Tuesday, May 5, 2009

Service Announcement


I just transferred a bunch of blog posts from my "infinite number of monkeys" blog on the rotting carcass of Myspace. If you've read them before, enjoy them again. If not, well are you in for a treat!

A Classic In Spite of Itself

from July 14, 2008

Review: "The Man Who Heard Voices: Or, How M. Night Shyamalan Risked His Career on a Fairy Tale" By Michael Bamberger

There are some biographies that you love because they are well-written. There are some biographies that you love because you love the subject of the book. This book is neither of those things, and yet it's one of the most entertaining books I've ever read. It's entertaining the way a train wreck is entertaining if in this case the train crashed into Noah's Ark, if Noah's Ark in addition to two of all the world's animals was filled with fireworks, and chocolate pudding and the Cirque de Soleil. There should be a constant Greek chorus while you are reading this book, chanting things like "Can you believe he just wrote that?" and "Who the fuck does M Night Shyamalan think he is, anyway?"

I'm not even sure how to describe this book, it raises such a welter of contrary and violent emotions. It is a clusterfuck wrapped in a fiasco, dipped in hubris and then set ablaze with a sparkler made out of unintended irony. I spent large chunks of the book entertaining the question "Who do I despise most, M Night Shyamalan, or Michael Bamberger?" By the end I chose to be equitable and call it a flat-footed tie of abhorrence.

Where to begin... Michael Bamberger is a hack. That's as good a place as any. Bamberger is primarily a golf writer for Sports Illustrated. Not that that's necessarily damning - one could be a good writer about any subject (see Harvey Penick's "Little Red Book"). But Bamberger is a shitty golf writer, hackneyed, prone to trite underdog stories, and rife with cliches - notable in the world of golf journalism mostly for having pointed out a rules infraction that got Michelle Wie kicked out of a tournament. A shitty golf writer who knows nothing about movies except they're a pleasant way to pass the time on drizzly Martha's Vineyard afternoons. Who better to write an insightful book about the film industry and one of its most enigmatic directors? If you said "anyone", congratulations.

In addition to being a hack, Bamberger is a name-dropping star-fucker. He meets Shyamalan (his friends call him "Night") at a ritzy Philadelphia dinner party. Bamberger makes sure to note that former tennis pro Jim Courier also attended - "Wow! THE Jim Courier?!?" But from the moment Shyamalan makes his "entrance" Bamberger only has eyes for Night. His shirt unbuttoned like vintage Tom Jones, Night casts a spell over everyone he meets - is he psychic or just preternaturally charismatic? Bamberger isn't sure, but he's in love.

What follows is one of the most embarrassingly lionizing pieces of idolatry you're ever likely to read. Bamberger lays out the nature of Night's genius, his meteoric rise from a merely pampered upbringing to enviable affluence with tortured Tiger Woods and Bob Dylan metaphors and florid crush note prose. Bamberger spends the next year or so following after Night like a loyal stray beagle, living in the reflected brilliance of Night's genius and annointed celebrity, nuzzling his hand for validation and burrowing his warm supportive nose into Night's neck when the vagaries and slights of the uncomprehending mundane world bring Night low.

That Shyamalan happened to be creating "The Lady in the Water", one of the most soggy piles of cowflop to ever grace the silver screen (before he set the bar even soggier and floppier with "The Crappening"), during Bamberger's Icarus-like flight only makes the unremarked-upon dramatic irony all the richer. Bamberger lauds Night as a man of the people for allowing his chauffeur, personal chef, and nanny to read his newest opus, then turns around and joins his voice to Shyamalan's own shocked and wounded whimper when Disney suggests they "might have some notes". Night's personal assistant is noted to be remarkable for her ability to not confuse her station with that of her employer, and also her faculty for not going to the bathroom for the duration of the flight from Philly to LA to deliver the script to Disney, as well as her completely justifiable shock and disdain that Nina Jacobsen of Disney chose taking her son to a friend's birthday party over the prompt receipt of Night's "sale script" (to be read not as work, but as a weekend's entertainment) and Jacobsen's offer of "low-carb soup" FROM THE FRIG!

