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21
Apr 12

The three Heisman statues

Finally got to see these today. They’re quite impressive. And at a reported $100,000, they better be.

(A statue of a living person is unfortunate, but we’ve already crossed that bridge.)

PatSullivan

BoJackson

CamNewton

The unveiling, last weekend, with Pat Sullivan, Bo Jackson and Cam Newton all in attendance:

Wish they’d used an Auburn sculptor — remember what Shug said — but the Ken Bjorge from Montana did fine work. (Here he is working on the Heisman bust which is a bit of disembodied creepiness.)

Maybe the best part is the strategic positioning, with the official Heisman portrait of each man looking over the statue. Nice touch.


20
Apr 12

A cookie, a book, baseball and music

Yesterday’s fortune cookie could have been an error of syntax.

“Remember three months from this date. Good things are in store for you.”

Maybe it just needs a conjunction: Good things are in a store for you.

So, if I go shopping on July 19th … I might find something nice. Somebody remind me of that.

This week I finished a book I started a few days ago. I read slowly, and intermittently, usually at lunch. But when I fly, as we did last week, that’s extra time, and the pages turn rapidly. So I wrapped up, at lunch on Monday, Matt Seaton’s Escape Artist. I picked it up because Bill Strickland wrote about it a few years ago, quoting from it in an enticing manner:

The road now falls sharply under tree cover. There is no need to pedal; the bike accelerates rapidly past the point where pedaling would be effective. You move into a tuck, making your body as small as you can into the wind, spreading your weight as low and evenly as possible over the bike. In the autumn, your eyes would be scanning the road for wet leaves that can form a skein of slime as treacherous as ice. But the winter’s rains have washed the surface of detritus. Still you watch for potholes and stones.

You are in free-fall, Seaton writes in “The Escape Artist.” You are aware of nothing but the line you need to take. A few minutes before, the sound of your labouring lungs was your constant companion. Now, in the background there is just the roar of the wind and pulsing of blood in your ears.

The road makes a hard bend to the right and then straightens to point directly downhill to the valley floor. If the surface is dry and you are running on good tyres, if the way is clear of traffic and you can use the width of the road, if you have all your courage and wits about you, you can make it round that curve without touching the brakes. You hit forty-five, fifty, right at the apex. You cannot see the exit and it is crucial to pick the right line. If you start running out of road, the camber will be against you, shrugging you off the blacktop. Once committed to a line, it is too late to use the brakes. To crash at this speed is unthinkable.

And then, in a split second, you are round and free. You are still upright, and the road stretches out in front of you again. You cannot believe your luck, you are alive and intact. You feel the chill of the air as the wind slices through layers of clothing, greedily sucking away the body’s heat from damp undergarments and the scorching tears on your cheeks. But the cold does not hurt. You have taken flight.

Strickland wrote “If you read Sitting In regularly, it’s probably because you care at least as much about how riding feels, about what it means – whatever that means – as you do about new gear or the latest news from Europe or our bullet-pointed advice for staying lean (which works, by the way). Go chase down The Escape Artist.”

That excerpt is from the beginning of the book, so when I stretched out the paperback I was excited for what surely must come next, whatever it was. But it peaked early.

Which is a mean thing to say. Seaton is a fine, fine writer. He has a heartbreaking tale, and it is well told in the memoir. It just wasn’t the right thing for me at the time. But if you want a heartbreaking memoir, go for it.

It is doubly mean because, while I don’t understand all of the things Strickland writes about, I love the way he writes. It is a good day when his name pops up in my RSS reader. And so, when you stumble upon someone who’s style you so thoroughly enjoy, you add a bit of heft to their recommendations — well, except Strickland’s clothes and high end endorsements; my money tree is a bit light. And if that recommendation comes up a bit short for what you want or need at the time, then that throws the entire suggestion calculus out of whack.

I’m considering another book he suggested for some later date. Will it be keeping with what I think I’d like? Will I miss there too? Gauging someone’s relative tastes and preferences never gets any easier.

