Thursday, December 19, 2024

To Absent Friends - Marshall Brickman


Marshall Brickman
1939-2024

Film screenwriter and director Marshall Brickman died a few weeks ago and his passing is worth mentioning.  To me, Brickman is best remembered as the screenwriter who, along with Woody Allen, co-wrote four of Allen's greatest movies: "Sleeper", "Manhattan", "Manhattan Murder Mystery" (a movie that earned an Oscar for Dianne Wiest), and, best of all "Annie Hall", which won four Oscars, Best Picture, Best Actress (Diane Keaton), Best Director (Allen), and Best Screenplay for both Allen and Brickman.

That alone earns Absent Friend recognition for Brickman in my book, but, as you learn when you read news obituaries, there was so much more to the Marshall Brickman.

He got his start in show biz by playing banjo in a folk music group called The Tarriers that made a minor name for themselves during the early 1960's folk music boom.  Brickman came on board the group as a replacement for a band member that as to go on to other things, actor Alan Arkin.  It was when the Tarriers were headlining in small clubs that Brickman met and became friends with an opening act comedian named Woody Allen.  After getting to know one another, Brickman began writing some of Allen's jokes and monologues that became a staple of his stand-up career,  He also helped to write a number TV specials for Allen as he was making his way up the show business ladder.


Some other Marshall Brickman highlights:

  • All the while, Brickman continued his banjo playing. When the Tarriers disbanded, he briefly played in a group called The New Journeymen, that featured a couple of singers John and Michelle Phillips in their pre-Mommas and the Poppas days.  
  • In 1972, the producers of the film "Deliverance" was looking for a soundtrack and stumbled upon an old banjo album that Brickman and his college roommate Eric Weissberg had recorded years earlier and used it.  The famous Dueling Banjos?  THAT was Marshall Brickman.  Brickman wasn't even aware of it until one day a check for $170,000 arrived in the mail for him from Warner Bros.
  • He went on to become the Head Writer for Johnny Carson on the Tonight Show.  Remember all this hilarious sketches featuring Carnac the Magnificent, Aunt Blabby, and Art Fern's Tea Time Movie?  That was Marshall Brickman.
  • The book for the hit Broadway Musical Jersey Boys?  Yep, that was Marshall Brickman, too.  He did the screenplay for the movie version as well.
Brickman's writing, directing, and producing credits number over fifty in IMDB.  Quite a resume and quite a career.

By chance and right before Brickman's death, Linda and I rewatched "Annie Hall" a few weeks back.  The movie is now 52 years old and it holds up completely and remains a comedy classic. You might want to do the same thing in the days ahead.

RIP Marshall Brickman.

Sunday, December 15, 2024

Three Sporting Thoughts

ONE:  Bill Belichick 

Big news on the football coaching front is that Bill Belichick, arguably the greatest coach in NFL history, will be returning to the sidelines in 2025, not in the NFL, but at the University of North Carolina.  "Can you imagine crusty, curmudgeonly  Bill Belichick kissing the asses of  17 year old high school kids on the college recruiting circuit?" seemed to be the most common theme among pundits.  True, although the landscape of college football has changed so drastically in recent years, that it has been speculated that a football "general manager" may be hired at UNC (as has been done at many other schools) to deal with the unseemly details of recruiting, transfer portal issues, and NIL money, and Bill would be left to do what he does best: coach football.  We'll see how it turns out.

A bigger question would be why has no NFL team turned to Belichick to become their HC?  He interviewed in Atlanta last year, and he reportedly wanted that job, but Arthur Blank choice otherwise. There will also be bunch of openings after this season concludes, and don't you think that Coach Bill would be a better option than any of the various OC's, DC'c and others who will be hired to fill those openings?

Belichick is 72 years old, and perhaps no team wants to commit long term to a guy of that age, but North Carolina is willing to go for five years at $10 million per.   It is going to be interesting to follow how things transpire in Chapel Hill over the ext several years.

TWO: Baseball Hall of Fame

Whatever they are calling the "Veterans Committee" in Cooperstown these days righted a couple of wrongs when it was announced this week that it has elected Dave Parker and Richie Allen into the Hall of Fame.


I'm not going to go into a recitation of the stats and numbers that Parker and Allen posted over long careers.  You can look those up.  If you followed baseball during the time that they played, you know just exactly how great they were.  Parker was a driving force  and best player on Pirates teams in the late '70s/early 80s that always competed for division titles and won the World Series in 1979.  He was the National League MVP in 1978.  The Cobra has fallen into ill health in his senior years, and I am glad that he got to know that he is a Hall of Famer while he can still smell the roses.