To say
merely that Bamberger lacks the objectivity to notice that anyone who voices the slightest dissent from Night's "vision" is branded a traitor (or that all those voices were proved prescient) is to pardon him for what is in actuality the aiding and abetting of felonious egomania. There is an interesting story going on here, not just between the lines of Bamberger's Gospel of M Night, but behind the scenes of "Lady in the Water", unremarked upon and entirely unnoticed by Bamberger - the story of how success and fame in the arts can so distance one from the real world as to completely neuter that art.

There's an anecdote that's relayed enthusiastically - M Night is in an elevator on the way to a casting call. In the elevator with him is a child actor and the actor's mother. Night tries to engage the youngster, but he is reticent about talking to strangers, and the mother is understandably protective. Night cannot believe that had this child, or the mother ONLY RECOGNIZED him, he could have been their lottery ticket. Oh, the bitterweet irony that HAD THEY BUT KNOWN who Night was (don't they watch American Express commercials?) they could have found the very success they were struggling to achieve at countless casting calls.

That Bamberger takes Night at his word that this episode is a tragically failed attempt by Night at charity and an emblem of his man-of-the-people magnanimity and not rightly as symptomatic of a delusional and grandiose Christ complex says everything you need to know about both the book and M Night Shyamalan.

This week in monkey news...

from May 29, 2008

Current mood:terrified

Pretend for a moment that I've had a blog my whole life. Pretend further that a beloved ongoing feature of said blog is "Monkeys in the News". This then would be the latest installment of "Monkeys in the News".

From the New York Times: "Two monkeys with tiny sensors in their brains have learned to control a mechanical arm with just their thoughts, using it to reach for and grab food and even to adjust for the size and stickiness of morsels when necessary, scientists reported on Wednesday.

The report, released online by the journal Nature, is the most striking demonstration to date of brain-machine interface technology. Scientists expect that technology will eventually allow people with spinal cord injuries and other paralyzing conditions to gain more control over their lives.

The findings suggest that brain-controlled prosthetics, while not practical, are at least technically within reach."

This can't be good news. How can you make it all the way to researcher at Carnegie Mellon University without having seen either "Planet of the Apes" or the Terminator movies?

What could be worse than a monkey apocalypse where humans are enslaved or a bleak dystopia where robots rule the world?

FUCKING MONKEY ROBOTS, THAT'S WHAT!!!


And Charlton Heston is dead now, so who's going to free us from our mechanical primate bondage? Practice saying it together folks...

"Get your robot hands off me, you damn dirty apes!"

We can only hope the monkeys rebel against their masters before the inevitable RobotMonkeyalypse.


And if they breed, and there are suddenly an infinite number of Robot Monkeys? Oh, the bittersweet irony of reams of new Shakespeare plays zipping out of robot typewriters as Man's last fretting and strutting upon the stage comes to its horrific, screaming end.

Previous installments of Monkeys in the News:

Glow in the Dark Monkeys

I Have Monkeys in My Pants

Adventures in Philately

from April 9, 2008

I just got a letter that had just about the ugliest stamp on it that I’ve ever seen.



I mean I like Linus Pauling as much as the next guy - only person to win a Nobel Prize in Chemistry and the Nobel Peace Prize, doncha know? - but what the fuck is up with this stamp?

Linus Pauling’s swollen melon being bombarded by what appears to be raspberry danishes or kidney pies? I understand it’s hard to convey the important work he did on chemical bonds and protein structures, but what about his career would lead an artist to depict Linus sitting there smugly while urinal cakes fall from the sky? Was he sitting underneath a strawberry donut tree trying to understand the tetravalent bond when he got hit on the head and said, "Eureka! Suddenly I’ve discovered orbital hybridization?"

