Tuesday, July 31, 2007
Throw Back a Colortini
One of my fondest memories is watching The Late Late Show With Tom Snyder with Mom back in the mid to late 90's.
Sunday, July 29, 2007
An Offer from Stilwell
Saturday, July 28, 2007
Sadler Out
It's Been One Week Since
Oklahoma Joe's carryout kicked things off at the rehearsal dinner on Thursday and for the first time we Easterners enjoyed something called cheesy-corn. Okie-Joe's is only the best bbq I've ever had and is consistently tasty each time we have it. When Jen and I hit KC last October, we went straight to Joe's from the airport with Rush and had a great meal.
The wedding was very well administered by the Brandenburg's priest and the church was very cool-looking architecturally. It was built in the late 60's and had an open, welcoming feel with a wood furnished interior ceiling reaching circularly up from the walls to a point high in the middle.
The wedding reception was held at a dinner the-a-ter a little down the road from the church. All of the tables, chairs and railings were covered in elegant white fabric. A five hour open bar really put reception over the top. Crown Royale and coke has become my new favorite mixed drink. I think Rush was putting those back too. There was even a Brandenburg special ale that had a strong lemony flavor to it. Another highlight was that a celebrity look alike joined us at the reception - Chris Farley's antics kept us laughing well into the night.
But all joking aside, Jen and I had a great time spending time with both families, friends and especially Rush and Adriane. They'll be back from their NoCal honeymoon tomorrow and this very happy couple will begin the rest of their lives together back in Kansas.
We couldn't be happier for them!
Wednesday, July 25, 2007
Wine #1
So I gave it up. Until now.
Earlier this month I grabbed two $10-$15 bottles of red wine. In honor of the only European country I've ever been to I picked up two Spanish wines. I bought a Rioja and a Carchelo. After a two week search for our wine opener I opened the Carchelo this evening and had a glass. I'm still awake, hence the post.
Along with the word Carchelo the label contains the year it was made - 2005 - and the words Monastrell and Jumilla. Illiterate as I am about wine I have called on the internet to help me make sense of what I've just drank. From the website classicalwines.com comes this description and praise from Jay Miller of Wine Advocate.
"Dark ruby-colored with a nose of meat, leather, earth and blackraspberry which jumps from the glass. Medium-bodied, the wine is ripe and roundon the palate with lots of juicy fruit, is nicely balanced, and ideal for quaffing over the next 2-3 years. - 87 points"--- February 2007
I'm assuming that's 87 out of 100 possible points. I guess that's not too bad for a wine. And what does quaffing mean? I reference this definition from wine-lovers-page.com.
"A wine that's simple but refreshing, prompting easy swigging rather than thoughtful contemplation. See 'gulpable.' "
Ok, well I'm glad I didn't take myself too seriously tonight as I worked over my first glass. Anyway, again referencing classicalwines.com, the word Monastrell refers to the single indigenous variety of grape plant that occupies the Jumilla region of Spain. The plant grows in desert-like conditions and it's not until recently that wines from the region have been considered to be at least average.
My experience this evening with the wine occurred over a plate of Trader Joe's pasta, Trader Joe's low-salt spaghetti sauce and some grated cheese. The wine part of the experience was just average. (The pasta experience was, as always, greatly above average). I will now explain myself. My initial attempts at describing the wine that I've just drunk will probably sound elementary to some, understandable to others and lovable to friends and family. So here goes.
The wine was warm and very prickly entering my mouth and I gulped the first swig down my gullet much to quickly. The strength of the wine caused my voice to weaken for about ten embarrassing seconds. I played it off well, though, and I don't think Jen realized how close I was to spitting it back up. The second gulp was more tolerable and by the time I'd worked my way halfway down the glass I was in a comfort zone. By then large scoops of pasta and then sips of wine were alternating in my mouth making the Carchelo all the more enjoyable.
On a scale of 1-10 the strength of the wine was an 8.14 and I didn't particularly enjoy the wine's style in the sense that the many different flavors overwhelmed me and didn't allow me to concentrate on any one trait that the wine may have had to offer. So the overall rating (1-10) that I'll give this particular glass of wine is a 4.67.