Not so Richie Allen, who left us in 2020.  A star with the Phillies, Cardinals, and White Sox (Al MVP in1972), Allen is surely one of the greatest players to ever come from Western Pennsylvania (Wampum, Beaver County), and I judge him by one totally subjective metric:  If the Pirates are clinging to a one run lead in the ninth inning and the other team has men on base, who do I LEAST want to see come to the plate in that situation?  Richie Allen was high, very high, on such a lot.

You can read what I wrote about Allen in 2020 when he died HERE, but I would like to add one paragraph from that post for y9our immediate reading:He had his enemies and his defenders.  

"At two different SABR meetings in Pittsburgh over the years, I heard both sides.  Chuck Tanner, who managed him in Chicago, defended him to the highest, and said he was one of the best players, on and off the field, that he ever managed, a great guy.  On the other hand, Nellie Briles, who played with him on the Cardinals, said he was one of the worst teammates that he ever had, and almost shuddered when he even mentioned his name."

Both Parker and Allen were iconoclasts of sorts and I include these two photos proof:



THREE: The Pirates

Major League Baseball's annual winter meetings concluded this week and, lo and behold, the Pirates made a trade.  They acquired first baseman Spencer Horowitz from the Blue Jays via the Guardians.  Until the day of the trade, I had never heard of Spencer Horowitz.


No offense to Mr. Horowitz who I am sure is a nice guy and a competent baseball player, but the one word that appeared over and over again in news stories about the deal was "affordable".  In other words, he comes cheap, and that is the way our Beloved Buccos do business.  Free agent 1B Pete Alonso would sure have been a better addition for the Pirates, but, alas, he is not "affordable" for Bob Nutting's Pirates.  And when the biggest news was the Mets signing Juan Soto to a fifteen year contract worth $765 million, it becomes more depressing being a Pirates fan.  Oh, and Braves ace pitcher Max Fried signed an eight year, $218 million contract with.....the Yankees.

Other teams over the years have shown that you don't have to spend THAT kind of money to compete and win, but the Pirates won't even do that.  

Anyway, welcome to Pittsburgh, Spencer Horowitz!

It ain't easy being a Pirates fan.

Wednesday, December 11, 2024

"Wicked"

 


So, we waited for the initial box office rush to die down a bit, then we waited to recover rom our Covid bouts, but on Monday we got ourselves to the theater to see "Wicked", the movie adaptation of the long running Broadway musical.  You may have noticed that there have been a commercial or two on television leading up to the release of this movie.

I am not going to go into a long review/synopsis of this movie, but I will tell you this:  It was terrific!  Bright, colorful, and beautiful to look at, and wonderfully acted.  Being in a <cough, cough> somewhat older demographic, I confess that I was not all that familiar with the oeuvres of Ariana Grande and Cynthia Erivo, but they were both wonderful in the lead roles of Galinda and Elphaba, respectively, and throw in performances by Jonathan Bailey (Fiyero), Michelle Yeoh (Madame Morrible). and Jeff Goldblum (The Wizard), and you've got a great cast, although I will say that this stage of his career, Goldblum mainly plays "Jeff Goldblum" in just about everything he does, which isn't necessarily a bad thing.

Oh, and there is a musical number that features cameo appearances from two people that came as a wonderful surprise to me.  Linda told me that she was aware that this was a part of the movie, but I was not and that made it all the more delightful to me.

The Two Stars of the Show

Much will be made about the "Defying Gravity" number that closes the movie, and it was spectacular, but the number that I just found totally delightful was "Dancing Through Life".  The choreography was amazing as was the visual effects and staging used throughout.  In an interview I saw on the Today Show a few weeks ago, Bailey said that took five days to film that scene.  It was well worth the effort.  Completely delightful.

This movie is going to get a whole bunch of Oscar nominations, including Best Picture.  The big question is will both Grande and Erivo receive acting nominations?  I wouldn't be surprised to see Yeoh nab a supporting actress nomination, and surely Jon M. Chu will be nominated for Best Director.

One gripe though.  This was only Part One of the film version of "Wicked".  Commercials for this movie began during the Super Bowl in February, and the there were more commercials for this movie in the last three months than there were Bob Casey and Dave McCormick commercials leading up to the election.  Trailers for it have been running in theaters all summer long, the Today Show spent an entire week in early November pimping for the movie, corporations like Target and Xfinity have built entire campaigns around it, and it was only until the week that it was released that it became known - at least to me - that this was only to be Part One of the movie, with Part Two being released next year at Thanksgiving, no doubt to similar promotional efforts.  This was not playing fair with the movie going public, I believe, but what are you going to do?  I just hope that I'm still alive when Part Two comes out next year.

Okay, I'm now off my soapbox.  Go see this movie.  

Four Stars from The Granddstander.

And a Post Script.  If you wonder what The Grandstander thought about the Broadway musical "Wicked" when he saw it back in 2018, you can read that HERE

Monday, December 9, 2024

CFP and Steelers Win

I decided midway through the afternoon yesterday  that the Monday Morning Blog Post would concentrate on the final bracket for this first ever 12 Team College Football Playoff.


