Day of Yore, October 17

Was today in 1989. With the media world gathered for game three of the World Series in San Francisco between the Giants and the A’s, the Loma Prieta earthquake put a sudden stop to the Series. With all the media there, it was the first earthquake to be on live television. The quake hit 31 minutes before the game was to start. They resumed play 10 days later and the A’s swept the Giants in four games.

It wasn’t quite an earthquake, but is was something in 1968 when Bob Beamon flew 29 feet and 2 and a half inches in the long jump at the Mexico City Olympics. Beamon broke the previous world record by over 21 inches and he held the record for almost 23 years.

It was today in 1931 that Al Capone was convicted of tax evasion.

Just five years after working at the very same movie theatre in Memphis, Elvis Presley’s third movie, “Jailhouse Rock” premiered tonight at the Loews Cinema.

Two of the best actors of all time paired up for a movie that was released today in 1986. Paul Newman was nearing the end of his brilliant career and Tom Cruise was still in his early days when they made, “The Color of Money,” the sequel to Newman’s earlier film, “The Hustler.”

Double albums were released today in both 1979 and 1980.

It’s almost impossible to follow up a landmark album like “Rumours,” but Fleetwood Mac tried with the very tricky, “Tusk” which hit shelves today in ’79. Famous for being the most expensive album ever made at that point in time, the double album was considered a bust after doing just $4 million in sales. (“Rumours” has done over $40 million to date.) You probably know every song on “Rumours” but do you know any off of “Tusk”? “Sara” about does it for me.

A year to the day Bruce Springsteen released his fifth album, “The River,” a two record set that further cemented his status as rock ‘n roll royalty. Take your pick, “Hungry Heart,” “The River,” “The Ties That Bind,” my personal fave is this one.

Happy 40th birthday to Marshall Mathers.

— Bill Hubbell

 

Posted in: 365 |

IT’S ALL HAPPENING: 10/17

Starting Five


1. The A-Hole Mess: Here’s all we want. We want New York Yankee manager Joe Girardi to give Alex Rodriguez an at-bat tonight. Then we want A-Hole to foul one off into the stands (because we want a ball to be hit into the stands and I think we all know that it is too much to ask that he hit a home run). Then, a moment or two later, we want that foul ball to come rolling back onto the field of play with a phone number on it. Is that too much to ask?

“Raul, I got her number!” “Awesome! High five!”

2. Obama-Romney II: What will survive the next few cycles, and perhaps the next few weeks (months? years?) is the term “binders full of women.” It may also be the next advertising slogan for AnastasiaDate.com.

3. Meanwhile, the Yankees posed for a team photo before Game 4 of the ALCS, which they currently trail 3-0.

4. Manzi and Manti: Johnny Manziel, Texas A&M’s redshirt freshman quarterback, and Manti Teo’, Notre Dame’s senior linebacker, are gaining steam as Heisman candidates. Johnny Football can bolster his candidacy with a home win this week vs. No. 6 LSU (we like this upset pick) while Te’o totally racked on Jim Rome’s show earlier today.

5. It’s not about the bike, but it is about the lie. Lance Armstrong resigns as chairman of the Livestrong Foundation and on the same day is dropped by both Nike and Anheuser-Busch (two fly-by-night outfits). We get the feeling that Armstrong wants to go full-bore Nathan R. Jessup here, to attack the collective naivete of everyone who cannot believe he cheated. He wants to say, “Everybody cheated, so we were basically all on the same level, and I was still the best! AND, I beat cancer!” Still, mark him down as just another former Sports Illustrated Sportsman of the Year who proved not worthy of the honor (they never improved upon the first honoree, Sir Roger Bannister). We remember interviewing former Notre Dame wide receiver Jeff Samardzija in autumn of 2006, after pitcher Kenny Rogers had been accused of doctoring baseballs with pine tar during the World Series. Samardzija, a pitcher himself, grinned and said, “If you ain’t cheating, you ain’t trying.” We’d probably be upset if we knew how many of our heroes subscribe to that mantra.