Sometimes the ball doesn’t bounce your way. And sometimes it really doesn’t. And that’s how you find yourself pulling in the infield to try and preserve a nine-run deficit.

baseball

A throwing error and two unearned runs later and this metaphor really starts to hurt. And so it was tonight at Samford Stadium- Hitchcock Field at Plainsman Park. Two-time defending national champion South Carolina beat Auburn 12-5. (The Gamecocks are eighth nationally. They’re only in third place in their division right now. SEC baseball is crowded with talent and tough.)

Two nice gentlemen from South Carolina were sitting right behind us. Tomorrow I’m going to ask them if they’re gluttons for baseball punishment. “Are you sure you want some more of this?”

One of those guys said ours was the nicest campus he’d ever seen.

“Glad you’re here, thanks for saying so. Try not to hurt us so bad tomorrow whydoncha?”

Oh one other thing: I bought Counting Crows’ latest release, Underwater Sunshine. on pre-order. It arrived the other day. It is covers old and new. It is stuff they love, that inspired them like Fairpoint Convention and Faces. It is a sonic catalog of new acts like Kasey Anderson and Coby Brown. If you like the Crows, you should go order this now.


19
Apr 12

Just because you read it

Board members from the Alabama Press Association were at Samford today talking to JMC students. Their advice: journalists are generalists, don’t limit yourself to print or video but get a bit of both, separate yourself from your competition.

The board members were passionate, optimistic and dedicated to helping their community and their industry. They gave good advice for students, both in the Crimson office, and in Dr. Jones’ print practicum class.

Dr. Jones got the ball rolling: “What skills do these students need?”

The consensus response? “Everything.”

Sounds familiar. We talk about that all the time at Samford, where our program endorses a broad-based approach. It helps make interns and graduates look more valuable to potential employers.

After that, the students have to take it upon themselves, but to get that encouragement from the faculty, to hear it from the pros — and to see how the industry is coming around to that reality, is a great thing. We’re doing it right.

And then there’s the latest from Pew.

The report goes on to say that 32 percent of these people say the disappearance of their local paper would have a major impact on their lives. Among people who aren’t that interested in local news, about half say their lives wouldn’t change at all if they didn’t have a local paper. Good, for newspapers, right?

But look at it another way: That means 68 percent of local news enthusiasts don’t believe the disappearance of their local paper would affect their lives in a major way. And 34 percent of such enthusiasts say the disappearance wouldn’t affect their lives at all.

This likely reflects local news enthusiasts’ reliance on TV; Pew reports that 80 percent of them use broadcast TV on a weekly basis, compared to 48 percent for newspapers, 52 percent for radio and 57 percent for “word of mouth.” TV was also the preferred source for weather and breaking news, the two issues local news enthusiasts follow most closely.

Believe being the key word. Look, the more media the better, and not just for our students’ sake. If I may return to my watchdog roots for a moment, someone has to watch the politicians and agencies and the occasional white collar bad guys.

And if papers go away, how will you get your comics?

One of the publishers today told the students he’s done everything in a newsroom, report, write, layout, copy editing, emptying garbage and writing the horoscope when it didn’t make it in on time.

So keep that in mind the next time you have a glance at Pisces.

Lessen’s tonight’s fortune somewhat, don’t you think?

fortune

I posted that on Facebook. A friend commented ” I got that one once. Three years later, I know my time is coming!”

Not everything you read is worth taking to heart.


16
Apr 12

Travel day

That long line of storms that covered most of the country today? San Antonio was at the very bottom of that, just as my plane was getting ready to fly. I got to travel in this soup:

Storm

The flight was entirely uneventful.

When I made it home, she quickly settled in. Think she missed me?

Allie

And so I’ll leave you with this, an almost hypnotic reminder to never put anything breakable in your checked baggage:

That’s all for now. More tomorrow, when life returns to normal. Whatever that is.