Four glasses of wine a week is my prescription. That means four wine posts a week, eh?
Tuesday, July 24, 2007
Hank Aaron Observations of the Day
This remarkable consistency yielded one MVP award and seven top three placements. Those top three placements were spread out nicely over the following years: 1956, 1957, 1958, 1959, 1963, 1969 and 1971.
Twither Blogging?
Damn! I was just getting started here.
Arctic Maneuvering
Throwback
Now there's Curtis Granderson.
Sunny Moscow

The photo above and many of the others found in the link depict a Moscow that is not as desolate as I have always pictured. Granted, these shots were taken on sunny, non-wintery days and there's always the chance that they could've been staged by the government. Note that there are several men wearing capitalist-pig suits and women attired in what looks to be 1930's/40's style American clothing.
Sun
One of BLDGBLOG's many posts on the Sun.
Geoff Manuagh wrote that particular post a year ago and references a writer named Guy Murchie whose descriptive book on the sun, The Music of the Spheres, is no longer in print.I get light-headed when I read that the surface of the sun "is really a thousand times more vacuous than a candle-flame on Earth, and even the concentrated moiling gases hidden a thousand miles below it are a hundred times thinner than earthly air." Indeed, some stars, such as E Aurigae I – a star so huge that it could "contain most of our solar system, including the 5.5-billion-mile circumference of Saturn's orbit". [my emphasis]
Monday, July 23, 2007
Palmer on Lincecum (Among Other Things)
On Lincecum,
Palmer as a teenage major leaguer,"The first time I saw him pitch, he was not particularly good," Palmer said Sunday. "Yesterday, he was brilliant. I watched two or three innings; that was enough. I saw the great changeup he threw to (Prince) Fielder, which Fielder just kind of waved at. It looks like he's got real good mound presence. He's got great stuff."
A comment on Mr. Weaver,As a young major leaguer, Palmer was SpongeJim SquarePants, soaking up all the pitching knowledge he could get his ears on. He made the big leagues at 19, realized how much he didn't know and went to school.
The Orioles nicknamed him "Brash," because Palmer would sit in the bullpen and pepper Stu Miller, Harvey Haddix, Eddie Fisher and Charlie Lau with questions about pitching and hitting.
On the road, Palmer would assault roommate Robin Roberts with questions for hours on end. "Robin had 277 wins; I didn't have any," Palmer said.
What more Oriole pitchers should take advantage of,"(Mike) Cuellar was leading the Twins 5-2 going into the ninth," Palmer said. "(Cesar) Tovar leads off with a single, then it's going to be (Rod) Carew, (Tony) Oliva and (Harmon) Killebrew. I walked down and I said, 'Mr. Weaver, that's his 135th pitch.' He said, 'Get your (fanny) back to the other end of the dugout. I'll let you know when he's tired.'
And if Lincecum ever wants to pick a brain that won 268 games, Mr. Palmer will be glad to take the kid's call.
Sunday, July 22, 2007
James Bond Shoots
Only once does Bond go to his knee when he shoots. Moore goes fedora-less and moves the series out of the mid-20th century and into the hatless modern era. For my money, Dalton has the best swagger.
Enjoy, Chris!
Blog Picture Update
Head-Shaken McLaren Ejected

Tidbits From the Ron Paul NYTimes Article
- He was one of very few Republicans in Congress to back Ronald Reagan against
Gerald Ford for the 1976 Republican nomination.
- [In his '96 Congressional race] Paul had only two prominent backers: the tax activist Steve Forbes and the pitcher Nolan Ryan, Paul's constituent and old friend, who cut a number of ads for him. They were enough. Paul edged Laughlin in a runoff and won an equally narrow general election.Nolan Ryan would be a nice celebrity to see publicly support Ron again. And hopefully Ryan wouldn't pull a Barry Manilow and also contribute to six other candidates.
Monday, July 16, 2007
Easy Sailing Through the Dog Days
Oh Dear!
The Athletics were six games above .500 at the time I blogged that post. Now they sit at four games under .500. Still, based on their aughts history I can't count out a second-half surge for the club until at least August rolls around.