My apologies to those who clicked on this because they thought it was going to be about blow-jobs.

A Barrel of Monkeys

from December 5, 2007

As I was walking home from the store this evening, it occurred to me that there are a disproportionate number of people named Cooper, which led me to wonder - were there really that many barrel makers in the Old World, or did barrel makers just really like to fuck?




Tire Tracks

from November 18, 2007

I was driving home from work the other day, driving behind Maggie down Hollywood Boulevard, when my phone rang. It was Maggie.

"Do you see the Scion next to me?"


"Yeah."

"Can you see who's driving?"
I could only see a silhouette of a man's head with long hair, and white-clothed shoulders.

"No."


"It's Jesus!" exclaimed Maggie. "Pull up closer, you have to see."

The traffic cooperated, and soon I was alongside the Scion. I looked over.

It was Jesus! Not a guy who kinda looked like Jesus, but Jesus - White robes; beard; Son of God; King of Kings; Lamb of Lambs; Emmanuel; the Alpha and Omega; water into wine; for God so loved the world, that He gave His only begotten Son, that whosoever believeth in Him shall not perish, but have everlasting life; He descended into hell, on the third day he rose again, He ascended into heaven, and is seated at the right hand of the Father, He will come again to judge the living and the dead; Jesus Christ Superstar do you think you are what they say you are? capital J Jesus!

I thought that I had lived here long enough that I had seen everything Hollywood Boulevard had to offer - Spider-man lugging his laundry, Willy Wonka hitting on Cat Woman, homeless ventriloquists, the "need money for kung-fu lessons" panhandlers, fake hurricanes, a thousand people lined up behind barricades hoping to catch a glimpse of Rob Schneider - every bit of strangeness and oddity that comes when the delusional, desperate and depraved collide with tourism, commerce, and a certain Flying Spaghetti Monster cult all within an eight-block radius - but seeing Jesus of Nazareth, the Messiah returned and driving the all-new, sporty, fuel-efficient Toyota Scion in nautical blue metallic was still a pleasant surprise.
I had almost forgotten I was on the phone.

"Wow, that really is Jesus!"

The traffic in our lane slowed and Jesus put the sandal to the pedal and pulled ahead. I talked to Maggie for a couple more moments and we both got distracted and lost track of Jesus (isn't that always the way?). When we got to the next light He was gone.

"Where did he go?" I asked.


"I don't know," Maggie answered. "I think He must have turned onto Highland. I looked away for a minute and He was gone."

"Don't worry," I replied. "Where you only saw one set of tracks on the road, that's when He was driving you."

The affect of gamma rays on man I have no clever ideas for this blog title

from November 6, 2007

If there can be a downside to only having a 15 minute commute to work in the morning, it's that there isn't enough time to get a good think on, which I discovered when I got stuck on the 101 the other morning. It was just a short (in LA terms) traffic jam and consequently only a few mini-epiphanies (miniphanies?), but I was left to wonder what things I might conjure if I had to drive my ass out to the Valley every morning, especially since I haven't had a workable bathtub for a while, thereby losing my previous greatest source of inspiration.

The miniphany was this: U2's "Bad" was playing on the radio, and I was singing my heart out a little, when I wondered, not for the first time, what the hell the song might be about (susbsequent research has indicated that it's about heroin, which I guess I should have assumed, - I knew "Running to Stand Still" was about heroin because it has the word needle right there for the lyrically challenged - but that's all really beside the point).

I had never before been able to put into words why U2 had been such a seminal part of my adolescence, how they were the yearning, anguished soundtrack of my years 12, 13, 14, and 15, but here it was - other than the obvious message songs like "Pride", "War", and "Sunday Bloody, Sunday", etc., I never knew exactly what Bono was singing about, but my god was it important! It had to be, as passionately as Bono was belting it out, like the entire fate of the western world hung in the balance betweeen Tracks 7 and 8.

