Day of Yore, May 16

There hadn’t been a rock ‘n roll moment on television like this since the Beatles played on Ed Sullivan.

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Michael Jackson officially became the biggest star in the world tonight in 1983, when he performed “Billie Jean” on the television special commemorating 25 years of Motown. I was a senior in high school, heading down the home stretch to graduating, and this performance was all anyone talked about for three days. (Which is an eternity when you’re graduating in two weeks.) It just so happened to be Michael’s little sister Janet’s 17th birthday.

“I feel the need…. the need for SPEED!

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“Top Gun” came out today in 1986 and it lit up movie screens all over the country. It took the kid from “All the Right Moves” and “Risky Business” and turned him into the biggest star in the world. The only problem with the movie is that everyone wondered why the cute girl (Meg Ryan) wasn’t playing the lead opposite Cruise.

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Rookie Magic Johnson played center for the injured Kareem Abdul Jabbar and led the Los Angeles Lakers to a 123-107 win over the Philadelphia 76ers and wrap up the NBA Championship. Magic had 42 points, 15 rebounds, 7 assists and a block.

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Today in 2000, Prince changed his name back to Prince, after being named, “the artist formerly known as Prince” via a symbol for seven years. Only Prince could pull that shit off and not have everyone turn on him.

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— Bill Hubbell

 

 

IT’S ALL HAPPENING! 5/16

Starting Five

1. One Scandal at a Time, Please

Benghazi. The IRS. The Associated Press. Oh, for those halcyon days when Kim Jong-Un was threatening to launch a nuke or POTUS was found to be shooting 2 for 22 from the field. Or was that J.R. Smith?

Zach Randolph, the patron saint of baby fat, had game-highs of 28 points and 14 boards.

2. Thunder Out. Tornadoes In.

The Oklahoma City Thunder, the darlings of last year’s NBA postseason, are eliminated in five games by the Memphis Grizzlies in Round 2. OKC trailed by two entering the fourth quarter at home, but the Grizz opened the quarter on a 16-6 run, fueled by the softest mid-range touch in the postseason, that belonging to center Marc Gasol. OKC had a chance to tie it in the final seconds, but Kevin Durant clanged an 18-footer. Meanwhile in north Texas, eight tornadoes rip through the countryside, leaving six people dead.

3. Mark Seal explores the Oscar Pistorius-Reeva Steenkamp murder case in Vanity Fair.

4. “At first they were reluctant to accept the clothing. Perhaps they did not want to be associated with narcissistic date-rapers.” One man’s campaign against Abercrombie & Fitch being the James Spader of clothing lines, and it’s a good one.

“Abs-ercrombie & Fitch. ABS-ercrombie! Get it?

5. BottleRock 2013. Here’s a review. The T-shirt I would’ve printed? “BottleRock 2013: Bin There, Done That.”

Day of Yore, May 15

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The first McDonald’s opened today in 1940 in San Bernardino, CA. Two brothers, named McDonald, and their original mascot was a man wearing a chef’s hat named “Speedee”. Ray Kroc entered the fray in 1955, and Ronald McDonald came to be in 1967. Double quarter pounder with cheese, large fries and a chocolate shake. I’ll start getting in shape tomorrow.

The last great MGM musical was released today in 1958. “Gigi” starred Leslie Caron and Louis Jourdan and won nine Academy Awards including Best Picture and Best Director. The rom-com borrowed heavily from “My Fair Lady,” but holds its own in portryaing love winning out over cynicism.

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Love over cynicism wasn’t exactly what Motley Crue was going for when they released “Girls, Girls, Girls” today in 1987.  Or maybe it was and I just missed the point of: “Friday night and I need a fight…my motorcycle and a switchblade knife…handful of grease in my hair feels right…but what I need to make me tight are…Girls, Girls, Girls”

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“Ishtar” was released on the very same day as “Girls, Girls, Girls” and despite everything you’ve ever heard, it’s pretty damn funny for the first 45 minutes.

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Happy 60th birthday to George Brett, the only player to ever hit .300 in three different decades. He still looks like he could do it. Happy 57th to Dan Patrick.