Sunday, July 15, 2007
The Wealth Creators
Robb titles his post linking to the Times as "Rogues list of wealthiest Americans". The use of the word rogue to describe these men is typical anti-market claptrap. It's surprising that, Robb, an entrepreneur himself would apply a term to these men who created jobs, wealth and products that improved people's lives as rogues. I'd much rather see a list of these men (most of whom I've never heard of) on a school bulletin board than the true rogues gallery of politicians who are prominently held up as heroes in schools across America.
In Google's Own Words
"I want to be president not because I want to run your lives," Rep. Paul told the crowd. "I don't want to be president to run the economy. I don't want to be president to run the world.I can't remember the last politician and certainly not the last presidential candidate to utter such an idea. It's a statement whose premise runs counter to the modern day politician's credo of do-gooderism
Thursday, July 12, 2007
Gutsy Move By Mets
Classic Ron Paul Clip
Tuesday, July 10, 2007
League Leaders
- Curt Granderson has racked up 15 triples.
- Ichiro is just 18 hits from being halfway to 3,000 career hits -- in the American Major Leagues.
- As measured by OPS+, Alex Rodriguez is having the best year of his career. His 186 mark so far this season exceeds the 167 he tallied in 2000 (SEA) and 2005 (NYY).
- Prince Fielder has exceeded last year's home run total by one, 29 to 28.
- I don't know if Jimmy Rollins is nearing exclusive company but this year marks the 5th season of his career that the 28-year old Rollins has hit 10+ doubles, triples and homers. Carl Crawford's done it three times. George Brett did it three times. Roberto Clemente seven times. Lou Gehrig nine times. Willie Mays five times.
- Oakland's ERA+ has dropped to 117 since early this June when I was all excited about there 130-plus showing.
- In the order of their innings pitched the San Diego relief corps have turned in the following first-half ERA's, 1.78 -- 3.43 -- 2.52 -- 3.03 -- 1.91 -- 0.31 -- 2.30 -- 0.84 -- 7.84 -- 0.00.
- Kevin Cameron's ERA+ is 1314. In the previous bullet he's the guy with the 0.31 ERA.
Look at the Depth!
Examining the rosters I'm amazed at the depth of both squads. The A.L. boasted seven future Hall-of-Famers - Yaz, Reggie, Palmer, Eck (still a starter with Cleveland), Carew, Fisk, and Brett - while the N.L had eight - Bench, Carlton, Morgan, Schmidt, Seaver, Sutter, Sutton, and Winfield - along with one more-than-deserving Hall-caliber player who would be later be banned from Cooperstown due to his wagering proclivities.
Sunday, July 08, 2007
Try, Try Again
The Schlieffen Plan was the culmination of four decades of refining a series of military strategies that were designed with the purpose of ensuring the sovereignty and expansion of the German state in the case of a general outbreak of war on the Continent.
I always found the fact that the Germans had been extensively planning for a major Continental conflict since the completion of the Franco-Prussian War (1870-71) as the ultimate expression of German bureaucratic planning and their people's general neurotic state. This neurotic attention to detail was superbly expressed in Barbara Tuchman's brilliant book on the first months of World War One, The Guns of August. In the book she describes the intensive detail that the German Army built into the Schlieffen Plan -- right down to the number of minutes it would take to move this far along the railways with this much poundage in the fifth car of the train if the invasion was commenced during a particularly warm spring.
Alas, the Germans got halfway there in the summer of 1914 and would have to wait another 27 years to finally get it right.
Defensive Changes
The Russian Duma just passed a bill that would allow the energy monopolies, Gazprom and Transneft, to build their own security forcesIn the same post I found the following quite interesting.
NATO, in its quest to remain relevant, is eyeing a role as a provider of security oil companies/oil exporting states (these companies will likely be responsive given that another Shell oil platform was attacked today in Nigeria).Like any bureaucracy that has outlived its usefulness it tries to hang onto the budget bucks anyway it can.
KC On-Line
“I was going to go to the gym,” Brett tells The Score. “Now I can’t stop looking at this site. It’s amazing!”Welcome to the club.
Ron Paul Quick Hits
A couple of early morning posts by Lew: Ignoring Ron and Paulism as the Establishment Foreign Policy.