I didn't know exactly what it was that he had found, just that he'd been looking for it for a long time. I couldn't imagine how you'd get around in a city where the streets had no name (and was this city the Red Hill Mining Town?) just that when Bono goes there with you, it's all he can do! I had no idea who Jara was (or even that his name was spelled Jara) but man his song was a weapon and HIS BLOOD STILL CRIES FROM THE GROUND! That has to mean something very important, right? And if I could just figure out what, maybe the rest of life would make sense too.

So the parallel for the first time became clear - U2 was a perfect analogy of adolescence - being really upset about something, just not exactly sure what, but you can feel it building, rising up from your stomach through your throat until you want to yell at the top of your lungs! Yell! Yell, well, I'm not sure what to yell, BUT IT'S REALLY FUCKING IMPORTANT! Clumsily stumbling toward meaning, not sure where to find inspiration - maybe it's religious, maybe it's political, maybe it's an Indian summer sky, maybe it's tripping through someone's wires, probably it's heroin.

Cornspicuous Consumption

from July 30, 2007

As I was waiting in the doctor's office today, browsing through the magazines I came across one called Departures. It might as well be called Conspicuous Consumption. It's basically a magazine for people who have so much money they need someone to give them suggestions how to spend it all - Brewster's Millions Monthly, if you will.

I was actually glad to find that I was in a good enough mood that I could laugh at it. There are times when it would have sent me into a deep dark funk. I flipped through pages of luxury getaways, $5,000 worth of the ugliest sportscoat I've ever seen, personal jets, and "soft-shell crab BLT's", you know for those summer picnics.

I was glad I was alone in the waiting room when I came across the best item, however, because I let out a huge snorting laugh - sterling silver corn on the cob holders! I'm pretty sure that if there ever came a time when I looked at a set of sterling silver corn on the cob holders and thought, "Yes, that's it. That's what I've been looking for." then my life is over. I have accomplished everything a man may accomplish, acquired everything a man can acquire. I will make that last big checkmark on the life list, cook up a mess of corn on the cob, holding each sterling silver corn on the cob holder with my pinky raised, and then promptly die and let the funeral director pick the corn out of my teeth before I get buried with my platinum barbecue tongs and 24 karat gold, diamond encrusted lemon zester.

Live Evel

from November 30, 2007

http://ap.google.com/article/ALeqM5iWWuZ0wDGsiJxYa_PFQLAH5qe-AwD8T8B56G0

It's sad enough when a hero dies and any death brings to mind thoughts of mortality, but when that hero seemed as immortal as Evel Knievel did, the loss sounds loudly.

For boys of a certain age, Evel Knievel represented the limitless possibilities of imagination and fearlessness of childhood itself. In his American flag jumpsuit and cape (the only man in America who could rock that look other than Elvis) he was the living embodiment of the American ideals of outsized dreams and picking oneself up after a spill and trying again.

When I got my first bike, a red metalflake Schwinn, I couldn't wait to get the training wheels off so I could jump something like my hero. As soon as that moment came, I, like probably ten million kids somewhere across America put a piece of plywood on top of a cinder block, and lived out my Evel Knievel dreams.

Now he's dead, gone not with a bang, but a whimper, having lived a post-daredevil life that leaves a bad taste in the mouth. He leaves behind a world where extreme sports and adrenaline junkies have become mainstream. But his death also echoes the death of those childhood dreams of flying through the air, scoffing at the feeble bonds of this earth. Maturity brings responsibility, responsibility brings caution, and caution is the very antithesis of Evel Knievel.

Evel Knievel dies only if we let the spirit of adventure die within us.

Honor the memory of Evel Knievel today. Dream something impossible. Dare something foolish, do something reckless. Live for a moment as if anything was possible. You may fail, but then you can fulfil his legacy by picking yourself up, dusting yourself off, and starting all over again.