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— Bill Hubbell

 

Posted in: 365 |

IT’S ALL HAPPENING! 5/15

Starting Five

1. Alive…But Bearly

A sentence I never foresaw typing: Jaime Lannister has had a better week sparring Grizzlies than Kevin Durant has. Although, as one smart follower on Twitter, @korykeys, noted, “Yeah, but at least Jaime Lannister had help.” The Oklahoma City Thunder, who advanced to the NBA Finals last year with a core trio of Durant, Russell Westbrook and Uber-Sub James Harden, trail the Memphis Grizzlies 3-1 in their second-round series after Monday’s overtime loss. Westbrook is out with a meniscus tear and Harden was foolishly traded (NBA wonks will never convince me this was the right move for either party). Not-OKC now must take three straight from the Grizz, while Durant wonders if he is going to have to take more than 33% of his team’s shots again, as he did in Monday’s OT loss.

“Give me your…um…stump.”

Meanwhile, Kingslayer –who is not to be confused with David Stern, the potential Sacramento Kingslayer — is headed home to King’s Landing. “Hi, Sis. This is my friend, Lady Brienne.” A week of odd couples over in Westeros: Arya and the Hound; Theon and the Quelle Dommage a Trois; Tyrion and Sansa….Oh, and did you notice that immediately after Joffrey whined about having to ascend all of those stairs to attend council meetings in the Tower of the Hand that his gramps climbed the five or six stairs to speak to him at eye level? Tywin Lannister, you salty old cuss. Love your style.

Kendrick Perkins (L) takes on Marc Gasol

2. The Great Gatsby

Here’s Peter Travers’ lede in Rolling Stone for his review of the latest remake of this literary classic: “Shush. Listen. That’s F. Scott Fitzgerald turning in his grave.” Travers goes on to write of the sixth attempt to give this film the cinematic complement it would appear to deserve, “That’s blind ambition being gutted by flawed execution.” We”ll wait for Chris Corbellini’s review, but to quote Travers’ closing line, “There may be worse movies this summer than The Great Gatsby, but there won’t be a more crushing disappointment.”

This is what happens when you marry Jay G. with Jay-Z

3. By the way, this is the cover of the latest issue of AARP (American Association of Retired Persons) Magazine:

And this is the cover of the latest issue of Rolling Stone:

 

Anything seem askew?

4. Remember a month or so ago when we said that the best person to replace Jay Leno would be someone named Seth? Well, we were close. The best anchor in the history of “Weekend Update”, Seth Meyers, will inherit Jimmy Fallon’s 12:35 a.m. slot at some point in 2014. We still feel that Seth has more appeal than Jimmy Fallon for the 11:30 p.m. slot and we’ll still be here when the suits at NBC come to realize this in 18 to 24 months. Fallon’s appeal goes directly to the beer pong demo but is not as broad. Meyers is more classically handsome and far less goofy. Fallon is likeable, but Meyers has the potential for just-below-Johnny Carson-level charm. For us it’s a no-brainer…Then again, what do we know? We’re the ones who told you six weeks ago that Matt Harvey was the best young pitcher in baseball. And whatever happened to him? (You also told us the Yankees would be six games under .500 at the end of April, and here they are with the best record, 25-14, in the American League. So…HA!)

Meyers: We forgive him for “New Year’s Eve” because he was behind the SNL spoof, “The Apocalypse.”

Also worth noting: Bill Hader, Jason Sudeikis and Fred Armisen are all likely gone after this weekend’s season finale. Good for all of them for knowing when to leave, but gird yourselves for a slew of “SNL sucks” tweets and blogs next autumn.

Consider me a Hader lover.

 

5. Conference calls on quarterly earnings are usually about as entertaining as Houston Astros doubleheaders. But the other day a private investor, Craig Kaufman, got on the line with Prospect Capital Corporation and went half “Triple Rainbow” and half “Clear Eyes, Full Hearts, Can’t Lose” on the company’s executives. Kaufman, a shareholder(35,000 shares) since 2007, informs the CEO and others that his “mind is going a gazillion miles an hour” (it’s on Pg. 4 of this transcript) and that “I could work for you guys.” Kaufman, who refers to himself as “a feisty guy”, doesn’t really have a question so much as he has a philippic condemning Jim Cramer and anyone who would imperil PCC’s share price. It’s hilarious. Kaufman literally speaks uninterrupted for nearly nine minutes. When he at last pauses to inhale, CEO John Barry calls it his “favorite question of all time.”