 

Reserves

We’re sorry, but didn’t we tweet or mention EXACTLY THIS last week? (apologies for the accompanying Screamin’ A audio)

Mental Floss’ list of the “25 Most Powerful Shows of the Past 25 Years.” Not “best shows”, so prepare to be disappointed or confused.

The Indiana Hoosiers are No. 1 in the NCAA coaches basketball poll. Kentucky is No. 3. And, in football, both Alabama and Notre Dame are undefeated. So, Welcome to the late 1970s.

Memo to Luke Winn: Get the higher-ups to re-run this cover. Retro!

Quotable: “Washing dishes that are already clean is like giving tax breaks to people who are already rich.” 

— Someone more clever than us (we forget whom) on Twitter yesterday

 

Flori-duh: Allen Blair Casey may have had one hand in his pocket, but he certainly didn’t have the other one making a peace sign. When the prosecutor makes his closing argument, here’s hoping he begins with, “What it all boils down to…”

YOU OUGHTA KNOW… better than to hit your boyfriend in the face with a plate…

Blake Lively got married again?!? Oh, this time it was as Serena Van Der Woodsen on “Gossip Girl.”

Matt Taibbi makes a non-partisan plea for elections to be cheaper and shorter and for the media to stop covering them as if they are a sports event. Taibbi is a twig of sanity being tossed about in a class-five rapids of media tumult, so good luck with that (we’re with you, Matty).

On this subject: How come each presidential candidate must pay for air time to advertise, but the networks do not need to bid for broadcast rights to the presidential debates?

Once upon a time, Sports Illustrated hired outside writers because (are you sitting down?) they were truly gifted, entertaining w-r-i-t-e-r-s. Men such as Dan Jenkins and Roy Blount, Jr., and yes, Rick Reilly, were not about to break stories such as the cover story that  new hires Thayer Evans and Pete Thamel have penned on Tyrann Mathieu, alias “The Honey Badger”, but they didn’t have to do so. They were simply sublime weavers of tales with a gift for making sentences sing.

We have yet to read the piece — here it is — but we do know and like both men and consider them outstanding reporters. Our only qualm with SI is that it has forgotten what it is, or what it should be: a repository for non pareil sportswriting. You know who would be a wonderful hire for that, or any, mag? Jason Gay of the Wall Street Journal: creative thinker and entertaining humorist. Here’s his piece from earlier this week on “Yankee Panic.”

Doctor Dr., Dr. Dre, Dr. Drew (see what we did there?)

More on Mathieu, SI: It is kind of funny — and by that we mean sad — that SI devoted so much of its resources to uncovering a story about Tyrann Mathieu, a story that most likely disappointed them in its lack of Switzerian scandal when they were done reporting it. And yet still the magazine which, according to the Mathieu family, refused to honor their requests not to be interviewed (sound like any dogged recruiters you know?), put the Honey Badger on its cover this week. Consider that the next time a do-righteous columnist scolds the NCAA for exploiting its athletes. As a woman mentioned earlier in today’s post might say, “Isn’t it ironic?”

And now even MEDIUM HAPPY is exploiting the Honey Badger…

 

We cannot wait for Obama-Romney III. That’s the one where they introduce a brash new character, Mr. T-Party. We pity the foo’s.

Bill Murray may understand the secret of living well — have fun, make people laugh — better than anyone who has ever lived. Here’s yet another example. By the way, Mitch Glazer must be a heckuva guy for Murray and his sibs to do this to him repeatedly. You only tease the people you love (Guy Code 101).


Not that the Yankees will miss him or anything, but we just looked this up and Derek Jeter is the all-time leader in the postseason in (deep breath) Hits(200), Runs (111), Doubles (32) and Triples (5, tied with a few others). Okay, he also leads in strikeouts. Carlos Beltran of the St. Louis Cardinals, by the way, is the all-time postseason leader in Slugging Percentage: .838

Answer the question, Paul! Answer the question! JUST ANSWER THE DAMN QUESTION!!!!!