Fuck George Clooney! Seriously, just fuck George Clooney!

from February 7, 2008

I had the dumbest dream the other night. I was at my parents house and we were having this huge pig roast. There were like 200 people in our backyard. Mom was worried that there'd be too many people for just the one pig, so I'd put a suckling pig in another pit alongside the large
r pig. Oh, and George Clooney was there, in a tuxedo (natch), helping me roast the pigs.

So, for some reason I hadn't put a rub on the pigs before they started roasting and I went into the house to put one together now. I got two tupperware bowls, one large and one small for the suckling pig and started looking for the spices. But my parents had moved everything in the kitchen when they remodeled and shit wasn't where it had been for my whole life. For some reason I remember being in the closet in my bedroom, yelling, "Where the fuck is the paprika!?!"


So, anyway I end up outside with my bowls of pig rub, only to see that George Clooney is brushing the pigs with some store-bought, cheap-ass barbecue sauce, like KC Masterpiece or some shit!
And I just lost it.

"What the fuck is George Clooney doing?" I screamed.

My mom tries to explain, "Well, you were in the house so long and everybody was getting hungry..."

"So you just let fucking George Clooney put some shitty-ass store-brand barbecue sauce on my roast pigs? Who the fuck does he think he is?" My mom shrugs. "I've been up since five this morning roasting those pigs and you're just going to let George Clooney fuck them up with his bullshit barbecue sauce?!?" I turn to my dad, looking for support, but he just shrugs too. "I woke up at five this morning, and ... Jesus fuck! I slaved all day... I know what this pig's last words were, and you're just going to..."

My dad gets a surprised look on his face, "What were the pig's last words?"


" 'Knife?' But that's not the point. Just because George Clooney parks his RV in our driveway, and bangs supermodels, doesn't give him any right to put that bullshit barbecue sauce on my roasted pig! First you let that one guy, you know the one with the mustache..."


"Burt Reynolds?"

"Yeah, you let fucking Burt Reynolds park his RV here, then George Clooney, and he just stays in there all day banging supermodels, and then you let him fuck up the roast pig I'd been working on all day!?!?? What the fuck?"


George Clooney tried to come over and make his peace, but I wouldn't have any of it and pushed him away. I noticed as he got close though, that he had wine stains on his tuxedo shirt and I thought with little satisfaction, "What a fucking scumbag."


My mom put on her conciliatory tight-lipped smile. "Why don't you eat before it gets cold, honey?"


You know how in a nightmare there gets a point where you're so scared you can't take it anymore you wake up? This time I woke up because I was so mad I couldn't take it anymore.
And then I'm awake, and trying to figure out why I'm so pissed off, and then I remember the dream, and couldn't stop laughing. I laughed like a complete fucking loon for at least half an hour at four in the morning. Fuck George Clooney. Fuck him and his RV full of supermodels. But mostly fuck George Clooney and his weak-ass store-brand barbecue sauce. I'm never inviting that fucker to one of my pig roasts.

The End.



Thursday, April 2, 2009

The Best


Lebron James gives a graphic demonstration of what brought
down Jose Mesa and the 1997 Cleveland Indians.

With the Cleveland Cavaliers all but assured of having the best record in the East, and ahead of the Lakers for the best record in the NBA, I stopped to think back of the very few times in my lifetime that a Cleveland sports team had been the best team in its particular sport. It's a very short list. In fact, depending on the outcome of the NBA Finals (I would worry about jinxing them, but I'm from Cleveland, I'm sure they're already jinxed), this Cavs team has the potential to be the best Cleveland team I've ever rooted for (excluding the Force, of course - those dudes, ruled! Kaaaaiiiiiiii Haaskaaviiiiiiii!).

