Friday, December 28, 2007

God bless Japanese game shows

I swear I'm going on Amazon right now and pick up every DVD of this show...the 9 minute clip alone has me soiling myself...

Apparently, the premise (such as it is) is a group in a library being subjected to all forms of cruel torture...the catch is that they must remain silent during the brutality. This episode features a guest appearance by one "Ernesto Hoost" - a quick perusal of Wikipedia reveals he is a famous Dutch kickboxer, but I think his best work is on this show.

I feel a twinge of sympathy for the poor bastard who gets picked three or four times in a row for abuse. At least he didn't get picked for "Old Man Bites Tenderly"

Silent Library

Friday YouTube Nugget

For the final nugget of 2007, I'm reaching back to 1980 and an infectious tune from one of my favorites from the nascent days of MTV. With his minor hit, "Ah Leah", here is Donnie Iris:



An interesting footnote on Mr. Iris - he was a "one-hit wonder" three times over. He hit the pop charts the first time in 1970 with his song "The Rapper" performed by his band The Jaggerz. Then, after the inevitable break-up, Donnie made his way to Wild Cherry, who hit the big time with the execrable "Play That Funky Music" in 1976. Donnie went solo a few years after and hit the Top 30 with "Ah Leah".

Fare-thee-well 2007, Aloha 2008

Well, that was a nice long blogging break. I lost the BlogWar and now live in exile from GabsOSteel-ville. Wars are hard.

I anticipate a nice long weekend of blogging about what's happened in the last month....or vegging out in front of the TV watching the Extras series finale for the 10th time. ("was that really Karl Pilkington as the autograph hound?"). Anyway, Friday YouTube nugget on the way...

Monday, December 10, 2007

Absenteeism in Blogging

If this past week has taught me anything, it is that blogging is way down on my priority list. Not necessarily a bad thing....but my higher priorities are work, drinking and more drinking. There are so many things to discuss - the NIE on Iran debacle, the upcoming Presidential primaries, the Led Zeppelin reunion in London, the resurgence of the Bills against the collapse of the Sabres on their West Coast trip - and I'm running out of days to do it before I have to switch into "End-Of-Year" mode. And you know what that means.

Top Ten Lists.....a whole week's worth.

Like Johnny Rotten once sneered, "I'm a lazy sod...."

Thursday, December 06, 2007

Paging Emily Post

Scenario: A good friend invites you to go out one evening....you suggest dinner and she agrees. Unfortunately, your job requires you to work late, so you suggest a time slightly later than normal - 7:30 pm. Your friend agrees. You, who have skipped breakfast and lunch because you're such a slave, er, dedicated worker, are starving....but, out of respect and courtesy to your very good friend, you refrain from snacking on anything until dinner. Even when you manage to make it home for a quick 15 minutes before the appointed dinner time. Even when your hunger pangs are about to drive you insane. Even when a co-worker drops off a piece of birthday cake saved especially for you. You abstain, you sacrifice, you suffer....all in the name of basic, common courtesy.

Which you find out means precisely jack shit at dinner when you discover, to your horror, that your dining companion has already eaten a full meal. One and a half hours before this dinner. A full sandwich and a yogurt. You suspected something was amiss when you asked your friend if she would like to split an appetizer, only to be told "I'm getting soup as my entree". Soup.....as an entree. Yep....that should have been the obvious tipoff. Then, your very good friend orders salad and soup, only to cancel the salad five minutes after ordering it.

I guess I should be flattered that my friend thought enough of me to tell me the truth, instead of claiming some "virus" or other such malady that would have curtailed the appetite in the few hours before meeting for dinner. I choose, however, to be amazed that this friend couldn't wait 90 minutes for nourishment.

Wednesday, December 05, 2007

Woke up, fell outta bed, dragged a comb across my head...

Well, not really a comb. I cut my hair really short last weekend because my bald spot was rearing itself again.

Not much to report so far today. The snow doesn't get me down as much as people who can't drive in snow. It's not a boxcar rally, people!