Oh, I am not going to make a case as to whether or not a three loss Alabama or an 8-3 South Carolina, who beat Clemson, should be in there, nor do I care about who is seeded where.  Let the ESPN gasbags deal with all of that.  Rather, I want to speak to one of the unintended consequences, for this year at least, that this format hath wrought, and that is the complete and utter lack of drama that was Conference Championship Saturday in college football, or College Football, as Kirk Herbstreit might put it.

Think about it.  Of the twelve teams in the bracket, four of them (Notre Dame, Ohio State, Tennessee, and Indiana) didn't even play on Saturday because they had failed to qualify for their conference title game, and three of the teams actually LOST in their title game but are still alive for the Championship.  Only one of the games was a win-or-go-home game, Clemson vs SMU, and that was only if Clemson lost.  SMU lost, but they are still alive for the CFP title.  The people who bitch about Notre Dame being an independent and not having to win a Conference Championship in order to qualify, should now shut up entirely, because, clearly, winning your conference championship doesn't matter (see Texas, Penn State, Ohio State, Tennessee, Indiana, and SMU).

Oh, the games themselves were terrific:  Georgia 22 - Texas 19 in OT, Oregon 45 - Penn State 38, and Clemson 34 - SMU 27 on a last play of the game field goal, but the question becomes, if these games don't matter, and clearly they do not when it comes to deciding a CFP Championship, then why play them at all?  And before you answer, I will tell you that I already know answer. When it comes to big time sports, the answer to ALL of your questions is MONEY.  These games will continue to be played as long as ESPN or some other TV sugar daddy will open the vaults to the universities in question.

All that said, I am really looking forward to the games that will be played and the sturm und drang  that will surround them.  In the opening round alone....
  • Clemson vs Texas. Who doesn't want to watch this game and cheer for Dabo Swinney to get his Bible-thumping ass kicked? Hook 'em Horns, I say!
  • Tennessee vs Ohio State.  After losing his fourth straight game to Michigan last month the question becomes, "Will Ryan Day lose his job if he goes out early in the CFP tourney?"
  • SMU vs Penn State.  Can James Franklin win a game against a ranked team?  
  • Indiana vs Notre Dame.  Well, it is Notre Dame, after all, and they are playing an in-state rival, and just how good is Indiana after all?
It's gonna be a lot of fun, I do believe.

********

Oh, and I can't not mention something that always brings great joy to my football heart....

Steelers 27 - Browns 14

Yep, a Steelers win over this long time rival is always good news.  I thought I'd include a few highlights of yesterday's game for my Cleveland pals.

Browns kicker Dustin Hopkins on one
 of his two missed field goal attempts

Kadarius Toney muffs a point which was recovered 
by Steeler Ben Skowronek.  The game was 
pretty much over at that point anyway, 
but it put a nice bow on the Steelers victory.

The Steelers are now 10-3, have a two game lead over Baltimore in the AFC North, as they head into a brutal three game stretch of the schedule: @ Eagles, @ Ravens, Chiefs at home on Christmas.   Three playoff caliber teams as they gear up for the Playoffs.


Wednesday, December 4, 2024

Grandstander Power Rankings Through Week 13


Yes, I know that I neglected to post an updated GPR after the Week 12 games. I blame it on being in a depressed state over that Steelers loss to the Cleveland Haslams.  Anyway, a nice win over the Bungles  snapped me right out of it, so here we go.....

  1. Lions 11-1 (Prior Ranking: 1)
  2. Eagles 10-2  (5)
  3. Bills 10-2 (2)
  4. Chiefs 11-1 (3)
  5. Steelers 9-3  (4)
  6. Vikings 10-2  (7)
  7. Packers 9-3 (Unranked)
  8. Ravens 8-5 (6)
  9. Chargers 8-4  (8)
  10. Broncos 8-5  (Unranked)
Knocking at the Door:  Cardinals 6-5, Commanders 8-5, Seahawks 7-5, Texans 8-5

As an added feature, I give you The Grandstander's Ballot for the NFL MVP Award through Week 13:
  1. Saquan Barkley, Eagles
  2. Josh Allen, Bills
  3. Jared Goff, Lions
Looking ahead:
  • A HUGE game on Thursday night between the Lions at home against the Packers.  A TNF game for which it will be worth staying up late.  Lions are 3.5 point favorites and the O/U is 51.5.   Not sure how to bet on this one.
  • Steelers a 6.5 point favorite at home against the Browns.  This will be a revenge game, and I look for the Steelers to shut the loud mouths of the CleveBrownies.  O/U is 44.5.
  • The win-by-the-skin-of-the-teeth Chiefs at home against the surging LA Chargers.  Chiefs a 3.5 favorite and the O/U is 42.5.