Herein, the brief respites in our era of mediocrity and worse (anyone remember the David Letterman telephone hotline skit from the late 80's/early 90's - "Synonyms for Cleveland Sportswriters"?: "Beaten, drubbed, lambasted, throttled, destroyed, vanquished, shellacked, thumped, whipped..."), those brief phoenix comets across our leaden-gray skies:


1a; 1b: 1995/1996 Indians

The one stat nugget from the 1995 team that always leaps to mind: the Indians 6,7,8 hitters of Jim Thome, Paul Sorrento, and Manny Ramirez had better stats than any other AL team's 3,4,5 hitters with the only exception of the Indians' own 3,4,5 of Carlos Baerga, Albert Belle, and Eddie Murray. Now that's a murderer's row, with Kenny Lofton at the top of the order, and Sandy Alomar at the bottom just for absolute overkill. Add to that the stat that the 1995 Indians were one of some small number of teams I'm too lazy to look up to ever lead the league in batting average and ERA, with stellar seasons from seasoned veterans Chuck Nagy, Orel Herschiser, and Dennis "El Presidente" Martinez, Jose Mesa's 46 saves at the back end, and you get an idea what a juggernaut this team was. All the 1996 team did was add Julio Franco's .322 average and Black Jack McDowell's 13 wins into the mix.

The 1995 team racked up 100 wins in a strike-shortened season of only 144 games, made the Jake the go-to destination in Cleveland and revitalized baseball in a town where it had nearly succumbed to apathy countless times since the late '60's. With electric crowds almost astonished that our lovable losers were suddenly lovable winners driving them on, the Indians bludgeoned the Red Sox in the division series (with the iconic "I got your motherfucking cork right here!" moment by Albert Belle, and Tony Peña's 13th inning shot being the highlights). As an encore, the bested the Mariners (who had "shocked the world vanquishing the goliath Yankees), Kenny Lofton scoring from second base on a Randy Johnson wild pitch still the single most exciting Indians play I've ever seen. Unfortunately they then ran into the one of the best 1-2-3 pitching staffs ever assembled in Maddox, Smoltz, and Glavine.

The 1996 team seemed less inspired if better on paper, and managed fewer wins in more games, before collapsing against the Baltimore Orioles in the Division Series, partly a factor of an aging starting pitching staff, and the first powder-residue-coated chinks appearing in the back end of a bullpen that would fail much more dramatically in the World Series the following season.

(Until I did a little research, I had forgotten how much I disliked the 1997 team, even before they suffered the most devastating loss of my lifetime (which is saying a lot). The whole tenor of the team changed going from Lofton to Grissom, Albert Belle to David Justice, and Eddie Murray to Matt Williams. Plus all the stop-gap platoon players like Tony Fernandez, Kevin Seitzer, Bip Roberts, Kevin Mitchell, Charles Nagy clone Chad Ogea (as if cloning Charles Nagy was a great idea), Albie "throwing gasoline on a fire" Lopez, John Smiley, Jeff Branson - a team that definitely proved the maxim that four quarters does not equal one dollar).

Albert Belle shows where he puts the cork (not pictured: Jason Grimsley).


3. 2008/2009 Cleveland Cavaliers

There is definitely the argument to be made that the 1988-89 Cavs were a better team than this year's version - other than BronBron, no starter from this team would crack the starting lineup
of Mark Price, Brad Daugherty, Larry Nance, and Ron Harper. The 88/89 team was as balanced as can be: Price, Daugherty, and Harper all averaging between 18.6 and 18.9 ppg, with Nance right behind at 17.2. Before I answer the question of how King James and the Four Fools (now Three Fool + Mo Williams) is a better team than Lenny Wilkens' Boys, go run yourself a bath, light some candles, put "Ride of the Valkyries" on the stereo, slide into the bath with a mimosa in one hand and a cigar in the other and spend however long you need imagining Lebron James playing on that 88/89 Cavs team, taking give-and-goes from Price and Daugherty, finding Harper with outlet passes, feeding Nance down low, King James putting up 35/12/8s every night, Lebron playing lockdown D on MJ, blocking his shot at the end of game 5, Lebron dunking on Patrick Ewing, knocking Bill Laimbeer flat on his back, outdueling Magic Johnson for the NBA title... okay, take all the time you need, I'll be here when you get back...