I'll check in later to document what fun my workday has in store for me

Tuesday, December 04, 2007

Declaration (of Blog War)

Well, it's on. I accept the challenge issued by Ms. GabsOSteel and pledge to post nothing this week but commentary on my life and other sundry issues. No easy YouTube links or witty image files to fill space on this here blog. You wanted the best, you got the best.

BTW, the good folks at Maker's Mark bourbon seem very receptive to my initial inquiries into corporate sponsorship...




Monday, December 03, 2007

Better Late Than Never Nugget, Neil Young Edition

What can I say....I'm sluggish after a holiday break. To commemorate his excellent recent show at Shea's, Neil Young gets the love this week....from 1983's Everybody's Rockin (which led his record company to sue him for not making "Neil Young" albums), this is Wonderin'.



Monday, Monday

Oy...whatta weekend. So many topics to cover, so this will be more stream-of-consciousness, Spinal Tap Mk IV vibe....

1) Neil Young at Shea's Friday night - Awesome, awesome concert. Easily the best show I've seen all year and probably the best I've seen since the Cream reunion at MSG in 2005. His wife Pegi opened the show with a nice country-folk set. Neil came out for an acoustic set that was something special. He played my personal favorite ("After The Goldrush") and pulled out some surprises ("Harvest" and "Mellow My Mind"). After a break, the full band came out and blew our minds. He opened with two Crazy Horse classics, "The Loner" and "Everybody Knows This Is Nowhere" and never let up. I'm definitely picking up his new album Chrome Dreams II if only for the staggering "No Hidden Path" which clocked in at 25:13 during the concert! Encores were "Cinnamon Girl" and "Like a Hurricane". My friend and I were floored by the whole experience - it's been 20 years since I've seen a show at Shea's and the grand ole' theater did not disappoint. There were some VIP sightings - former Mayor Masiello was sitting four rows in front of us and we did notice, walking past us in the aisle....Thurman Thomas?? I guess ol' Thermal digs Rust Never Sleeps.

2) Sabres vs. Carolina Saturday night - OK, the game was of secondary importance...Buffalo steamrolled the hapless Canes en route to an 8-1 laugher. The real fun began when my buddy and I went out after the game. We ran into the wife of a prominent local businessman who was having a girls night out with her friend. Turns out my friend knows her well, so we were hanging with them most of the evening. They were a lot of fun and even managed to get me dancing. The real revelation was when said wife told me she used to be a Playboy Bunny way back in the day (in the Playboy Club, not in the magazine). I'm not really used to women telling me they had any affiliation with Playboy, so I tried to do the polite thing, but there really is no etiquette for a moment like that. So I looked at her chest.

She was very nice about the whole thing, so no damage done (I think).

3) Bills vs. Redskins on Sunday - It's a good thing Joe Gibbs is suffering from early onset dementia because we really should have lost this game. But for Washington's inexplicable failure to run out the clock in the 4th and Gibbs's mental fog in forgetting you can't call consecutive timeouts to freeze the kicker, we'd be staring down a 5-7 hole today. The defense played superbly, as usual, especially shutting down Clinton Portis. Trent Edwards played well, but he's not setting the offensive world on fire. We'll get nowhere with more zero-offensive touchdown performances like yesterday. Our defense is game, but it ain't the 2000 Ravens D. Once we get healthy (read: the return of Marshawn Lynch), we have be more productive in the red zone.

Also, Joe Gibbs should retire before he embarrasses himself and his organization any further. Has anyone tarnished such an impeccable legacy in so short a time span? That a man who won 3 Super Bowls with 3 different quarterbacks failed to remember what any 7th grader knows about calling consecutive timeouts is a sad commentary on how much the game has passed him by.

Thursday, November 29, 2007

We Miss You George


"Watch out now, take care
Beware of the thoughts that linger
Winding up inside your head
The hopelessness around you
In the dead of night
Beware of sadness
It can hit you
It can hurt you
Make you sore and what is more
That is not what you are here for"

-excerpt from Beware of Darkness from All Things Must Pass (1970)

Wednesday, November 21, 2007

Happy Thanksgiving

Here's an appropriate toast, from The Ice Storm:


Saturday, November 17, 2007

One More Nugget

I found this clip on YouTube a few days ago...this is the infamous Jimi Hendrix appearance on the Lulu show in 1969 where he and the Experience hijacked the show to pay a cheeky tribute to the just-broken up Cream. The fun happens at 7:44


Saturday YouTube Nugget


A little Everly Brothers for a quiet Saturday night.


