- The addition of Old Guys Andrew McCutchen, Ji-Man Choi, Carlos Santana, Rich Hill, and Vincent Velasquez to provide leadership and, we hope, some actual quality baseball ability.
- The continued development of Young Guys Oneil Cruz, Ke'Bryan Hayes, Jack Suwinski, Rudolpho Castro, Mitch Keller, Johan Oviedo, and Roansy Contrras. Plus, a couple of new names like Canaan Smith-Njigba, and the hopes of seeing guys like Quinn Priester and Endy Rodriguez at PNC Park sometime this summer.
Thursday, March 30, 2023
Opening Day 2023
Monday, March 27, 2023
High School Musical Edition: "Les Miserables"
Saturday, March 25, 2023
To Absent Friends - Willis Reed
Tuesday, March 21, 2023
Baseball, A Podcast, A Musical, and An Absent Friend
Here you go, a blog post smack dab in the middle of March Madness, and the only mention that I will make of the Madness is to say that I made 18 wagers on games over the course of the first two rounds and posted a 10-8 record. Making money, but barely.
On to other topics.....
World Baseball Classic
That led to me watching the semi-final game between the USA and Cuba on Sunday night, won handily by the USA, 14-2, and featuring two more home runs by Trea Turner, who has become the WBC version of Reggie Jackson. The other semi-final was played last night between Mexico and Japan. Japan won 6-5 with a bottom of the ninth two run walk off double. Japan trailed the entire game until that moment, and it was an absolutely terrific game. This sets up tonight's championship game between the USA and Japan. Seven o'clock on FS1. I'll be watching and so should you if you are a baseball fan. Oh, and if you think that these games are "meaningless", watch the emotions and reactions of the players (see photo above). It isn't meaningless to them.
It is interesting that these WBC games are being played under the "old" rules. No pitch clock. Infield shifts allowed. I have watched very little spring training baseball, but I have seen enough to know that these rules will create a tremendous improvement in the viewing experience of ball games. Watching the WBC games, where the pitchers pace around the mound between pitches, and the batters step out of the box between every pitch, only reinforces that observation.
The "Footbahlin with Ben Roethlisberger" Podcast
I was aware that Big Ben had started a podcast last fall, but I hadn't sampled it until this week. The Podcast website describes the show thusly:
"After years of sampling unique beers and talking football with friends, we've decided to make it a show! Get ready for uneducated craft beer reviews, over-educated football insight, and a list of special guests that is guaranteed not to disappoint!"
The interview with Tomlin was excellent. Very informal, very entertaining, and very informative, as the Coach and the QB had an excellent bull session about coaching, football, and their relationship in general. When I look AT THE GUESTS THAT BEN HAS HAD ON HIS SHOW since it began, it makes me look forward to some long car rides in the future when I can replay these old shows.
Check it out.
"Six"
Four Stars from The Grandstander.
To Absent Friends - Bud Grant
Thursday, March 16, 2023
"All Quiet On The Western Front"
Monday, March 13, 2023
My Oscars Post-Mortem - All At Once
- In regard to the four winning actors, can anyone NOT be excited for Jamie Lee Curtis win as Best Supporting Actress? Her acceptance speech, wherein she talked about her career in "genre movies" and paid tributes to her parents, Tony Curtis and Janet Leigh, was a pure delight and perhaps the highlight of the evening.
- Host Jimmy Kimmel was quite prescient when his opening monologue included the line "Just think, two actors from 1992's "Encino Man" could possibly win Oscars tonight." They, Ke Huy Quan and Brendan Fraser, actually pulled it off!
- Speaking of Kimmel, I thought he, once again, did a good job as host. He referenced last year's Will Smith Debacle without actually mentioning either Smith or Chris Rock's names. He was funny without being over the line, and he kept the traffic moving. The only bad part of his shtick was the "questions from viewers" and trying to include Malala in the bit. God bless Malala for the work she does, but she obviously has no sense of humor, at least not for stuff like this.
- One movie that I am definitely prompted to see after last night was the other big winner of the night, "All Quiet On The Western Front." That viewing via Netflix could come as soon as tomorrow.
- I have said for years that one way to shorten the length of the Oscars telecast would be to remove the performance of the five nominated Original Songs, and last night's show did nothing to change my mind. Twenty minutes of the show could be chopped off just like that!
- As for the winning Song, "Naatu Naatu" from "RRR", well, I will plead a general lack of knowledge of Indian culture, so I hope that I am not being too critical or ignorant when I say that nobody will be humming that one like they do past winners like Moon River or Raindrops Keep Falling On My Head. My own thought was that the song was actually a terrific dance number and a great piece of choreography, and would it have won if it was just a song without the accompanying dancing?
- Having said that, I loved the acceptance speech from the two songwriters when the one gentleman said he grew up listening The Carpenters and then did a riff on Top of The World.