Lebron James reverses his stance on windmills as a source of
alternative energy.

Okay, hope you enjoyed that. Now, start with the records - the 88/89 squad finished 57-25, 6 games back of the Pistons, tied with the Lakers for the second best record in the league, and 19-11 in their own division. This Cavs team is on pace to go 67-15, with a chance still at winning 69 games, is a ridiculous 35-1 at home, 11-3 vs. the division, and 25-4 against the Western Conference. The most games they've lost in any month was going 10-4 in January.

The 88/89 Cavs lost to a 47-35 Michael Jordan Bulls team where no other Bull would have cracked the Cavs lineup either (no, not even Scottie Pippen, only in his second year and averaging 14.2 ppg), so it's really not that much of a stretch to say LBJ could have taken them down as well.

If you believed the sports media, the only existing shot of the Cavs 1988/89 season.

Secondly, this season that Lebron James is putting up is one for the ages. I can bombard you with stats, but just try this one on for size: According to ESPN's Bill Simmons Lebron is going to be "the first player since they started keeping track of blocks and steals in 1973 to finish in the top three in scoring AND lead his team in total points, assists, steals, blocks and rebounds AND win more than 60 games." If that isn't an MVP season, I don't know what is.

The question, as several recent articles point out, isn't even how Lebron's season compares with his peers - there is no comparison there. The question is how LBJ compares with names such as Jordan, Bird, Magic, and Robertson.

As fun as it was to watch (and listen to Joe Tait announce) the Price, Daugherty, Nance, Harper team (and as tragic as it is that the worst trade ever - Harper for Danny Ferry - made this the only season we could enjoy this lineup), the 08/09 King James Cavs team is clearly the best Cavs team of all time.

4. 1986 Browns

Kind of a fudge, since they were only the best team in the AFC, not the NFL, as both the Giants and Bears were 14-2 that year, and the Redskins were 12-4 also (goddamn, but the NFC was ridiculous back then). But didn't want to leave Bernie and the boys off. They were such a fun team to watch until you know, that D-word happened, led by some guy whose name rhymes with Horse-Face.

They had one of the league's most balanced and explosive offenses, finally unleashing Kosar and adding him to a running attack of Mack and Byner that had each racked up 1,000 yard seasons in '85. Slaughter and Langhorne were third only to Rice/Clark and Duper/Clayton as wide receiver tandems, with Ozzie Newsome and Brian Brennan added to drive defenses insane. Underneath that mullet of Cobra curls, Kosar possessed the most gifted offensive minds pass through Cleveland since Paul Brown, but was unfortunately saddled his whole career with the most timid (Marty-ball), the most elderly (Bud Carson) and the most zombiefied (Belichick) offensive minds working in pro football. The guy was better drawing plays in the dirt than any clipboard-toter he ever played for.

Blitzing defenses are the disease. He's the cure.

The defense featured the best duo of shut-down corners in the league in Hanford "Top Dawg" Dixon and Frank Minnifield, excellent linebackers in Clay Matthews and Chip Banks, and a solid line of Puzzoli, Carl Hairston, and Sam Clancy. Add in Gerald "Ice Cube" McNeil and this was one very exciting team, with the double-overtime playoff win against the Jets still my favorite Browns memory. They showed it the other day on NFL Films (in what must have been some court ordered restitution for the countless years that the only Cleveland games shown on TV were "Willie Mays' Catch", "The Shot", "The Drive", "The Fumble" and "Cocaine Addled Jose Mesa Blows the Whole Fucking World Series 2 Outs Away From Ending 49 Years of Misery (Catchy Name Still Pending)") and I had forgotten how damn exciting it was, down 10 points with four minutes to go, Kosar rallies the Browns to an incredible victory. I forget what happened the next game. They must have lost, I guess.

Seriously, I have no memory of this.