Tuesday, December 3, 2024

A Football Cornucopia


Thanksgiving 2024 will not go down as one of the best holidays in our lives.  Early in the week, both Linda and I tested positive for Covid (it's still out there, folks), and spent much of the holiday week feeling, oh how should I put this, feeling like shit.  It caused us to cancel plans for a basketball game, a fancy Thanksgiving Dinner out in downtown Pittsburgh, the Michael Jackson musical at the Benedum, and plans for having friends over to watch the Steelers game on Sunday.  It was only yesterday that I felt that I was "over it", and Linda is finally starting to feel like herself today.  So, while this Thanksgiving wasn't a good one, it certainly was memorable.

Fortunately, we had, as I told family members, football, Netflix, and each other, and the football gods certainly served up a veritable cornucopia of delights for our viewing pleasure.  So much so, that I am only going to skim, over all of it.

The Thanksgiving Day games weren't so great, but were most notable for two things.  One, the Green Bay Packers have established themselves as one of the better teams in the League, but, unfortunately for them, they find themselves in the same division as the team that may well be the League's best, the Detroit Lions.  And two, the total end of game clock mismanagement by Bears HC Matt Eberflus that ended up getting him fired two days later.

On Friday, the Chiefs moved to 11-1 by winning a 19-17 squeaker over the awful Raiders who lost a chance for the upset on a botched snap from center that led to a recovered fumble by the Chiefs on the last play of the game as Vegas was driving towards a makable field goal attempt.  The Chiefs have won at least four games this season on such twists of fate, and one wonders if such good fortune will be sustainable over the course of a Playoff run.  Still, they do have that Mahomes guy playing quarterback, so it's hard to bet against them.  Oh, and this game was made memorable by me cashing in on two parlay bets, both of which involved the Chiefs winning and one of which involved the total points being under 42.5.  I was sweating out both of them, but was still able to cash two nice tickets.

Saturday was Rivalry Day in College Football, and it was highlighted by the 19.5 point favorite and second ranked Ohio State losing the Big Game to Michigan.  What now happens to OSU HC Ryan Day, who beats everyone else except Michigan, now seems to be Topic A amongst college football pundits.

The highlight of this game, though, came afterwards when a Michigan player attempted to "plant the Michigan flag" on the Ohio State logo at midfield, which led to an ugly, really, ugly scene of both teams brawling on the field and cops pepper spraying players and anyone else in the vicinity in an attempt to restore order.


I am not sure when "planting the flag", which leads to "disrespecting our logo" (both ideas are ridiculous) became a thing, but it is a stupid thing and should be stopped by any means possible.  I understand that both Michigan and Ohio State were fined $100,000 for these shenanigans, and that is certainly a good place to start.  Another place might be to fine the coaches of the teams involved and suspending players for such deeds.  

The whole scene was disgraceful.

Locally, Penn State laid a can of whoop-ass on Maryland and was leading 38-7 when with :04 remaining in the game, a Penn State fourth string QB threw a touchdown pass to a fourth string receiver to allow PSU to go up 44-7 on the last play of the game.   Maryland took exception and accused Penn State, and their HC James Franklin, of "running it up".  Franklin, of course, defended the whole thing by saying that the "3's and 4's on the team deserve to be able to 'play football' when they get a chance to play" especially when the other team still has their starters in the game.  Okay, I get that, but did the fourth string kid really have to throw a pass on that last play?

This isn't the first time crap like this has surrounded Franklin.  Remember this scene from several years back?  Penn State is playing Pitt at Heinz Field and is thoroughly thrashing the Panthers.  In the last minute of the game, which was also being played in a torrential downpour, Penn State fumbles and Pitt recovers.  With his team leading by a million points and the final seconds ticking away while a hurricane rages, Franklin challenges the ruling of a recovered fumble by Pitt.  I don't even remember the results of this challenge,  but I do remember this chickenshit act by Franklin.  He's  great coach (except agains Ohio State), but he's, well, chickenshit.  I never root for Penn State to lose, but I'm always delighted to see HCJF take one on the chin, which will probably happen when the Lions meet Oregon for the Big Ten championship on Saturday.

But, hey, at least Franklin didn't demand that the field at Beaver Stadium be cleared in order for Penn State attempt the extra point that would have made it 45-7.  What a sport.

The there was Pitt losing to Boston College.  Remember back in October, when Pitt was 7-0 and nationally ranked?  Seems a hundred years ago, because since that time, Pitt has lost five straight games to finish the season 7-5, and howls have gone up amongst the fanatics and the future of HC Pat Narduzzi is being questioned.  He is actually being compared to Derek Shelton!  Lots of reasons, mainly financial ones, that won't cause Pitt to can Narduzzi, but that seat has to be really, really hot under his behind, and rightfully so, as they head into 2025.  Hey, maybe Pitt can hire Ryan Day after he gets fired in Columbus!

