Back in May, I wore my Roberto Clemente jersey to a Pirates-Giants game at PNC Park, and upon seeing all the folks there in Giants gear, I hit upon an idea for a photo opportunity, and when I saw a guy wearing a certain Giants jersey, this photo was taken:
Wednesday, August 28, 2024
Photo Ops at The Ballpark
Tuesday, August 27, 2024
The Cruz Affair, and A Humiliating Loss
The announcement from 115 Federal Street that Oneil Cruz would be moved from short stop to centerfield came in such a wonderfully ham-handed Only-The-Pirates fashion. Let me count the ways.
- It comes only a week after GM Ben Cherrington announced that Cruz "is our shortstop." We weren't paying close enough attention when GMBC added "for now" to his ringing endorsement of his then-shortstop.
- It comes 131 games into the season. Not try it out in winter ball or spring training. Let's start RIGHT NOW. This, effectively, turns the remainder of the Bucs' season into early spring training, at least as far as the up-the-middle defense goes.
- It was offhandedly announced midway through another stultifying Derek Shelton pre-game presser. Not to be confused with his always riveting post-game pressers.
- Word is that Cruz is "unhappy" about the move. So much for what might be best for the team. I also read that when the Pirates did try Cruz in the outfield a couple of springs ago, he made minimal effort in trying to learn the positions. So now we will have yet another disgruntled ballplayer who will be counting his days until Free Agency Eligibility.
- The Cubs stole 8, count 'em, 8 bases on the Pirates. This broke a team record that was set the year before the Titanic sank.
- Mitch Keller struggled through four innings, throwing 97 pitches as the Cubs stole base after base. Still, when he was pulled, the Pirates trailed only 3-2, and it was still a ballgame until.....
- Domingo German came in and gave up 8 runs in the sixth inning, and effectively ended the game. As was stated in a text chain conversation I was in during the game it was the worst performance by a German since their Army at Stalingrad.
- Now down 11-3, Nick Gonzalez tried to stretch a single into a double and was thrown out by a mile. As Greg Brown was incredulously saying "Gonzalez is headed to second", his colleague Neil Walker was heard saying "He'd better make it", and, of course, he did not. Even the always rose colored glasses wearing Brownie was stunned that such a bone headed base running play was made when you're down by eight runs.
- Not to be a "back in my day" kind of guy, but there was time in baseball when a manager would yank a guy out of the game right then and there and sit his ass on the bench to make an example and send the message that such stupidity will not be tolerated. Guess that moves like that are not spelled out on the computer print outs that so obviously governs Sheltie's decision making.
- Then we got the Feel Good story of 33 year old pitcher Brady Feigl, who, after a journeyman career through the minors, struggling with injuries, and playing independent league baseball, got to make his first appearance in the big leagues, when Shelton finally pulled the plug on German, and immediately retired the first batter he faced on four pitches and ended the inning. We got to see the proud parents and the tearful wife in the stands watching this long awaited debut. Feigl then came out for one more inning and one-third of another and gave up six runs on seven hits. This led to the ultimate embarrassment of.....
- Sheltie asking first baseman Rowdy Tellez to finish the last inning and end the misery. This, by the way, was the second time in three games that Sheltie did this with Tellez. To me, having a position player come in and pitch in a blow out is the ultimate embarrassment for a team. There is nothing cute or funny about it. If I'm Rowdy, I march into Shelton's office after the game and say, "I've done you this favor twice now, but don't embarrass me like this ever again." (Still, Tellez' ERA of 5.40 is a whole lot better than Feigl's 32.40.)
Thursday, August 22, 2024
At The Movies with The Grandstander
Two movies for your viewing pleasure.....
It Ends With Us
This is a movie about domestic violence and the cycle of it that seems to repeat itself through generations. Frankly, I would never have chosen to see this movie on my own, but Linda wanted to see it, and God knows she goes along with a whole lot of stuff that I want to see, so what the hell, off I went to see something that I thought might be just a glorified movie-of-the-week type melodrama.
In fact, It Ends With Us turned out to be pretty good movie about a most disturbing subject. I knew of Blake Lively, but was not familiar with any of her work. My favorite movie critic/podcaster Arch Campbell likens her to the type of leading lady that was prominent in the so-called golden age of Hollywood glamour girls like Rita Hayworth, Joan Crawford, Barbara Stanwyck, or Myrna Loy, and I won't disagree with him. She is certainly beautiful, and she was great in the lead in this one. The male lead with whom she falls in love, marries, and has a child with was played by Baldoni. He was okay, but that rugged handsomeness that he projected, with the multi-day growth of beard, and tousled hair with the lock that doesn't quite stand straight up and doesn't quite fall on his forehead was just a bit too manufactured for my taste. Then again, maybe I'm just jealous. Jenny Slate, as Lively's girlfriend and Baldwin's sister, struck a great chord between comic relief and wise counsel to Lively's character.
I ended up liking the movie and I'm glad I went. Domestic violence is a serious topic that doesn't make for "feel good RomComs", so know what to expect going into this one. (A group of thirty-something women were seated near us in the theater and when the movie was over, one of them looked at the one of the others and said "Why didn't you tell me what this was going to be about?")
Three Stars from The Grandstander.
