baseball


2
Apr 11

“When you’re tan, you feel better about yourself.”

Taking stock of my day in the mid-afternoon I’d already: overslept because that’s my weekend rite.

I rode my bike, the Yankee and I pedaled up and down the streets behind us and enjoyed the calm spring air.

I played Beethoven. I learned Fur Elise, or at least the first nine notes or so.

I cleaned a bit, too, and that was all before the afternoon gave way.

That doesn’t sound like much, but it was frivolous and free and a fun way to start a weekend. I felt as if I had to pack in an extra bit of weekend since last Saturday and Sunday was spent in conference and travel.

The Auburn baseball game doesn’t figure into the weekend as that’s an integral part of most any spring day worth recalling. Tonight’s promotion is “Kids Take Over.” There was a kid on the P.A. for an inning. Others threw out t-shirts, did the camera work and so on. They should do that every night.

The Tigers are struggling, though, having now lost four conference games in a row and struggling in the bullpen and with a few tough breaks here and there. So it doesn’t help that this weekend’s opponent is top-ranked Vanderbilt. The Commodores won tonight 11-6, as the Tigers gave up 20 hits.

Two stories to chew on: Snooki had a $32,000 appearance fee at Rutgers. Pulitzer Prize winner Toni Morrison is getting $30,000 for speaking at graduation. Two of Snooki’s highlights:

When asked her inspiration in life, Snooki said: “Being tan. When you’re tan, you feel better about yourself.”

Snooki brought a Rutgers student on stage and offered to put her hair in a “pouf” using a banana hair clip. Snooki wasn’t thrilled with the results. “That’s as good as it’s gonna get,” she said. When asked what she uses to style her own “pouf,” Snooki said he relies on Aussie-brand hair products. “Smells good and stays in good,” she said.

And, for fun, read the comments on that story.

Closer to home, the state is making 15 percent budget cuts and promising at least 15 percent budget cuts next year. Alabama lawmakers are due a nice raise:

”It looks terrible. It not only looks terrible, it is terrible,” (Sen. Gerald) Dial (R-Lineville) said, adding that a state forestry commission employee he met at the post office Friday said he expects to lose his job this summer.

”We’re terminating this month people. We’re in the worst budget crisis we’ve ever seen, and the Legislature is going to get a cost of living raise?” he asked.

[…]

But state Rep. John Rogers, D-Birmingham, said he thinks the inflation adjustment is fair. ”Every time the cost of living goes up, our expenses go up too,” Rogers said. ”It just keeps us at an even keel.”

Asked whether the adjustment looked bad in light of recent budget cuts, Rogers said an increase of $792 a year per lawmaker wasn’t much. ”That little bit doesn’t make any difference at all,” he said.

[…]

Rep. Demetrius Newton, D-Birmingham said he plans to accept the increase. ”I’m going to accept anything that I’m legally entitled to do,” he said.

Lawmakers can opt this month (a few have) but that is purely symbolism. All of this is on the heels of a 72 percent pay raise lawmakers gave themselves a few years ago. They really need that money.


19
Mar 11

I can’t believe it is already Saturday

If you left it to some media outlets you’d think the South was still living in the 1960s.

But no one talks much about Worcy Crawford, who died in July at age 90, leaving a graveyard of decaying buses behind his house on the outskirts of Birmingham.

His private coaches, all of them tended by Mr. Crawford almost until the day he died, do not have the panache of the city buses that the Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. refused to ride. But they have significance nonetheless.

With their cracked windows and rusting engines thick with brambles, they are remnants of something that was quite rare in the South: a bus company owned by an African-American.

Mr. Crawford’s work was simple. He kept a segregated population moving. Any Birmingham child who needed a ride to school, a football game or a Girl Scout outing during the Jim Crow era and beyond most likely rode one.

That’s a neat piece, don’t misunderstand. But let’s also be clear: the latest development in that particular story is Crawford’s death, last July. Everything else dates back two generations.

The reporter certainly has her share of accolades, but she’s from California and Alaska, so maybe that’s the problem. Every time you send another person South they have to gain some sort of institutional history and the Civil Rights Era is one place to start. Certainly this is a worthy era, but it discounts more than a little about what has happened in this region, you know, in more recent decades.

Just off the top of my head there’s biomedical research, medicine in general, automotive growth, the transition from heavy industry to service industry (which would be a nice follow up after the typical Civil Rights, five decades-old reporting), more corruption and governmental unscrupulousness than you can cram in a newshole and so on.

None of these things will ever be covered by that particular newsroom. Doesn’t fit the narrative.