Ryan Lochte will be the celebrity picker on College Gameday from Gainesville this Saturday. We’d have gone with Andy Staples ourselves.

Day of Yore, October 16

Marie Antoinette was beheaded today in 1793. It was the height of the French Revolution and since their was no television and thereby no, “Keeping Up With the Antionette’s” they simply sent her to the guillotine for treason.

Three days after Antoinette was killed Gordie Howe… 

As the world’s currently most famous Mormon gets set to take the stage tonight to debate the President, it’s worth noting that BYU was founded today in 1875, by a guy named Brigham Young. Talk about your 3 percenter.

A little known fact is that Brigham Young played Pee-Wee hockey with Gordie Howe…

The Walt Disney Company was founded today in 1923 by Walt and his brother Roy as the, “Disney Brothers Cartoon Studio.” That show is now called, “First Take.” As the brothers were locking up that first night they probably couldn’t have guessed that their little studio would have total assets of over $72 billion in under 90 years.

He looks like the bad guy in a… um… Walt Disney movie

It was tonight in 1946 that Gordie Howe made his debut with the Detroit Red Wings in the NHL. He would retire 34 years later at the age of 51. Believe it or not, he played in all 80 games in 1980, and helped the Whalers make the playoffs, picking up 15 goals and 26 assists for 41 points. He is a man’s man’s man.

It was today in 1968 that Tommie Smith and John Carlos held up black-gloved fists during the playing of the Star Spangled Banner in a Black Power salute at the Olympic Games in Mexico City. Both athletes were expelled from the games by IOC president Avery Brundage, an American citizen and Nazi sympathiser. Smith insists that the protest was not for “black power,” but for “human rights power.”

Today in 1969 the Amazin’ Mets capped off their improbable run to the World Series title, beating the Orioles for the fourth straight time to win the series 4-1.

  

John Mayer turns 35 today. He had a birthday lunch with Katy Perry in NYC. Lord knows what they’ll do tonight, but will he still love her tomorrow?

Top Five John Mayer songs:

1. Say

2. The Age of Worry (and still rising… he must feel like Phillip Phillips ripped him off…. karma?)

3. Waiting on the World To Change

4. Your Body Is a Wonderland

5. Assasin

Six years ago today, the famed NYC rock ‘n roll joint, CBGB closed its doors for good. Patti Smith played the last show there.

  

And finally, because we don’t like being booed and we aim to please, it was today in 1988 that many Catholics had big smiles on their faces at church following the Catholics vs. Convicts football game the day before that saw 4th ranked Notre Dame knock off top-ranked Miami 31-30. The Irish would run the table and finish 12-0, winning their last National Championship.

What’s fallen further, Miami football or acid wash?

— Bill Hubbell

 

 

 

Posted in: 365 |

IT’S ALL HAPPENING! 10/16 (Special Phyllis W edition)

Starting Five

1. The San Diego Chargers and Denver Broncos each play ONE outstanding half of football, but Peyton’s squad plays the better one.   Score at halftime: Chargers 24, Denver 0. Final score: Broncos 35, San Diego 24.

2.  Mitt Romney and President Obama sequester themselves for a few days for “debate camp.” (there’s a color wars joke in here somewhere, we are just unable to locate it).

3. Picturesque Kennebunk, Maine, is reeling as a 29 year-old Zumba dance teacher is arrested soil running a prostitution ring. The police will release have released the names of her johns. English teachers everywhere silently hope one has the surname Prynne.

“How much did you say those dance lessons cost, again?”

4. Sure, the San Francisco Giants beat the St. Louis Cardinals 7-1 to even the NLCS at 1-1, and everyone is talking about Matt Holliday’s hard slide into second base against Marco Scutaro. Us? We are intrigued by Giant third base coach Tim Flannery performing the national anthem with two members of the Grateful Dead, Phil Lesh and Bon Weir.

5. Three-time BMX world champion Kyle Bennett, 33, dies in a single-vehicle accident near his home in Texas. Bennett lost control of his vehicle and was not wearing a seatbelt.