 

The company executives tell Kaufman that they’d like to stay in touch with him after the conference call and implore him to give them his phone number. Kaufman: “Is this like going out where everybody is going to hear?” Barry: “Give me your number. Go on. They’re not going to call you.”

 

Reserves

The Spurs win and the Knicks lose. David Stern is FREAKING OUT at the prospect of his final four teams being San Antonio, Memphis, Indiana and Miami. That’s three Central Time Zone teams. If the Bulls pull off the most miraculous comeback of all time, Stern may just go ahead and move up the NBA Draft by two weeks.

Call me crazy, but I think Wiggins’ form on his jumper could use a little help.

The nation’s top overall hoops recruit (even if he happens to be from another nation directly north of us), six-foot-seven forward Andrew Wiggins of Toronto, signs a national letter of intent with Kansas. College hoops junkies have already filled out the final two spots of their 2014 March Madness brackets with Kentucky and Kansas. Which would be the third time that Bill Self and John Calipari met in the title game in the past seven seasons. The USA Today shows it has a sense of humor by running a sidebar titled, “Will Wiggins Be the Best Kansas Player Ever?” Well, if he goes for 52 points in his first varsity contest as Wilt Chamberlain did for the Jayhawks, then let’s discuss the issue.

 

Ted Mosby and….Rihanna? Sure, I can see it.

They revealed the future Mrs. Ted Mosby on “How I Melt Your Mother?” Really? And I missed it? I’m not buying it: If you’ve watched the series throughout, you know that Ted’s true soulmate is Barney and in the year 2030 or whenever the forward part of the show actually takes place, no one will bat an eye at a Ted-and-Barney marriage. Especially since NPH is already OotC. I’m off to Farhampton to mull on this development.

***

Google (GOOG) stock eclipses $900. It’s been hiding in plain sight for nearly a decade now. The stock went public on August 19, 2004 with an IPO of $85 per share, so yes, it is up more than 1,000% since then.

***

Can we give a nod to the term “groovy”? On “Mad Men” everyone’s favorite ethical corporate exec (oxymoron, I know), Ted Chaough, utters “groovy” in the initial post-merger meeting. The term draws a bemused look from Don Draper (Jon Hamm is a better actor when he’s reacting to lines than when he is delivering them). The episode ends to the strains of “Reach Out of the Darkness”, whose infectious opening line is “I think it’s so groovy now/That people are finally getting together.” Matt Weiner’s love of irony — as Don and Zou Bisou Bisou sit apart from one another on the bed, the assassination of RFK playing in the background– knows no bounds.

“Groovy, Ted? Groovy? That is ‘far out!'”

The origin of the term? Apparently it comes from the jazz culture of the 1920s, although the colloquialism first found its way into Sixties music in 1964 with the tune “A Groovy Kind of Love.” Phil Collins remade the song in the 1980s, though nobody knows why.

Remote Patrol

Memphis Grizzlies at Oklahoma City Thunder

TNT 9:30 p.m.

“Oh, Thunder Woes, Thunder Woes/Lying out there like a killer in the sun/Hey, I know it’s late, girl, we can make it if we run…” There were ghosts in the eyes of all the boys (Harden and Green, for starters) you sent away. KD plays like a Boss, but who else can score. Z-Bo, Gasol and Mike Conley could end Oklahoma City’s season tonight — though we like the Thunder’s chances at home.

 

 

 

 

IT’S ALL HAPPENING! 5/14

Starting Five

To quote The Dandy Warhols: “A long time ago, we used to be friends.”

1. “The Justice Department” is an Oxymoron

Watching Jon Stewart finally accept that Barack Obama’s White House is no cleaner than George Bush’s was, well, revelatory. It began with an examination of how the IRS specifically targeted right wing political groups:

“(The IRS) used names like Tea Party or Patriots, and they selected cases simply because the application had those names in the title. That was wrong. The IRS would like to apologize for that.”

Lois Lerner, IRS Director of IRS Exemptioons

Jon Stewart: “Oh, okay, that’s–WAIT A MINUTE! I didn’t realize apologies were sufficient in IRS-related issues… and as long as we’re talking about this, on my tax return I put down that I had a farm. Actually, I had a salad. Soooooo…..sorry.”

