photo


3
Sep 11

Football: Auburn hosts Utah State

Our friend Brian came down to crash last night. he was working today’s game for al.com. He sat up in the press box and then worked his way down to the field for the game’s big finish. It is a tough job he has there.

This is at Tiger Walk, where I saw a handful of people who’d jockeyed for the better part of an hour move aside so a little boy could get a right on the rope line to see his football heroes. And then they moved again so a young man in a wheelchair could have a nice view. Auburn people, in their environment, are so incredibly gracious it just makes you proud to be a part of the place.

These things would no doubt happen in other places, too. It isn’t a judgement, merely a statement. Anyway. Tiger Walk. The players walk down the two blocks from the athletic department and into the stadium, fans line up in the thousands to cheer them on. Here are two of them:

TigerWalk

We set out to tailgate with friends, who tried to upgrade our tickets. We already have good seats for the season, so we gave them back. Somehow and for some reason they gave us some more, which upgraded our tickets to the scholarship level. So we’re in the Nelson Club. This is a tilt-shift shot from my phone looking into the south end zone:

TiltShift

Aubie, if you hadn’t heard, stole the crystal football during the off-season. You can see all of his exploits here. He was finally “caught” by the canine training unit on campus. During the pre-game they showed a video of his confrontation with the football coach. Aubie was ashamed and scared, two new components of his personality that you don’t normall see in the character. (The Aubie character is quite defined.) And then, a moment later, he ran the crystal football onto the field.

Aubie

Now it is on permanent display in the Lovelace Museum. Just before Aubie “returned” the missing trophy, The Yankee and I had a run-in with the football ourselves. That wasn’t a typical part of your gameday experience.

Blake

The first touchdown of the year, Barrett Trotter found Emory Blake for a 56-yard touchdown. Blake finished with three catches for 95 yards.

Utah State’s new quarterback had a field day for the Aggies. Chuckie Keeton completed 21 passes for 213 yards. He’s throwing here to Michael Smith, who had 65 total yards,

Aggies

Auburn’s defense is talented, but young. And young is overselling it. They’re brand new. Only four of these guys had serious playing time last year and just two started.

Defense

If you’ve ever wondered if it would be cool to be a freshman and return a kickoff 97 yards for a score in your first ever collegiate game, just ask Tre Mason about that feeling:

Mason

BCS MVP Mike Dyer had a “quiet” day, in part because Utah State took Auburn out of their game plan and dominated the Tigers’ line.

Dyer

Dyer gained 58 yards and had two scores, including the game winner with 30 seconds ont he clock. We talked to him for a minute after the game.

But what will Auburn do without Cam Newton!?!?

Aggies

Barrett Trotter went 17 of 23, including one poor throw and a lot of smart decisions to get rid of the ball when he had to. He picked up 261 yards passing and three touchdowns. He looked collected as he helped rally Auburn past upset-minded Utah State and created two scoring drives in the final three minutes to claim the win. Auburn is going to be fine at quarterback.

I suggested to The Yankee that part of why the team struggled was that she’d forgotten one of her rituals:

Aggies

But the Tigers didn’t give up and they found a way to win against Utah State. The Aggies wanted that win, and probably should have won. They controlled, if not dictated, the happenings of 55 minutes of play, but couldn’t hang on in the final minutes.

Auburn won 42-38, and they weren’t very happy about how it came to pass. Utah State left feeling dejected — you could see it on their kids’ faces as they stood with their handful of traveling fans. They should be proud. They played inspired football and were a great deal of fun to watch. There were more than a few Auburn folks congratulating them after their game, too.


2
Sep 11

Football, fans and feathers

No matter how good or bad your week, no matter what you’re planning to do, you’ll be hard pressed to find a better way to start your weekend than with the cuteness of owls:

owl

Or to watch people coo over hawks:

owl

Or to watch them race just over your head:

owl

And there’s no better way to enjoy an evening than having an amazing golden eagle — Nova, War Eagle VII — show off his stuff:

owl

The Raptor Center hosts an educational program on Friday evenings before home games in the fall. If you’ve never gone, I’d recommend it. We visit it a few times a year. Great for kids, too.

More pictures from the program will go up in the September photo gallery next week.


30
Aug 11

First day of classes

Taught my first class of the semester today. It is a two-hour, one day a week experience. Today we met for about 90 minutes.

I gave them a quiz.

Oh, we did the getting-to-know you portion of the class and they received the syllabus. There were some slides and lots of words and pictures. We rushed headlong into Associated Press style.

And then I gave them homework.

Too much for the first day?

Here was there assignment. Feel free to play along, if you like. Ernest Hemingway is said to have written a six word story that was among his best work. (Even Snopes isn’t sure if this is true or apocryphal, but it works for an exercise in conciseness.)

The story:

For sale: Baby shoes. Never worn.

Beginning, middle and end. So I asked the class to bring back their six word stories next week. The only rules were that it had to be six words, and death could not be the theme.

Now I have to come up with one, too. Feel free to leave yours in the comments below.

And now a pretty picture of a tiny part of our lovely campus:

chapelflowers

Samford is a beautiful place.

Speaking of photos, the August photo gallery is now online. Also, you’ll notice a new piece of art across the top of the page, that’s on Cannon Beach, in Oregon. I’d like to go back there soon. Care to donate to the cause?