Wednesday, November 14, 2007

God Bless Susie Greene

OK...this might be a touch out of context and a tad profane, but this clip captures what I love about Curb Your Enthusiasm.

"IT'S GONE!!!! IT'S GONE, YOU FUCKING MOTHERFUCKING...I'LL KILL YOU JEFF!!! YOU'RE A COCKSUCKER, MOTHERFUCKER...MY GRANDMOTHER'S BROOCH IS MISSING! I CANNOT REPLACE THIS ITEM! HOW WOULD YOU FEEL IF SOMETHING YOU CARED ABOUT WAS MISSING?!! YOU DON'T GIVE A SHIT ABOUT ANYTHING, YOU KNOW THAT?!!!"


"...ooh, my baseball cards...."


Friday, November 09, 2007

Friday YouTube Nugget

This week's installment comes courtesy of the dearly missed Muppet Show. Here's Kermit's nephew Robin singing a lovely song adapted from a poem by A. A. Milne - "Halfway Down The Stairs":



Monday, November 05, 2007

Congrats J.P.




















Continuing the football wrap-up....any guy that throws for 295 yds, then goes home to pound the skins and pore over Hesse's Steppenwolf is jake with me.

Who Will Rid Me Of This Troublesome Team?


New England's march to perfection rolls right over defending champ Indianapolis and, frankly, it couldn't happen to a more deserving pair. Peyton Manning regained his title as Supreme Choke Artist while his coach, the noted homophobe Tony Dungy, watched helplessly as his team gave away a ten point lead at home with under nine minutes to play in the fourth quarter.

Looks like Buffalo vs. New England (Week 11) is the league's best chance to stop the Patriots' juggernaut. (/daydream)


Friday, November 02, 2007

Friday YouTube Nugget

Two bits of comic relief today:

Thank You, Masked Man by Lenny Bruce


Tracy Morgan, star of NBC's 30 Rock, is interviewed on a local morning news program. He is, shall we say, in good spirits

UPDATE: More Tracy Morgan goodness, this time on WGN-Chicago

Wednesday, October 31, 2007

Happy Halloween

from the good people at Mainway Novelties:



Monday, October 29, 2007

Your 2007 World Series Champs

Congrats to the Boston Red Sox...the pluckiest band of $143 million payroll players ever assembled. Hoorah...





Friday, October 26, 2007

Friday YouTube Nugget

A little easy-listening country for you this week. Here's an up-and-coming quintet from the North country. Singing "Far Away Eyes", here's the Rolling Stones:
Check out Charlie Watts' face at 1:38....he is simply the greatest

Thursday, October 25, 2007

Paul Wellstone

Today, October 25th, marks the third anniversary of one of the most shocking events of my political lifetime - the plane crash and death of Senator Paul Wellstone (D-MN).


Senator Wellstone, as you can see, wasn't your garden variety, blow-dried politician. He was a proud liberal and probably the only member of the Senate with a conscience. I've identified with Sen. Wellstone more than any other politician in my lifetime (save maybe Howard Dean), because he was genuine and passionate about his public service. I had to love that he was a former Political Science professor before he was elected to the Senate out of nowhere in 1990.

Paul Wellstone spent his life fighting for progressive values, social justice and, most importantly, inspiring people like me to be more active and informed on what goes on around us. His values live on in those he inspired, but I'd be remiss if I didn't take a moment today to say thanks, Senator.

More info on Paul Wellstone here and here

Friday, October 19, 2007

Friday YouTube Nugget

For this week's installment, I set the wayback machine to those heady days of the mid-90's and what I believe to be one of the top 5 pop songs written in the last 20 years. The band is Pulp and the song is "Common People":


Who has two thumbs and center Orchestra tickets to Neil Young at Shea's in November?