Sunday arrived and the Steelers delivered unto us a 44-38 victory of the Cincy Bengals, thanks mainly to a 400+ yards performance by QB Russell Wilson, the first 400 yard game for a Steelers passer since 2018.


Wilson has the Steelers offense rolling in ways that haven't been seen since Big Ben was calling the signals.  Ten different players caught passed from Wilson on Sunday.  It was fun to watch.

Of course, glass-half-empty Steelers fans are bemoaning that the lowly Bengals scored 38 points against them, but to that I say, that was Joe Burrow going against them throwing to two all-world wideouts in Tee Higgins and Ja'Mar Chase.  Burrow's numbers are among the very best in the NFL, and they are being killed by an absolutely awful Cincy defense.  As a friend of mine noted, if Burrow, Higgins, and Chase got to play against their own defense, they'd score a hundred points a game.

Two very entertaining games followed on Sunday.  The Eagles handily beat the Ravens, 24-19, and the Bills completely buried the 49ers, 35-10, in a blizzard in Buffalo.

Both of those games raised the question in my mind of who should be the Most Valuable Player in the NFL this season.  Up until a week or so ago, this award was generally being conceded to Lamar Jackson of Baltimore, and not without merit.  However, recent weeks have dropped Jackson, in my mind at least, to no better that fourth in this particular horse race.  I think that the players who should be put ahead of him are Saquan Barkley of the Eagles, Josh Allen of the Bills, and Jared Goff of the Lions.

Just my.....


All of this talk should, of course, lead up to the release of an Updated Grandstander Power Rankings, but I've rambled enough for today.  Maybe tomorrow, folks.



Tuesday, November 26, 2024

Covid, Movies, a Documentary, and Trash TV

Yes, my friends,  Covid has reared its ugly head again and has knocked Yours Truly on his butt since Sunday.  The good news is that the Paxlovid scrip that I received yesterday seems to be working, and I can detect some improvement in my condition.  Still feel like shit, but improving.  One side effect of this condition has been an inability to sleep at night, which has led to me watching a lot of television late at  night, which has given me some grist for what I hope will be an informative and entertaining Blog Entry.

Before all that, though, a gripe.

In case you've been living under a rock for that last six months or so, the movie "Wicked" opened this past Friday.  I believe that the first time I saw a commercial for this movie was during the Super Bowl last February. Since then, I have seen the trailer for it every time I've gone to the theater, and in the last six weeks or so, the publicity and hype campaign for the November 22 release  date of "Wicked" has been wall-to-wall and over the top even by Hollywood's standards.   What was never mentioned, not once, in all of this lead up was that this movie is only PART 1 of the movie.  It takes you only up to the ending of Act One of the stage play/musical.  That part only became known a few days prior to the November 22 release date.   If you want to see the entire film adaptation of this great musical, you have to wait until November of 2025 when they release PART 2.

Does this strike anyone else as being just a tad unfair?

Okay, now that I got that off of my chest, here's what I've been watching lately.

Remembering Gene Wilder (Netflix)


This is an absolutely terrific documentary about the late Gene Wilder.  It tells of he professional partnerships with Mel Brooks and Richard Pryor, his marriage to Gilda Radnor and the tragedy of her death, and his subsequent marriage to Karen Webb, who was with him up until his death in 2016 due to Alzheimer's Disease.

You see all kinds of clips from Wilder's extensive filmography that will make you laugh, for sure, but the story of  Wilder finding love a second time after losing his wife to  cancer is what struck home for me.  The story of Wilder's last day when he went for a swim in their pool and his last words to Karen are poignant beyond belief.

Among those interviewed for this doc are Mel Brooks, Richard Pryor's daughter, and Karen Wilder.

Three Stars from The Grandstander.

Woman of the Hour (Netflix)


This movie is based upon the true story of serial killer Rodney Alcala who somehow managed to appear as a contestant on The Dating Game back in 1978.  Anna Kendrick, who also directed this movie, plays Sheryl Bradshaw (no relation to Terry), a wannabe/failing   actress in Los Angeles whose agent gets her a gig on the Dating Game in order for her to be "seen".   Of course, she picks Alcala to be her date.  In both the movie and in real life, Bradshaw never went on the date with him because he creeped her out entirely after she actually met him, and she bailed on the whole deal.  According to the title cards at the end of the movie, Bradshaw "lived her life and raised a family".  After being convicted of multiple murders, Alcala died in prison in 2021 at the age of 77.

Some guy named Daniel Zovatto plays Alcala in as creepy a way as possible, which, I suppose, makes him a good actor.  The whole movie was kind of creepy and not all that great, but it was only 1 hour and 35 minutes long, so it had that going for it.

One Star from The Grandstander.

Now for the trash....