- The onstage-and-part-of-the-program commercials for Disney's "Little Mermaid" and Warner Bros. 100th Anniversary. What was that all about?
- The only shock of the In Memoriam segment was seeing that Kirstie Alley had died. I had either forgotten that or missed it completely. I looked it up today and saw that she died on December 5, two days after our wedding. That explains that.
- In THIS POST from yesterday, I gave you seven predictions for the Oscars, and I was correct on four of them, missing on three of the four acting categories. I hope that by next year, I will have seen more of the nominated films and will thus be able to give some better and more informed predictions.
- One last thing, my award for Best Gown of the Evening goes to Eva Longoria. (Runner Up: Halle Berry)
Sunday, March 12, 2023
Tonight's Oscars
Thursday, March 9, 2023
"Casablanca" and The Face of Ilsa Lund
Boeheim Retires
Sunday, March 5, 2023
The Murdaugh Trial and Conviction
As the news has been abuzz for the last several weeks with news of the trial and subsequent conviction of Alex Murdaugh, something kept niggling in the back of my mind. "I KNOW this case, it seems familiar, yet what I remember had nothing to do with a guy killing his wife and son." Then, a factoid about the Murdaughs was mentioned on the CBS Sunday Morning show today, and the light bulb clicked on.
So I went back to the archives of The Grandstander to reread about my vacation in Hilton Head Island back in May, 2019. Here is a portion of a Grandstander post from May 16, 2019:
While on vacation in Hilton Head Island last week, I made it a point each day to pick up a copy of the daily newspaper, The Island Packet - and, yes, I was amazed to see that tiny Hilton Head was publishing a daily newspaper. Anyway, I found the paper to be fascinating reading. It included stories like these....
- The case of John Terry Murdaugh. Murdaugh is the 20 year old scion of an influential South Carolina legal family (judges, prosecutors, and high powered lawyers populate several generations of the family tree) who is charged with a BUI (Boating Under the Influence, a common crime in the SC Low Country) incident that resulted in the death of a teen age woman, and injuries to others on board the craft that young Murdaugh was piloting. All passengers on board were heavily imbibing and were under the legal age do so. It seems that the entire booking, hearing, and indictment process were handled with so many kid gloves that charges of legal favoritism amongst the South Carolina "good old boy" network of justice are just flying left and right.
Saturday, March 4, 2023
To Absent Friends - Bob Richards
Richards was of the era when pole vaulters used stiff metal poles and not the flexible fiber glass poles that we see today. Richards lived to see his record height in the event of 15 feet, 6 inches surpassed not only by athletes everywhere, but even by his own children and grandchildren, and that fact generated this quote that was in the closing paragraphs of Richards' Washington Post obituary:
Mr. Richards is still the only Olympic pole vaulter to win two gold medals, but he’s not the family’s lone record holder. Several of his children and grandchildren became competitive pole vaulters, surpassing his 15 feet 6 inches by several feet — though they weren’t vaulting with a metal pole.
“If you want to get a clear picture,” Mr. Richards once said, “give today’s vaulters a stiff pole.”
Like many great athletes who lived to an old age, even the great Bob Richards was not above Shouting at the clouds and telling the kids to get off his lawn.
RIP Bob Richards
Thursday, March 2, 2023
Critical Commentary: Marlowe, Banshees, and a Few Others
It has been awhile since I have put pen to paper, figuratively speaking, and offered some Pop Cultural Critical Commentary, so here goes.
Let's begin with...
"Marlowe"
This movie is critically acclaimed and has been nominated for a slew of Academy Awards, including Best Picture, Director, Actor, and two for Supporting Actor. It is beautifully filmed and is beautiful to look at, but when it ended, Linda and I looked at each other and said "Okay, what exactly was that?"
Season Three of Apple TV's "Ted Lasso" debuts later this month. When I mentioned this to Linda, she said that she had never seen the show. So, this has sent us back to watch the first two seasons of the show, her for the first time, me for the second time. We are halfway through Season Two. Linda is enjoying it immensely, and I am as well as I am picking up on some things that I missed or have forgotten from my first viewing. I have written of this show before, so I won't detail it once again, except to say that if you have access to Apple TV, watch this show.
This Apple TV+ series stars Jason Segal as a psychotherapist who, as the series begins, is still in mourning and grappling with the death of his wife a year earlier. This has led him a tailspin of drugs and alcohol, a fractured relationship with his teenaged daughter, and a host of professional problems as he attempts to help his patients deal with their issues. Doesn't sound like a barrel of laughs, does it? Trust me though, this series is funny and thoughtful as it takes us through the shitty stuff that life can throw at a person. A new episode of this series drops every Friday. Five episodes are now available to binge as we await each Friday.
Paula Hawkins' first novel was "The Girl On The Train", and it was a terrific story, from which a pretty good movie was made.