Reserves

Okay,  the headline that caught our eyes this morning was “Worker Dies in Tuna Plant Oven.”

The New York Post accuses A-Rod of hitting on female fans seated in the second row of Yankee Stadium during Game 1 of the ALCS ( the good news is he’s hitting).

Our favorite moment of MNF was the post game show when our friend Rick Reilly said that the Broncos “played the first half like Cicely Tyson and the second half like Mike Tyson.” Stu Scott quickly added, “Eighties Mike Tyson”, which is also the last decade in which that joke might have been funny. Oh, Riles. you are just stealing money at this point.

It may not be fair, but every time we see Chuck Todd on camera we wonder how many pairs of jorts he owns.

How many Garth Brooks concert T-shirts does he own?

Ray Lewis and Derek Jeter suffer season-ending injuries on the same weekend? Now there’s a leadership void.

Mack Brown  says he will not listen to any suggestions about retiring — the Longhorns trailed 56-8 to Oklahoma at one point Saturday — because a lot of boosters have told him to keep his head up.  In a way Brown is fortunate he won’t be going up against Johnny Football and Texas A&M.

Happy Birthday, Mom!

Day of Yore, October 15

“So the Dodgers brought in Debbie Gibson, now if only they had Kirk Gibson.”

So said Bob Costas after pop-star Debbie Gibson sang the National Anthem before game one of the World Series in 1988. The injured Gibson, of course, came off the bench to pinch hit in the bottom of the 9th and hit one of the most dramatic home runs in baseball history. (And Jose Canseco wants me to remind you that he hit a Grand Slam in his first World Series at bat earlier in the game.)

  

A year later on October 15, another Los Angeles athlete made history, when Wayne Gretzky, now with the L.A. Kings was in Edmonton to play the Oilers. With the Kings down a goal late in the third period and their goalie pulled, the great one scored a goal to surpass Gordie Howe as the NHL’s all-time leading point scorer. Gretzky, as he was wont to do, then scored the game winner in overtime after a lengthy celebration of his milestone. Almost unimaginably, Gretzky was only 28 years old at the time.

Just two years before Gibson’s dramatics the New York Mets beat the Houston Astros 7-6 in 16 innings in one of the best League Championship Series games ever played.

It was today in 1764 that English writer Edward Gibbon saw a group of friars singing in the ruined Temple of Jupiter in Rome and it inspired him to write, The History of the Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire.”

Proving how far the American Empire had come, it was today in 1951 that CBS debuted the “I Love Lucy” show.

In what might have been an episode of, “I Love Lucy,” it was today in 1917 that Mata Hari, the Dutch exotic dancer and courtesan, was executed by a French firing squad outside of Paris after being found guilty of spying for Germany in World War I. She was 41 years old.

It was today in 1999 that 20th Century Fox released, “Fight Club.” I’d tell you more about it, but, well….

Today in 1996 saw the last gasp of one of the great “alternative” bands of the 1990’s. The Lemonheads dropped, “Car Button Cloth,” before disappearing for years. The album was the third straight excellent outing for Evan Dando since he’d signed with a major label, but he never got the fame predicted for him when they first broke. Listen to this song to get a sense of how good Dando was, and listen to this one to hear how damn funny he could be. (My favorite Lemonheads verse starts at 1:50)

The Refreshments were far too good of a band to just go away after their two albums in the 90’s and thank god for us they didn’t. Roger Clyne & The Peacemakers bowed today in 1999 with, “Honky Tonk Union.” HTU has a lot of great songs, but my favorites are, “Beautiful Disaster,” which sounds like if a Bruce Springsteen song had a baby with a Tom Petty song, the title track, and this one, one of the better ballads of the last 20 years.

Roger Clyne and his band of Peacemakers started today in 1999

Happy birthday to the sixth and last of Charlie’s Angels, Tanya Roberts, who replaced Shelley Hack in the fifth and final season of the show.

“What do you mean, why wouldn’t a private eye be wearing this top?”

— Bill Hubbell