Chimp Crazy (Max)



This one is a four part series that, I think, was hoping to ride the coattails of that "Tiger King" docu-series that everyone in the world watched while quarantined during the COVID pandemic a few years back.  This one is about a woman named Tonia Haddix (no relation to Harvey) and her affinity for raising and maintaining chimpanzees, particularly one named Tonka, who appeared in a couple of Hollywood movies, her never ending battles with PETA, and the underground world of people who deal with and own exotic pets.

What you learn from watching this is that there is just no end to the number of people in this world who are just out and out batshit crazy.

Late Night Lockup (Max)


Okay, I found this one totally by accident while scrolling the Max home screens at two in the morning.  They are half hour shows that show videos taken from police officer body cameras and closed circuit TV's in police cars, police stations, and local lockups of arrests that are made - are you ready - "after the sun goes down, when things get really crazy."  All of the arrests that I have seen (I've watched three of these episodes, but there are three seasons of this show available for your viewing pleasure out there) involve people who are completely and totally falling down drunk.   Nothing good comes from drinking excessively, is the lesson to be learned here, although I don't think that the producers are out to impart lessons with this show as much as just show nothing but a bunch of human train wrecks.

It's entertaining in a manner of speaking, but not something that you would want to binge watch for hours on end.

AsI have already classified these shows as "trash tv" they get Zero Stars from The Grandstander, but you might want to give them a try yourself, just for the freak show value of them.

Thursday, November 21, 2024

Let Us the Salute 2024 National League Rookie of the Year


Congratulations, Paul Skenes, on a well deserved honor.  Speaking on behalf of all Pirates fans, we are sure going to enjoy watching you wearing the Black & Gold for the next 4 to 5 seasons, or until Bob Nutting decides he can't, or won't, pay you what you're worth and trades you for a bunch of other teams' prospects flotsam and jetsam.
 

Monday, November 18, 2024

Big Football Weekend and A New GPR

Well, it was an amazing NFL Sunday yesterday with the two biggest games on the docket, Steelers-Ravens and Bills-Chiefs, more that living up to all of the pregame hype.

The Steelers 18-16 win over the Ravens was not the offensive  tour de force for which we had hoped.  All of the Steelers points came off of the foot of Chris Boswell who chalked up his second six field goal game of the season.


It surely was disappointing that the Steelers couldn't have notched a couple of TD's on their several trips into the red zone yesterday, but what was certainly not a disappointment was the performance of the Steelers defense, which held presumptive league MVP  Lamar Jackson in check and forced two critical turnovers, including a youth-had-to-see-it-to-believe-it interception by rookie linebacker Peyton Wilson.

Of course, in typical Ravens-Steelers fashion, it all came down to the end of the game when Joey Porter Jr chased down Jackson and foiled a two point conversion attempt that would have tied the game and sent it into overtime.  The Steelers were then able to run out the clock and secure the win.


The Steelers have now won eight of the last nine games against the Ravens, and Jackson has now dropped to 1-4 against the Black and Gold.  That may seem lopsided, but none of these games have been easy, and Steelers-Ravens remains the best rivalry in the NFL,  and we get to see them go at it again December 21.

The other big game yesterday was the 8-2 Bills against the 9-0 Chiefs, and QB's Josh Allen and Patrick Mahomes.  Trailing 23-21 late in the game, it appeared that Mahomes and the Chiefs would get the ball back late and have the opportunity to pull another win out of their hats and remain undefeated.  That was until Allen made an electrifying 25 yard run from scrimmage on third-and-two, that secured the win for the Bills, 30-21.


I had mentioned above that Jackson is currently the "presumptive League MVP", and last week I mentioned in another forum, why is this just being ceded to him ten, and now eleven, weeks into the season?  I had mentioned the Lions' Jarod Goff, who had another huge game yesterday, as a legit candidate, but there are sure other guys who seem at least as worthy. Guys like Allen and Mahomes to name two, and what about the Eagles' Saquon Bakley?  The MVP doesn't have to be a quarterback, does he?  The Steelers muzzling of Jackson yesterday might bring him back to the field a bit in this race, but it will be fun to watch and see how it goes from here.


After what was a great week of football (I'm not counting a potential MNF snoozer between Dallas and Houston tonight), let's update the Grandstander Power Rankings through Week 11.
  1. Lions 9-1 (Last Week - 1)
  2. Bills 9-2 (3)
  3. Chiefs 9-1 (2)
  4. Steelers 8-2 (5)
  5. Eagles 8-2 (6)
  6. Ravens 7-4 (4)
  7. Vikings 8-2 (7)
  8. Chargers 7-3 (Unranked)
  9. Falcons 6-5 (9)
  10. Commanders 7-4 (7)
Also receiving consideration: Broncos 6-5, Cardinals 6-4.

If I was honest I night have the Eagles ahead of the Steelers, but, what the hell, it's my poll, so I'm giving my favorite team the edge here.  They play each other on December 15, so that question will be answered on the field.