THIS GUY!!!!

Wednesday, October 17, 2007

Miracle on Abbott and Southwestern Drive

An update that I am overjoyed to share: Bills TE Kevin Everett Can Stand On His Own

In a scant five weeks, Everett went from the most grim of prognoses by the attending physicians to becoming ambulatory by himself.


Shit like this reinforces my faith in humanity. Those were people, trained and highly skilled, who saved that man's life. Who applied the body-cooling treatment as soon as he was injured that most likely saved his spine and will lead to him being able to walk again. Said treatment was developed, of course, through the Miami Project, a non-profit organization devoting to reversing paralysis and started by a former NFL linebacker who's son was paralyzed in a college football game in 1985. And who, among NFL owners, is the biggest contributor to the Miami Project, who has donated millions to this cause?


Ralph C. Wilson, Jr, owner of the Buffalo Bills


That circle of life is a humdinger, ain't it?

Day 246: United 93 Held Hostage


Okay....this is beyond the realm of ridiculous and lazy. We're entering Captain CuckooBananas territory here. I have, in my possession, the film United 93 for more than 35 weeks now. What kind of pathological behavior am I exhibiting in this sad affair? Am I so lazy that I'm using the excuse that I can't find the nifty little red Netflix envelope to return the movie to explain why I have held this DVD hostage for 8 months? Can no one explain why I just don't call/e-mail/fax/smokescreen a message to Netflix to send me another envelope? Can it be that I've forfeited 8 months and $40 in membership fees to see other, less-depressing titles?

Why haven't the good people at Netflix reached out to me? A simple message saying "Hey friend - you've been hoarding United 93 for an awful long time...what's up?" would suffice. As would "Hello? Are you OK? Did you hit your head on a coffee table, put some tissues on your massive head wound and die bleeding and blind drunk like William Holden?" Nada, nil, zilch from those robber barons at Netflix....I guess as long as the monthly debit fee comes through, they could care less about my well-being. I think they have to share at least some of the blame here.

I think I need professional help. Or a replacement Netflix envelope.

P.S. It was a tremendous film

UPDATE: Writing this post was somewhat cathartic...it released me from whatever psychic block I was having from taking action on this pathetic episode. I called Netflix and spoke to a nice gentleman who is sending me out a bonus DVD (Blades of Glory)....then, I can return both DVDs in the new mailer. Problem solved...until next month.

Saturday, October 13, 2007

The Humanist's Eye On Hollywood

DATELINE: Hollywood:

Holy shit....I just read Angie Everhart is engaged to......wait for it.....


Yes, Joe Pesci.


This Joe Pesci:













is engaged to this:





that's right, little Joe Pesci is going to be making animal noises in this woman's ear:
















This raises, of course, several questions - does he even come up to her mid-thigh? Why did God/Buddha/Jehovah/Allah/Flying Spaghetti Monster bless Joe Pesci with so many earthly rewards? Why couldn't Toulouse-Lautrec or Sartre pull off something this audacious?

Saturday YouTube Nugget

The exquisite Nina Simone, live from Ronnie Scott's, singing "If You Knew" . I guess the club's air conditioning was on the fritz that night.


Friday, October 12, 2007

Wednesday, October 10, 2007

The Continuing Saga of Senator Widestance





Well, well....our favorite men's-room-cruising senator, Larry Craig has had quite a busy month. After first pledging to resign September 30, good ol' Larry flip-flopped and announced he would stay and fight. Gotta love these Republicans and their "ethics".


Sen. Craig. of course, famously reversed course initially by saying if he was able to convince a judge to withdraw his original guily plea, he wouldn't resign. How did that work out? Eh, not so well.


This mattered not a whit to Sen. Craig...he vowed to complete his current term, which runs through January 2009 (about the time we'll be swearing in a new Democratic president and ushering in significant Democratic majorities in both houses of Congress). I would love the spectre of this closet case in the Senate as a daily reminder to voters in Idaho and elsewhere that the GOP is a party of moral hypocrites, serial lawbreakers, and self-aggrandizing liars.