Then this link regarding the foreign policy establishment he's up against.
Finally, the This Week interview from this morning.
Additional stuff,
Here's a recap of Paul's second quarter from the Unofficial Ron Paul for President blog.
Andrew Sullivan notes Paul's visit to his hometown. There's some interesting personal information on Paul in the post.
Saturday, July 07, 2007
Ron Paul Preview
Friday, July 06, 2007
From One Lanky Righty to Another
Palmer may be just right for Cabrera if he's willing to listen. But let's assume that he's ready to accept the tutelage of Palmer and work to become a better pitcher. Palmer's pitching motion always appeared to be on the verge of falling apart. So many different body parts moving in different directions gave Palmer a loosey-goosey appearance on the hill. Cabrera isn't as extreme as Palmer in this regard. In fact, he looks to be pitching from his core and keeping things compact this year. Still, Palmer may be able to offer Cabrera some insight as a fellow tall hurler.
There's no doubt that Palmer has his ideas about Cabrera. He has them about pretty much every pitcher in the league. As fellow watchers of Oriole games know Palmer also won't be afraid to talk about those ideas with him -- at length.
Year-End Free Agent Class
Torii Hunter will probably be the most sought after player this side of Ichiro. Hunter plays a young 31 and looks to be the type of player who will be able to perform at his established level well into his 30's. He's been a very solid offensive player since the 2001 season and has not seen any drop-off from his age 26-28 seasons. If anything, he's become more consistent and provided that consistency at a little better level of offensive production as he's moved into his 30's.
Mike Cameron and Mike Lowell are solid all-around players who will be able to provide slightly above league average offensive numbers while on the defensive side they are bonafide stars who probably won't see much deterioration in their skills over the span of a 3-4 year contract.
Andruw Jones will be the most interesting case. His absolute meltdown this year in his highly anticipated walk year could cost him close to $100 million on the open market. As of last night his .199/.299/.389 line with an 83 OPS+ is quite simply stunning. A strong second half could go a long way in getting much of that $100 mil back.
Sustainable Counter Terrorism
Thursday, July 05, 2007
Spreading Wealth
Wednesday, July 04, 2007
Government School Naming
Actually, I see this as a positive development. And get these usurpers of personal freedom off our coinage too.When we’re naming more schools after birds than after presidents, something is amiss.
Let These People Rot
If he were to do that the immoral Drug War could be called into question. Since this war on the American people is big money for the Federal, State and Local governments there can be no compassionate exceptions made to the draconian drug laws lest the whole enterprise be called into question.
If called into question on a serious level then the politicians and their hired police forces may just have to scale back on their budgets and more importatnly their exercise of brute force and power over their citizens.
Tuesday, July 03, 2007
The Yellow Is Good
For O's Fans
I'd missed this entry on Jeremy Guthrie by Sickels last month. I wouldn't be doing my baseball civic duty if Leo Mazzone wasn't mentioned at least once in a post regarding a successful Oriole pitcher. Therefore, I like this comment in particular by Uncle Charlie,
Mazzone doesn't usually take lousy pitchers with poor stuff and make them good. He takes decent, or above-average pitchers with one problem--wild command, over-thinking, etc.--and gets them back to basics, allowing their talent to shine through. I've always found it pretty funny that one of the best pitching coaches of this era spends most of his simply undoing years of coaching and getting pitchers back to what they're comfortable with. Mazzone's two mantras are "keep it simple" and "establish the outside corner."
Modern Monarchs
Monday, July 02, 2007
Conservative Endism
andSince 9/11, conservatism has reverted back to European-style absolutism, as evidenced by the Right's embrace of the revisionist theory of the "unitary presidency," which elevates the president in wartime to monarchical status.
What the Bush worshippers fail to realize is that the unitary presidency will someday be occupied by someone they fear. Probably sooner rather than later.The Goldwater-fusionist devotion to decentralized power, the genuine fear of Big Government, the libertarian disdain for officialdom and its inherent inefficiencies have all been thrown overboard and a state-and-leader worshipping cult of power installed in their place.
Sunday, July 01, 2007
Remarkable Vin Scully Interview
Note how long and informative Scully's answers are.