Tuesday, November 12, 2024

Sporting Thoughts

A scattershot look from The Grandstand at recent happenings in the World of Sports.

Steelers 28 - Washington Football Team 27

Najee rumbles

George Pickens does magic

Russ drops one down the 
chimney to Mike Williams

In a week that can be described as "depressing" for some of us sitting in the Grandstand, the Steelers road win on Sunday over the Washington Commanders can be rightly described as "euphoric".  The Steelers were coming off a bye week and were 6-2, and the Commanders with their terrific rookie QB Jaydon Daniels were the surprise of the league at  7-2.  In all honesty, I was expecting a Steelers loss on Sunday.   The nature of the win....a Steelers defense severely limiting Daniels, overcoming a double digit second half deficit, and the dime that Russell Wilson dropped to newly acquired Mike Williams with a little over two minutes to play for the go ahead touchdown....it was, well...euphoric!

I have not written much about the Steelers or the NFL so far this season, so let's reflect a bit.  Sunday's win gives the Steelers a 7-2 record and a half game lead over the 7-3 Ravens, and sets ups a BIG GAME this Sunday when Baltimore comes to Pittsburgh.  It will be the first divisional game that the Steelers will play and the stakes are, well, big.  First place in the division, tie-breaker advantages, and blah blah blah.  At the beginning of the year, I felt that Baltimore would be in the Super Bowl, and Lamar Jackson is playing at a level that will probably bring him a third MVP Award.  However, the Ravens have shown some defensive vulnerability and a strange propensity for blowing leads late in games.  I have often said that there is no better rivalry in the NFL over the last 15 or so years than Steelers-Ravens, and this week should prove to add to the luster of these games.  And expect to hear the TV announcers trot out the Mike Tomlin-John Harbaugh to George Halas-Curly Lambeau comparisons.

After that 6-2 start, the Steelers post-bye schedule appeared, and still does appear, to be a brutal one:  all six divisional games, plus the Commanders, Eagles, and Chiefs.  They already have notched one W from that gauntlet.  The rest of the way won't be any easier, but with how the team looked against the WFT, I am anxiously awaiting the next eight weeks, but, of course, I'll be taking them all one game at a time.

Grandstander Power Rankings


Not sure how regularly I'm going to do this, but here is my first GPR of the season, submitted without comment:
  1. Lions 8-1
  2. Chiefs 9-0
  3. Bills 8-2
  4. Ravens 7-3
  5. Steelers 7-2
  6. Eagles 7-2
  7. Commanders 7-2
  8. Vikings 7-2
  9. Falcons 6-4
  10. Cardinals 6-4
Others receiving consideration: Bengals 4-6, Broncos 5-5, Chargers 6-3, Texans 6-4.

Dodgers Win World Series


The Dodgers five game World Series win over the Yankees was just a little over two weeks ago, yet it already feels like so long ago, so I don't want to let it recede into the mists of history without a few comments.

First off, a Dodgers-Yankees face off was an exciting prospect, because it would pit the two greatest offensive players in the game today in a showdown against each other, Shohei Ohtani of the Dodgers and Aaron Judge of the Yankees.  That was going to cause fireworks like we hadn't seen since Reggie Jackson turned into Mr. October.  Well, it didn't turn out that way.  Over the 162 game season, Ohtani and Judge combined to hit .315 with 112 home runs and 274 runs batted in.  In the five game series, they combined to hit .162 (6-for-37) with 1 HR and 3 RBI.

And then there was that fifth game.  After four innings the Yanks led 5-0, Gerrit Cole hadn't surrendered a hit through four innings, Judge had hit a home run, and the Yankees appeared to be cruising to a win that would extend the Series to a sixth game.  Then it all fell apart in a way that only baseball can deliver to us.  Aaron Judge, who hadn't committed an error all season (you can look it up), dropped a routine fly ball in center, short stop Anthony Volpe made a throwing error, and then, inexplicably, Cole failed to cover first base on a ground ball to first, and BOOM, the Dodgers had tied it 5-5 and were on their way to a 7-6 win in Game 5 and a World Series Championship.  Overall, perhaps it won't go down as one of the Great World Series of our time, but that fifth game, and especially that fifth inning, will make it a memorable one for sure.


Dodgers first baseman Freddie Freeman, playing with an injured ankle that would probably have put him on the injured list in the regular season, was the Most Valuable Player of the Series.  He batted .300, had a Series record tying 12 RBI, and hit 4 home runs.  The first of those was an extra innings walk off grand slam that, in retrospect, may have effectively ended the Series right then and there.   The MVP Award for this Series was never in doubt.