Naturally when one banner comes off the blog it remains on the Former Blog Banners page. Not sure why I even maintain that page, other than it is neat to see the places I’ve gone all together. Some are more interesting than others, but all of them passed muster to make it here. There’s at least a half-baked story behind each of them.

The piece I wrote here on Saturday was re-published on The War Eagle Reader. It is getting some nice comments, too. Seems everyone is ready for football.

Finally, there’s this, the latest wonderful piece of medical science:

Medical advancements never cease to amaze.


29
Aug 11

Mondays, can’t live ’em …

Back to the routine, then. Classes start this week. My first one is tomorrow.

So I polished up a syllabus today. I put together the massive spelling list required of this class. I outlined the first four weeks of class. I wrote the first two lectures. Fired off a solid salvo of Emails.

Things got done.

Also I caught up the July photo gallery. Lot of pictures in there. Tomorrow I’ll catch up the August pictures.

Rode the bike this evening. Got 26.9 miles on the bike, enjoying a dry evening’s air. Only got heckled once, by a car full of young ladies. Also, I think I hate kevlar tires.

Lately my rides haven’t been very good. Too slow, too much struggle or too much pain. Today it was all three. This started when I had to replace my Continental racing tires with some three ply version of heavy duty there’s-debris-in-the-road tires.

Racing tires weigh between 30 to 60 grams less. And I wouldn’t have thought that would be a big difference for a duffer like me, but I’m changing my mind. The problem is that racing tires are more expensive.

On the ride before this I got home to discover my front rim was riding against the brake pad. No wonder it felt like I was going nowhere. I was pedaling through my brake! So, yes, I want my old tires back.

Temp

Visited the local Kohl’s tonight. That was the temperature. How’s August where you are?


29
Aug 11

Things to read

It was vital before the weekend, even as it is dated now, but here’s a bit of specialty reporting worth your attention. What do you do with prisoners during a hurricane? Nothing, apparently, if you’re New York City:

“We are not evacuating Rikers Island,” Mayor Michael Bloomberg said in a news conference this afternoon. Bloomberg annouced a host of extreme measures being taken by New York City in preparation for the arrival of Hurricane Irene, including a shutdown of the public transit system and the unprecedented mandatory evacuation of some 250,000 people from low-lying areas. But in response to a reporter’s question, the mayor stated in no uncertain terms (and with more than a hint of annoyance) that one group of New Yorkers on vulnerable ground will be staying put.

New York City is surrounded by small islands and barrier beaches, and a glance at the city’s evacuation map reveals all of them to be in Zone A (already under a mandatory evacuation order) or Zone B–all, that is, save one. Rikers Island, which lies in the waters between Queens and the Bronx, is not highlighted at all, meaning it is not to be evacuated under any circumstances.

Speaking of the storm, FEMA asked people to use Twitter and Facebook during the bad weather, for fear of otherwise overloading the cell phone system. How many stories are in that sentence, do you think? Meanwhile, the New York Times says Twitter was a playground.

Was Irene much ado about nothing? As of this writing there are 24 deaths and a great deal of flooding, but was the media too panicked? Did the system get too much hype? You could argue both sides. On one hand you never know about hurricanes until they make landfall, and by then it is too late for the media and government to caution and evacuate people. On the other hand, there’s Howard Kurtz:

Someone has to say it: cable news was utterly swept away by the notion that Irene would turn out to be Armageddon. National news organizations morphed into local eyewitness-news operations, going wall to wall for days with dire warnings about what would turn out to be a Category 1 hurricane, the lowest possible ranking. “Cable news is scaring the crap out of me, and I WORK in cable news,” Bloomberg correspondent Lizzie O’Leary tweeted.

[…]

But the tsunami of hype on this story was relentless, a Category 5 performance that was driven in large measure by ratings. Every producer knew that to abandon the coverage even briefly—say, to cover the continued fighting in Libya—was to risk driving viewers elsewhere. Websites, too, were running dramatic headlines even as it became apparent that the storm wasn’t as powerful as advertised.

Copy editing extends to television graphics. Look at what Irene did to some of our nation’s finest cities:

Map

That’s from MSNBC, and probably a layer or software glitch. “That’s live television” some may say, but remember, in times of crisis it is information people need. Be sure you have it right.

Quick hits: We are all members of the media now. I’ve been saying it in classes and presentations for years now. Some of our peers disagree, but the New York Times sees it. How can Google+ be used in journalism education? Here’s a primer from Bryan Murley. Half of U.S. adults use social media, says a new Pew study. The publishing end run on Apple. Publishers want their control, but Apple’s closed model insists they have control; publishers were only going to give for so long.

There’s a saying in broadcasting that every mic is a hot mic, which means be careful what you say around every microphone, because you might be broadcasting without realizing it. ESPN is telling their employees to consider Twitter a hot mic. Agree or disagree? Internet use is on the rise for farmers. The 9/11 archives, raw footage from a wide variety of TV stations and networks during 9/11/01, and the days that followed, is now online.

Finally, typos are bad (says the guy who leaves a lot of them on his own site). Big typos on signs at school, signos, are embarrassing.