Opinion on What’s In and What’s Out
The Bear content.

Pic du Midi de Bigorre – Cycling Inspiration & Education
Looks like a nice, easy, Sunday morning bike ride to me.

Bodysurfing Mavericks with Kalani Lattanzi
Yikes.

This is how it sounds WITHOUT the sample // Bitter Sweet Symphony
I’ve needed to hear this for 25 years.


Music/Podcasts

60 Songs That Explain the ‘90s
I’ve known about this podcast for ages but never listened to it, mostly because my pod queue is already so deep that I can barely get to everything in it. I was finally sucked in when I saw there was a new episode about Prince in the ‘90s. Fascinating stuff.

The best tidbit garnered from that show was that Prince’s infamous “assless” pants worn at the 1991 VMA’s were not, in fact, assless. Rather they featured flesh-colored fabric panels. There was a fabric designer in Minneapolis who was on retainer to occasionally color fabrics to match Prince’s skin tone. And this women never met Prince face-to-face! Just awesome, esoteric stuff there.

I’ve been digging into the show’s back catalog. One of my other favorite nuggets was the host’s lines about Metallica drummer Lars Ulrich on the “Enter Sandman” episode. He said that Ulrich is the Derek Jeter of drummers: if he’s on your team/in your band, you love him and think he’s an all-timer. If not, you think he’s overrated, gets far too much credit for making easy things look difficult, etc. I loved that.

He also said on one of Metallica’s albums, Ulrich’s drumming sounded like “30 minutes of someone falling down the stairs.” That is an incredible description.

A

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