5. Everybody else

You have to admit, after that group, doesn't it all run into a gray, soupy mass of also-rans, near-contenders, heartbreakers, "if only"s, and other varieties of runt dogs, stray cats, and hobbling platypuses?

Anyway, I really don't have a great closing for this other than to say, go Cavs, I hope you find some way to not break our hearts, but really we're from Cleveland, we kind of expect it, and we'll be quite content nuzzling you to our collective sports bosom if you wind up an almost, just-about but-not-quite, snatching-defeat-from-the-jaws-of-victory band of lovable losers. Right up until Lebron leaves for the Brooklyn Nets in 2010, and the team moves to Las Vegas in 2011. At which point you're dead to us. But for now go Cavs!

yay.



Tuesday, January 27, 2009

MTV - Getting it Wrong Since at Least 1992

MTV has started a list of "Greatest Movie Badasses of All Time". The first one is Boba Fett. Coincidentally, Bill Simmons has an article today about being underrated. The basic premise is that with today's omnipresent internet buzz, no one can be truly underrated because no one slips under the radar anymore, and that the majority of the time, the person gets called underrated so often they become overrated. I think you can see where I'm going with this.

The entire mythos of Boba Fett, the most egregious Star Wars fanboy circle-jerk in a community famous for its tireless dedication to circle-jerking, is based on what? Five things? The suit looked cool, he was a bounty hunter of few words, his action figure would sink and then float, he had some history of wanton "disintegrations", and he tailed Han Solo to Bespin. That's it.

The first three can't be debated, but neither are they enough to confer "Greatest Movie Badass" status. Greatest Star Wars action figure status, maybe, but that's not the debate before us today.

The last two: how good a bounty hunter is he if he is so renknowned for disintegrations that Darth Vader has to specifically warn him against it this time around? Sure, if you were hired as "Designated Disintegrator", but no, the job description of bounty hunter sort of presumes you bring them back alive - that's why it's a harder job than assassin. And the tailing? Okay, points for being patient, and intuitive enough to guess that Han Solo may have hidden the Milennium Falcon in the trash dump, but when you think of the definition of badass are the words "patient" and "intuitive" the first ones to leap to mind?

Han Solo is clearly the coolest motherfucker to ever wear a vest and cavalry pants, and the guy who captures him would clearly be a badass, but sorry MTV, Boba Fett isn't the guy. Boba Fett plays "follow that car" to Cloud City, then drops a dime to the Imperial Solo Finder Hotline, but it's the Sith Lord himself who actually snatches the scoundrel's scoundrel at his banquet of evil (with help of course from the traitorous Malt Liquor Man, but don't get me started on him). How in the name of the Dark Side does Boba Fett get ranked above Darth Vader on a Movie Badasses List in the first place?

Any consideration of Boba Fett as a Movie Badass has to begin and end with Empire. Every frame of film shot of Monsieur Fett since Empire has only served to make him ridiculous (making him a microcosm of the whole franchise, but again don't get me started - and don't think about bringing in Expanded Universe bullshit, Nerdy McCosplay - MTV's ground rule is movie badasses; nobody cares how cool Boba Fett was in a novel only you and your Bochi speaking friends have read.) Whatever cool Boba Fett might have exhibited in Empire is taken away ten-thousand-fold in every subsequent film. Boba Fett has a jet pack? Awesome! Jet pack only gets used when struck accidentally, careening him into Jabba's sail barge and thus into the dyspeptic maw of the Sarlacc (with a girlish yelp no less)? Oh. We're going to learn about Boba Fett's origins? Hey that sounds like an opportunity for some cinematic badassery! This is Boba Fett?


Hey, he looks pretty cool. Not as badass without the helmet, but... What do you mean it's the kid? The kid's Boba Fett? Oh, um, yeah. Okay. The kid's whiny and obnoxious and from New Zealand? Yeah, three words also not to be in found in the definition of badass.

Try again, MTV.