One more note - it's good to see that certain sectors of Sen. Craig's homestate still stands behind him, firm and strong. Welcome your newest inductee into the Idaho Hall of Fame - Senator Widestance.

Tuesday, October 09, 2007

It's Johnny's Birthday, it's Johnny's birthday...

Christ, I almost forgot. Happy 67th birthday, John Lennon


Everybody Knows This Is Nowhere


Somewhere in the Guangdong province on the south coast of China, a simple farmer got up this morning to tend to his beet crop, unaware that about the time he was waking up, God was delivering another curse to a football team 7,000 miles away. I want to be that farmer.


I must say that, notwithstanding another gut punch Bills loss-that-should-have-been-a-victory, the Bills do find interesting ways to lose. Such as forcing the Golden Boy, Tony Romo, to turn the ball over six times, yet allowing Dallas to recover an onside kick, then boot a winning 50+ yard field goal as time expires.


God, if he or she does exist, hates us.

Monday, October 08, 2007

TILT


Got back from Vegas at 12:45 am Monday morning with nothing but lint in my pockets. I got busted six ways from Sunday in Sin City and now have a pleasant week of eating my shoes for dinner.

Thursday, October 04, 2007

Friday YouTube Nugget (one day early)

VEGA$ EDITION, PT II, ELECTRIC BOOGALOO

It seems as if I never left...I am headed back to Sin City, this time for my aunt's 60th birthday. My whole family (8 people) will be there - a reunion, of sorts. I can't wait to hear how my cousin's job with US immigration law in Seattle is going, how my other cousin is faring with his computer programming consulting in St. Louis...and how many cans of tuna my brother has consumed this week in Las Vegas.

In any case, we will be attending the much-hyped Cirque du Soleil (or, "Sun Circus"....fact) show featuring the music of the Beatles as background to a bunch of contortionists acting all spastic in the foreground. Some call it "interpretive, circus-based artistic and athletic stage performance"...I call it a bunch of fruit pies running around in spandex, seeing how much abuse they can apply to their joints and spines before breaking in half.

Whoa...I think I was channelling Bill O'Reilly for a second. Anyhoo, here's a clip of my favorite band of all time performing "Your Mother Should Know"


Friday, September 28, 2007

Friday YouTube Nugget

In honor of the end of baseball's regular season, I'm posting an old favorite - a postgame tirade from Cubs manager Lee Elia in 1983. Some choice thoughts from Mr. Elia on the state of baseball in the Windy City at that time, particularly the following bon mot:

"What the fuck am I supposed to do, go out there and let my fuckin' players get destroyed every day and be quiet about it? For the fuckin' nickel-dime people who turn up? The motherfuckers don't even work. That's why they're out at the fuckin' game. They oughta go out and get a fuckin' job and find out what it's like to go out and earn a fuckin' living. Eighty-five percent of the fuckin' world is working. The other fifteen percent come out here..."



Thursday, September 27, 2007

My new favorite artist

Ladies and gentleman....I present the gentle, yet rocking artist from the Great White North.....Feist



The genius that was SCTV

I had an opportunity to surf the Web at work (an uncommon occurrence, I assure you) and was in the mood to listen to a little 80's cheese pop. To be precise, any song I remember from 1980-1982 that's marked by one or more trademarks of this hallowed genre:

- drowning in synthesizers
- weird voice effects
- banal lyrics that have as much weight and meaning as a half-eaten Twinkie
- video shot on Betamax tape with a production budget of about $9.95


So I found what I was looking for in the insipid Chilliwack hit from 1981 - "My Girl (Gone, Gone, Gone):








But, lo and behold, there was another YouTube listing for "My Girl"....this one done by the comic geniuses at SCTV...I didn't even remember this episode, but this had me in stitches:


You don't have to remember the song or the times to enjoy this. Pure gold.

I Want A New Drug

One that won't go away
One that won't keep me up all night
One that won't make me sleep all day



Not to go all Huey Lewis and the News on you, but I really need a new form of medication. The DayQuil/NyQuil cocktail I've been imbibing the last two days is just not doing it for me. And that cockamamie saline nasal spray that's supposed to clear out your sinuses and eliminate a stuffy, runny nose? Hello nosebleeds!