The Greatest Night in Pop
Were you around in 1985, and do you remember when the song "We Are The World" was recorded by group over forty pop music stars of the day in an effort to raise funds for famine relief efforts in Africa? This was inspired by Bob Geldof's Live Aid concerts that were held in London and Philadelphia that same year. This documentary of how that project came about, and the amazing effort that went into recording the song in one night when all of this incredible talent came together was released on Netflix earlier in the year, and we finally got around to watching it thais past Sunday.
If you don't know the story, the project was conceived by Quincy Jones and Lionel Ritchie. They had to come up with a song, which Ritchie and co-writer Michael Jackson did, find a studio, and, most importantly, figure out a way to get so many stars together in the same place an the same time, and record the song in one session. How they managed to do all of that is the story that is told in this terrific documentary.
The recording session was filmed throughout in order that a music video could be released along with the record. In this film, current interviews are held with Ritchie, Jones, Bruce Springsteen, Huey Lewis, Cindy Lauper, and Sheila E, artists who performed in the song, as well as many of the recording technicians who were there. In addition to those artists others who performed included Stevie Wonder, Bob Dylan, Ray Charles, Paul Simon, Kenny Rodgers, Al Jarreau, Darryl Hall and John Oates, Kim Carnes, Diana Ross, Dionne Warwick, and Tina Turner. and I know I'm leaving a whole bunch of them out. One great line in the film was Paul Simon being quoted as saying "If a bomb goes off in this place tonight, John Denver is back on top again."
It was fun seeing people like Ritchie, Springsteen, Dylan, and Lewis forty years younger than we know them today, and sobering to see how many of those stars are no longer with us.
"We Are The World" won the Grammy for Jackson and Ritchie for Song of the Year, and it did what it was supposed to do, raising hundreds of millions of dollars for famine relief, and in fact, royalties from the song continue to provide such relief to this very day.
Four Stars from The Grandstander.
Monday, August 19, 2024
"JAWS" - Book vs. Movie
THE BOOK
Remember how he kept saying that they just COULDN'T close the beaches for the 4th of July Weekend, because, well, Amity was tourist town nd the residents depended on people flocking to it's beaches. If there were no tourists, the residents would be unable to survive for the other nine months of the year. It would be an economic catastrophe.
- "This was no boating accident." To be used when presented with a set of facts and suppositions, often in the work place, that are obviously pure unadulterated bullshit.
- When confronted with a seemingly insurmountable obstacle, either at home, with your family, or in the workplace, who among us hasn't said "We're going to need a bigger boat."
Monday, August 12, 2024
The Paris Olympics
The 2024 Summer Olympics, or to be technical, the Games of the XXXIII Olympiad of the Modern Era, came to a close in Paris yesterday, and you can most certainly say that they were one terrific show.
First of all, can any city in the world top Paris for sheer breathtaking beauty? Credit the Paris Organizers for taking full advantage of the amazing backdrop that is Paris.
Secondly, NBC and it's various platforms did one tremendous job in covering the Games, and in Mike Tirico, they had a great host for the show. Having the Peacock streaming app made it possible to see just about every event that you wanted to see, and see it LIVE as it was happening. It made the five-hours-ahead time zone difference nonexistent. Of course, being retired and being able to stay home all day and watch, helps out, too.
And while on the subject of NBC, I got a huge kick out of swimming announcer Rowdy Gaines and track announcers Leigh Diffey and Ato Boldon. Let's face it. swimming and track and field are pretty much niche sports that appear on most peoples' radar once every four years and to hear these guys get so excited and geeked out about this swimmer's split times or that runner's best race since the Worlds in Copenhagen three years ago was joyous to listen to.
And who would have thought that the absolute breakout star of NBC's coverage would have been this guy?
Talking about back stories, nothing can top the image of Brittany Griner on the Gold Medal podium, less than two years removed from a Russian prison.
Tuesday, August 6, 2024
A Chautauqua Sojourn
A few days ago I teased on Facebook by saying "When was the last time you checked into a hotel and got one of these?":
The hotel is a beautiful building, as are the grounds on which it sits, but it is old. The key is only one example. Window air conditioners and outdated bathrooms in the rooms are two others, but at least they had an elevator! We were disappointed with our room, but, hey, we were only there one night, and the setting, the food, and a great lobby bar more than made up for it. Another thing that is old at the Anthenaeum is the clientele. I turn 73 next month, and I'm guessing that I was below the average age of the folks who stayed there.
No matter though, because the highlight of our stay was a pops performance by the Chautauqua Symphony entitled "Sinatra....and Beyond" featuring guest vocalist Tony DeSare. Linda was limited by our calendar by what date we would be in Chautauqua , so she was flying blind insofar as what we would see at the Amphitheater that night. She was gonna take whomever or whatever happened to be scheduled for August 3, and did we luck out.
He also did some of his own songs. He is also a singer/songwriter who has recorded his own music and has performed across the country. He told a delightful story about performing in a New York City hotel cabaret when he was terrified to discover one night that none other than Paul McCartney was in the audience. And after an program of Sinatra ballads and his own jazzy love longs, he and the terrific Symphony closed the evening by bringing down the house with Jerry Lee Lewis' "Great Balls of Fire". He didn't play the piano with his feet like the Killer did, but he more than did it justice.
It was great one day/night getaway, and a terrific birthday gift from my wife. I will close with some pics from our trip.