One more journalism note. I foudn these three headlines grouped together. Google calls it an algorithm. Really, this is irony:

  • Arianna And AOL CEO Tim Armstrong Teach Journalism Class At Brooklyn Middle School.
  • AOL to De-emphasize Journalism, Focus On Brand.
  • Huffpo Claims Its Bloggers Aren’t Writers. Is That True?

So I guess my one recent visit to HuffPo might be my last. We’ve seen AOL brand things before, and this is just going to get unfortunate, I’m afraid. Shame, too, they have been massing together a lot of resources and talent, but if the point is just to get the logo on my browser, I’m going to be less and less interested.

Meanwhile, from the Middle East, comes a fascinating insight into life in Syria:

Syria recently gained the unpalatable title of being the most restrictive Middle Eastern country for internet censorship, formally held by Tunisia. Syria blocked (and still blocks) a number of sites ranging from pornography to Kurdish websites. These restrictions however are not uniform and inconsistencies such as blocking Hotmail but not YahooMail are not uncommon.

More or less every internet cafe I visited (albeit these were in the more touristy areas) already had the settings changed so that a proxy computer, usually in Saudi Arabia, was used so the public were free to browse banned sites at their leisure. There were even computer programmes that people would pass around to find a new proxy number should one stop working. Sometimes I had to ask for the proxy to be put in which the staff would do without a bat of the eye.

[…]

Speaking to my friend recently he told me people are still frightened because although these sites are now allowed, the internet is still heavily monitored and the rules may change at any time. As there has been no official announcement of the ban being lifted, predicting the mood of the regime is difficult.

The full piece is definitely worth a quick read.

More baseball today as the Tigers looked for revenge against the visiting Arkansas Razorbacks. The bases were loaded, Kevin Patterson had been in a mini-slump, but he’d been hacking away like someone kicked his puppy. And then the pitcher grooved one which wound up behind him, about 385 feet in his bullpen. That grand slam helped the Tigers win 9-5.

Also, they had fireworks.

(That’s from last night, but they go better with a grand slam story than an extra-innings loss.) If you’ll watch the video there’s something a little different in the second half.


18
Mar 11

Remember what the train conductor said

My four tokens to the general usefulness of things today:

  • I graded a lot of things.
  • I prepared a bit for my comps defense.
  • I read a lot about Libya, the slow-motion thing that can’t be stopped, with fascination.
  • And I built a mobile version of my website.

The world really needed that last one. Someone poked fun that I didn’t have a mobile version to the blog yet. But late this evening I added a plugin for that too. So you can easily see this drivel anytime.

I tinkered with this one for a while, but couldn’t make it go. So I found another one to build from. I’m on the fence about it, but what do you think? The mobile site is here. The mobile version of the blog is … well, found on your phone.

It is a curious thing, but I like that particular mobile theme on a friend’s site, but I’m not sure it works here. When these are the problems in your life you’re doing OK, though, so I won’t be too upset about it.

My comps defense is rumored to be next week. So I’ve been consolidating a few ideas I’d like to incorporate into that conversation.

On Libya, these types of stories are always good reading, and the reporting here is fine:

“This is the greatest opportunity to realign our interests and our values,” a senior administration official said at the meeting, telling the experts this sentence came from Obama himself. The president was referring to the broader change going on in the Middle East and the need to rebalance U.S. foreign policy toward a greater focus on democracy and human rights.

It will be interesting to see how long this shiny spin on things remains in place.

“In the case of Libya, they just threw out their playbook,” said Steve Clemons, the foreign policy chief at the New America Foundation. “The fact that Obama pivoted on a dime shows that the White House is flying without a strategy and that we have a reactive presidency right now and not a strategic one.”

So the next few weeks should be interesting.

Baseball this evening, Auburn hosts Arkansas this weekend, but dropped the opener 6-5 in 11 innnings. The bullpen is still working itself out and Auburn stranded eight runners on base and seven of those were in scoring position.

We had pizza after the game at Mellow Mushroom. We noticed that Moe’s Original Barbecue is now open downtown. Finally, our style of ‘cue. Now we just have to become regulars.

YouTube Cover Theater is a little feature intending to point out the art of people making music in their homes to their video camera. There’s a lot of talent out there, some of it is more than worth sharing. I hurriedly picked REM as this week’s featured cover act. It didn’t seem the best pick at the time, but now I’m glad of it. Their music seems to have a lot of room in it for others to play. Unfortunately none of these particular three covers have been seen by more than 2,000 people.

Doug McKenna is an independent artist, but unfortunately his site has been neglected. Nevertheless, Sweetness Follows is a good tune and he does a nice job here:

My favorite REM song, and it is a shame this has only 59 views. Unfortunately there’s not much biographical information about the guy here, but his treatment of Driver 8 is good fun:

In a different career on those rare times when I had to play music at radio stations I’d always end my shift with this song, so we’ll end this post the same way.