Freeman came to the majors full time with the Braves in 2011.  In those days I was still playing fantasy baseball, and I always coveted him for my team, but he always got drafted by someone else before I had the chance to nab him.  From the start he was, as my Dad would have put it, "a nice looking ball player."  He was a good player from the start, and he seems to be a likable guy as well.  He always seems to chat up and laugh with other players whenever they reach first base, which I think is kind of cool to see.  Through 15 seasons, he has hit .300 with 343 HR and over 1,200 RBI.  Next year will be his age 35 season, and he appears to still have gas in the tank, so an eventual landing spot in Cooperstown is not hard to imagine.  I will look forward to still watching him play.

College Football

What with conference realignments, NIL money, the transfer portal, and a twelve team Playoff, the business model of college football is well on the way to becoming Major League Baseball.  If you follow the sport, you know exactly what I am talking about, so I needn't spell it out for you here.  Whether this is a good thing or a bad thing is still TBD, but one thing for sure is that this 2024 season has produced some absolutely terrific match-ups and games, and seems to be doing it on weekly basis.  I cannot recall a season where I have looked forward to at least one game every single weekend as much as I have this season, and it shows no signs of stopping right up on through the conclusion of the CFP Championship game on January 20, so at least there will be one good thing that will happen on that day.

Sunday, November 10, 2024

Movie Time - "Here"

 

Back in 1994 the creative team of director Robert Zemeckis, screenwriter Eric Roth, and actors Robin Wright and Tom Hanks gave us the multi-Oscar winning (Picture, Director, Screenwriter, and Lead Actor) "Forrest Gump", and this fact has been heavily touted in the publicity for this one, "HERE", wherein that whole creative team has been reunited.

This movie is about one house, one particular room of the house, actually, and the people who have lived there and the events that took place in that room over the course of a hundred years or so, and even many eons ago as well (trust me on that point.).

The cinematic trick that makes this movie unique is that it is filmed with a stationary camera.  People move in and out of the room, but the camera doesn't follow them; it stays on the room. You know that there is a kitchen, a dining room, a back door etc. behind that fourth wall, but you only see the room.  Makes it somewhat like watching a play.

Many families have occupied this house, and one very famous household furniture item was conceived there (per this story), but the focus is on the multi-generational family that lived there from the end of World War II and into the 21st century.  Hanks is the baby-boomer son of the WWII vet and his wife.  People settle in, struggle with jobs, have kids, celebrate marriages, births, birthdays, holidays, illnesses, and deaths.

This movie has not been received well by the critics.  They say the the stationary camera is a cinematic conceit  of Zemeckis, that the CGI "de-aging" of Hanks and Wright is distracting. I thought the single camera angle was different and I liked it.  We all know that Hanks and Wright aren't twenty-somethings  anymore but let Hollywood magic work it's tricks on them.  I found this movie the be warm and human, well acted (I mean, this IS Tom Hanks, amiright?), and it delivers a wonderful message.  That is is not bricks and mortar that should define a house and home.  It is the memories it creates, both good and not so good, and the people with whom we share them is what is important. Corny?  Maybe, but we liked it.

The movie hit both Linda and I in a very visceral and emotional way.  In Linda's case, her daughter and her husband are now living in the same house where Linda and her Mom, Dad, brother, and sister lived.  They moved into the house in 1961. She sees the emotions and memories are what makes this particular room special, even though the room may look very different than it did a generation ago.  In my case, all the memories that can spring up within you when someone special to you dies.  It packed quite a punch for both of us.

Like I say, professional critics haven't loved "Here", and that is too bad in that it will probably keep people away from it, but these two regular movie goers did, and I look forward to watching it again when it hits the streamers. 

Four Stars from The Grandstander.


Friday, November 8, 2024

To Absent Friends - Elwood Edwards

Elwood Edwards died this week, one day before his 75th birthday, and if you don't know who Elwood Edwards is/was, well, all I can say is that THIS is why I do "Absent Friends" pieces.


Edwards was a camera technician and graphic designer at television station WKYC in Cleveland whose wife was working for a then small internet company.  Back in 1989 she suggested that her firm use the voice of her husband to make a recording that would welcome users to this new online platform.  Edwards then recorded four short phrases:  "Welcome", "Files Done", "Good-bye", and the most ubiquitous and most famous one of all, "You've Got Mail".   Hey, let him tell you about it in this YouTube video.

Who didn't make their first stab at going on the internet and using a personal email account with America Online?  Even if you didn't, you most certainly have heard that unmistakable voice saying "You've got mail."  I always thought that it was some computer generated voice.  It never occurred to me that it was a real person that actually said those words.  Edwards' famous words were even made into a terrific Nora Ephron romantic comedy with Tom Hanks and Meg Ryan.  Edwards also appeared on the Tonight Show with Jimmy Fallon uttering those famous phrases.

AOL paid Edwards $200 for making the recording.  Too bad he didn't think to ask for residuals.

RIP Elwood Edwards.