So now, I'm a coughing, rheumy-eyed, sneezing, wheezing, nose-bleeding shell of a man who just managed to drag his carcass to work today. O, death, where is thy sting?

Tuesday, September 25, 2007

Friday, September 21, 2007

Wednesday, September 19, 2007

Win This Division or We'll Shoot This Dog


Hmmm....what's that saying about history and repeating?


Late September, 1978: the Boston Red Sox blow a 14.5 game lead over the Yankees and proceed to lose a one game playoff for the division on October 2nd.


Late September, 2007: the Boston Red Sox are about to blow another double digit lead over the Yankees and it might not even get to a one game playoff as long as the Sox keep putting in Eric "Gasoline Fire" Gagne. He's more flammable than Richard Pryor with a fifth of cognac and a freebase pipe.

Oh, this is going to be a very interesting week, indeed. If the Sox revert to their natural ways and choke like Tennessee Williams on an aspirin bottle cap, then this is going to be the last comforting image for Sox fans for a long, long time:


Tuesday, September 18, 2007

37 years too soon

Today marks 37 years since Jimi Hendrix walked among us. Words seem futile, so here's one of my favorite Hendrix clips, from the excellent 1973 documentary, Jimi Hendrix.


Friday, September 14, 2007

Friday YouTube Nugget

VEGA$ EDITION, Y'ALL!!!

In honor of my trip to Sin City in about 8 hours, I've unearthed a very special clip of the King himself, Elvis Presley. This is, I think, indicative of the charisma and stage presence that endeared Elvis to audiences worldwide:





OK seriously...here's the Dead Kennedys doing "Viva Las Vegas"


Wednesday, September 12, 2007

Today is the greatest....

day I've ever known...

This morning, I looked on my Yahoo page and there in the Sports sections were the two headlines to remind me that there is justice and righteousness in this world:

Spy flap raises questions about Patriots
Everett's mom hopeful of son's recovery

Like Louie said, what a wonderful world.....


Tuesday, September 11, 2007

A Look Back At September 11th (or The Week Football Stopped®)

This is how I'd like to remember lower Manhattan



Six years ago, I was living and working in San Francisco. I was a little over a year into my job at Blue Shield of California after graduating business school and was (mostly) enjoying my 30th year in 2001. The evening of Monday, September 10th was spent watching Ed McCaffrey break his leg and end his career on Monday Night Football. I had some early morning meetings to get to the next day and I turned in pretty early.

I was awakened at 6:30 am Tuesday morning September 11th to the phone ringing. In my daze and fog, I stumbled over to the phone and noticed it was my mom calling from Buffalo. She had a habit of conveniently forgetting about the 3-hour time difference between the Bay Area and Buffalo and loved to call me in the morning to make sure I was up. I ignored the ringing phone and hopped in the shower, figuring I'd call her back on my way into work.

The phone kept ringing as I went through my morning routine. Finally, on the sixth call while I was shaving, I realized that something was wrong...she would never call over and over like this. I wiped my face and picked up the phone and heard the fateful words:

"Turn on the TV. The World Trade Center has been attacked"


I switched on the TV, sat on the couch and watched with my jaw on the floor at the image of both towers of the World Trade Center smouldering while apocalyptic messages filled the crawl at the bottom of the screen ("PENTAGON ATTACKED", "U.S. CAPITOL BUILDING BOMBED"). I've only been watching for a minute or so when the South Tower of the WTC, a building that's been an iconic part of the NYC skyline for 28 years, collapsed. To call it surreal and unthinkable doesn't even come close to the sensation I (and most people watching it on TV) felt. The only thing I can compare it to is if someone told you the sun would extinguish tomorrow morning and you saw it live on TV.

I spent most of September 11th, 2001 on my couch, half-riveted to the news unfolding as the day progressed and half on the phone, calling everyone I knew who lived or worked in mid & lower Manhattan. My best friend worked near the WTC site and he was the only one I couldn't reach...I eventually caught up with him in the late afternoon. He had been one of the thousands who walked acrosss the Brooklyn Bridge to Brooklyn and was in a bar chatting up a girl.