15
Apr 12

The River Walk

You probably can’t have San Antonio without the River Walk. It fills up with tourists at shops and bars and restaurants at night, but on Saturday morning, as The Yankee and I happily discovered, it is quiet, still and serene:

RiverWalk

There are bridges for the over the road traffic passing just overhead, but that seems about as far removed from people on the walk itself as possible. There are also pedestrian crossovers to get you to that restaurant you really want to try on the other side without having to rejoin the land of the suckers.

There are also the boats, one part tour, one part mass transit system and, sometimes, a dinner cruise. Here the passengers were learning about the historic architecture overlooking the San Antonio River:

RiverWalk

Among those trees and ducks and squirrels and ferns you can find too many people, or the feeling of a land lost. In the early morning hours only the odd mosaic are there to disturb you. One tells you that just a few feet away is a tree where a Mexican sniper hid to pick off Texan settlers.

Enjoy rounding that corner, friends.

Another mosaic, for reasons never explained, lays out the city’s interstate grid. A better one shows the modern route of the carefully controlled river. From that one you can start to figure out how all of this came together.

For if you can’t have modern San Antonio without the River Walk, you can’t have the River Walk without Bowen’s Island.

In the middle of the 19th century they called it Galveston Island, but it was technically a peninsula bordered on three sides by the river and on the fourth by an important local irrigation system. The local postmaster, John Bowen, built his home there. When he died in 1867 it turned into a beer garden, a market and what we today would probably call a recreational area. Gymnastics, picnics and religious meetings all took place there.

The Bowen family held onto the land until 1910. Developers rerouted the river, made the nearby streets longer and put to work their vision of a 10-acre site for buildings, including a hotel, the Federal Reserve Bank and commercial buildings.

None of that could have been done, perhaps, without Robert H. H. Hugman. He was the architect that had the idea to spruce up the place. His fingerprints are everywhere, as are these bronze plaques, replicating the stamp he placed on all his drawings:

RiverWalk

And so here we are today.

I don’t know if you’ve ever been to one of these restaurants where the gimmick is the waitstaff gets to treat you horribly bad. We’ve been to two locations of Dirty Dick’s. One, in Boston, because we were hungry and they sat us for lunch right away. Tonight we ate at the one on the River Walk … for much the same reason, actually.

At lunch they have perfectly good burgers. And, for whatever reason, the guy we had in Boston was relaxed and chatty with us. Meanwhile they were simply abusing other tables. This is probably good therapy for people who’ve waited tables one-shift-too-many, but I’m not sure why the customers show up.

Anyway, the dinner was OK tonight, though not as good as the lunchtime burger half a continent and almost a removed from my memory. We had a large group tonight, six adults, all people with way too much money invested in their brains, and a really sharp four-year-old.

The waitress tonight started out to give us a little grief which, I don’t know about you, but no thanks. And then it just … stopped. It was like she just noticed the child sitting with us. Oh you get the hat with the stupid insult on it, there’s no escaping that, but she was fine, left us alone, didn’t overtly scar the kid and we all pretended like we didn’t notice.

Maybe there’s a vibe some tables give off.

So the little boy, the son of two of our friends at dinner with us, gets into a dance contest with me. And he was awesome. Remind me to never do that again. The restaurant had a local band playing, and we caught maybe their first two songs, including something from the early 1960s soul era that I’ve already forgotten. I just sit in the chair and bop along a bit because the boy and I have become buddies.

I break out the classic stupid dances of our generation: the shopping cart, the sprinkler, the Q-tip, making the pizza.

The child responds with what he calls the Lighting Lawnmower. He sticks out his hands, tenses up his entire body and starts a little shimmy which soon turns into a full-on, almost violent shake. Suddenly the lawn mower image is out of control. He’s not pushing the mower, but hanging on for dear life as it runs over everything in site.

It was awesome. No one knows where he got it from and all agreed he easily won our dance competition. Even me, and I don’t mean in that “Sure, you were better than me kid” way.

At the end of the night he gave me what he called dinosaur hugs, which seem to involve choking me out, tackling me and roaring a lot. He’s a cool kid, despite his need to defeat me in light saber duels and mock finger-pistol shootouts all weekend.