And then, after Lerner states in a conference call that about “a quarter” of the political organizations that were targeted by the IRS had “patriot” or “tea party” in their names, Tom Costello of NBC News goes for clarification. “That would be a quarter of the 300 then, so we are talking 75 or so?”

Lerner: “That is correct. Is that a quarter? Thank you. I’m not good at math.”

Good one, Miss IRS Staffer!

Stewart: “This has, in one seismic moment, shifted the burden of proof from the tin foil-behatted to the government.”

Stewart to Obama: “In a few short weeks, you’ve managed to show that when the government wants to do good things, your managerial competence falls somewhere between David Brent (I love that Stewart went with Original Recipe “The Office” here, and not American-Style) and a cat chasing a laser pointer, but when government wants to flex its more malevolent muscles, you’re (bleeping) Ironman!”

Stewart: “I’m sorry, I’m overreacting…our form of government is bigger than these issues. This storm will pass–really? Right now?”

Cut to Wolf Blitzer: “We’re just getting this into the Situation Room…calling it a quote ‘massive and unprecedented intrusion,’ the Associated Press now saying the Justice Department secretly obtained two months of phone records of its reporters and editors…”

Stewart: “(Obscenity)”.

2. LOOK! It’s hockey!

Boston now has its own “Miracle on Ice”, exactly three Mondays after the marathon tragedy.

We don’t spend enough time here discussing the NHL, because frankly when I think of icing my first thought is, “Mmmm, cake.” But last night’s Game 7 between the Toronto Maple Leafs and Boston Bruins, two of the Original Six (the NHL’s answer to “First of Men”), was a classic. The Maple Leafs led 4-1 in Boston with less than 15 minutes to play in the third period. Then the Bruins embarked on an epic comeback, scoring three goals to tie it and force overtime, after which it just seemed inexorable that they would win. The Bruins became the first team in NHL history to erase a three-goal deficit in a Game 7 of the Stanley Cup playoffs.

As always, when a Canadian club loses to the Bruins in the postseason, there is a massive display of fandom out of doors.

2011: Vancouver loses to Boston in Game 7, inciting a spontaneous blacktop makeout session.

3. Remember last week when I mentioned that the White House Correspondents’ Dinner and the Met Gala were the first two legs of the East Coast’s Triple Crown of spring soirees, but that I could not conjure the third? Well, a friend reminded me this morning of what it is: The Robin Hood Foundation Gala. Last night’s event, emceed by Brian Williams and held at the Jacob Javitz Center in New York City raised upwards of $80 million (you heard me) from some of the fattest Tabbies and American Shorthairs on Wall Street. Entertainers included Jerry Seinfeld, Louis CK, Paul Simon and Sting who, fittingly, performed “Fields of Gold.”

Lloyd Blankfein: The Ariel Castro of the financial sector.

Of course, it’s easier to be philanthropic when, after your business goes into the toilet due to your own mismanagement and skulduggery, the government writes you a check for $18 billion with no strings attached. But, hey, that’s just me…

4. Seriously, this Justice Department vs. AP story is going to make Benghazi look like a pimple on an offensive lineman’s back. Journalism careers will be made off this (see Messrs. Woodward and Bernstein) and political careers will go down in flames. It’s only just begun. As our favorite colonel once informed our favorite JAG cross-examiner, “You just (bleeped) with the wrong Marine!” You know who you don’t target if you are the government and are looking to avoid bad press? THE ASSOCIATED PRESS!

The Department of Justice: Edifice Wrecks.

The only reason I can think that Stewart used it as a kicker last night is because his staff understands how monstrous a story it is about to be and that there was no way to tackle it with just an hour or so notice before going on air. In the words of our favorite political backstabber, Petyr Baelish, “Early days, my friend.”

5. Memphis outlasts Oklahoma City in overtime to take a 3-1 lead. Meanwhile, “Inside the NBA” devotes most of its postgame show to mocking the manner in which Charles Barkley duck walks to use the men’s room in between segments. Earlier in the evening, they showed a photo of the capri pants Dwyane Wade wore to the United Center for Game 4 and someone (Kenny Smith?) warbled off-camera, “Karma karma karma karma karma cham-eee-leeeon…”Inside the NBA” has the on-set chemistry that every other sports studio show lusts after. It’s alchemy. You cannot just make it happen, Jamie Horowitz, no matter how hard you try.