I eventually got off my couch and ventured outside. Everyone looked like they were in the same state of shock as me. In short order, I gave blood, walked by my office (which had been closed in the morning as a precaution), had a sandwich and called my brother, with whom I hadn't spoken in 2 years. It's pretty pathetic that it took a national tragedy of this magnitude to get us talking again, but there you go.

It's popular in some circles to use as a mantra, "9/11 changed everything". I don't particularly subscribe to that bumper-sticker thinking, but there is little doubt that our society, our culture, our way of life have been forever changed. The confidence we used to exude, the blind faith we enjoyed in our lives, the utter joy of being an American is dented. What seemed to be important arguments now pale in consideration of the 3,000 innocent lives still buried under tons of rubble at Ground Zero.

The last six years have been, for me, a blur of authoritarian aggression, from the fictitious war in Iraq to the the suspension of Constitutional protections here. "9/11" has been used as justification for every hare-brained operation the administration has mounted, but we've quickly forgotten what we felt in the immediate aftermath. Writing this post takes me back to the days after September 11th, 2001. The world rallied to our side and we enjoyed an outpouring of support and love that we hadn't felt since the end of World War II. While we wondered if we'd ever be able to laugh and sing again, people around to world stood with us and, by virtue of the weight of their experiences, told us it would be alright. The Israeli who's witnessed six bus explosions in the past decade. The Irish kid whose father was killed by English soldiers during the Troubles. A Spanish couple who lost their daughter to a Basque terroist attack in Barcelona a decade ago. A Filipino woman whose husband was abducted and likely killed by the Abu Sayyaf terrorists near Manilla. And on and on and on...

We as Americans do not hold a patent on misery and suffering, even though we sometimes act like we do. We're just recent entrants. Six years? We're mere infants in the mass-wave-of-death anniversaries compared to our brethren in the U.K and France.

I'll spend this day with a thought for the innocent lives lost on 9/11/01. But my mourning is reserved for the lives lost since in the service of a criminal administration. And most of all, I miss seeing those two skyscrapers dominate the New York City skyline.

Monday, September 10, 2007

Kevin Everett


That would be Bills backup Tight End Kevin Everett, who suffered a spinal cord injury while making a tackle on the opening kickoff of the second half of yesterday's Bills-Broncos game.


It's tempting to say this is some sort of microcosm of the misery and pain of being a Bills fan, but that seems like cheap and ugly point to make while this 25-year old man lies on a respirator at Buffalo General after enduring intensive surgery on his spine last night.


Losing a football game is one thing....witnessing this man collapse on the ground like a sack of wet potatoes at the Ralph yesterday is another.

Friday, September 07, 2007

Friday YouTube Nugget

"And now, today's sermon is from our beloved Reverend Cleophus James..."


Have you seen the light?


Wednesday, September 05, 2007

UPDATE: Senator Widestance Goes To The Mattresses

















Oh, it's on now, bitches!

In what must be an intentional act to deliver the White House and significant majorities in both houses of Congress to the Democrats next year, Senator Craig (he of the toe-tapping, foot-brushing rituals in the men's room in the Minneapolis airport - see post below) is rethinking his resignation. Because, I shit you not, this clown thinks he can withdraw his guilty plea:

"It's not such a foregone conclusion anymore, that the only thing he could do was resign," Sidney Smith, Craig's spokesman in Idaho's capital, told The Associated Press. We're still preparing as if Senator Craig will resign Sept. 30, but the outcome of the legal case in Minnesota and the ethics investigation will have an impact on whether we're able to stay in the fight — and stay in the Senate," Smith said."

Please, please, please Senator....for the love of all that is pure and righteous, please stay in office and fight! Please grab the headlines away from the dog-and-pony show that will be General Petraeus' report to Congress on the surge (gee...let me guess how that'll go). Please disobey the Senate GOP leadership. I love the smell of conservative fratricide in the afternoon.