tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-154429262008-07-02T17:02:53.205-04:00Just My OpinionMarchttp://www.blogger.com/profile/15278012407263103991noreply@blogger.comBlogger226125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-15442926.post-60380855512032898742008-06-26T01:52:00.009-04:002008-06-26T08:39:53.942-04:00A Big ReturnThank you all for your support, you've renewed my fervor. So I shall now return to the blogisphere with some of the things that have been rattling around in my head for the past few days.<br /><br />Where to begin? I think I'll start with what I am least passionate about and escalate from there.<br /><br /><b>More about Gloucester:</b> It has supposedly come to light that the girls in Gloucester did not form a pact to get pregnant. They claim that their pregnancies were coincidental and they simply decided to stick together through this life experience. I wonder, then, why the school nurse admitted to administering over one hundred and fifty pregnancy tests to girls who were disappointed when they were negative. These are not girls who were messing around with their boyfriends and are currently in the midst of a "scare." Girls who are afraid they might be pregnant wait a few months in the hopes they are not. Girls who want to be pregnant check whenever a new test would be warranted, if you catch my drift. If there was no pact, why would a girl have allowed a 24 year old homeless guy to father her child? I think the girls simply realized just how stupid it was. Or perhaps (and this may be more likely) they just want to keep it a secret. They have this sisterhood agreement and the last thing they want is for it to come to light. I wonder if they are resenting the interviews and attention from all the news outlets. Granted, a portion of the spike was from students transferring to GHS under the guise of wanting to take advantage of some alternative educational opportunity so that they could actually take advantage of the free day care. I don't really think that "Juno" or "Knocked Up" has played as big of a role as some have claimed. I do have to say this: I'd have much more to rant about if the rate of teen girls having abortions rose as sharply as the rate of pregnant girls have. I think that fact (that so many are keeping the babies) lends itself to the pact "theory" as well.<br /><br /><b>The End of the World:</b> Look, enough with the Mayan "prediction" that the world is going to end on December 21, 2012. It's not an actual prediction, it is misinterpreted as one. The Mayans had two calendars: a "Calendar Round" for shorter periods of time (the calendar repeats itself every 52 years) and a "<a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Maya_calendar">Long Count</a>" calendar for longer ones. The long count calendar had 5 spaces in which they would record the number of days that had passed since August 11, 3114 BC. (Much like our calendar has eight spaces (12/34/5678) for recording the date.) When the five spaces are full it is equal to the number of days between August 11, 3114 and December 21, 2012. To add even one more day would require adding another space to the calendar. To assume this is a prediction of the end of the world would be akin to declaring that the modern era is predicting the end of the world to be December 31, 9999 (or 12/31/9999) because to go another day would require another space. It's simply sophomoric and ignorant to make the assertion that the Mayans purposefully predicted the end of the world in this fashion. So, can we agree to stop, please?<br /><br /><b>Energy:</b> There is a big argument between Obama and McCain as to how we should solve the current energy crisis. McCain wants to drill and open the reserves. Obama's "Yes We Can" campaign slogan says "No We Can't" to both ideas. Obama's reasoning for not drilling off shore or in Alaska won't help the situation for another ten years so we shouldn't start drilling. Funny thing is, ten years ago (which was only 1998) we decided not to drill. Sure would have been helpful if we'd made a different decision then. But let's make sure we make the same mistake now, too. Obama wants to tax the profits of the oil companies. Yeah, because that wouldn't be pushed off onto the consumer in some way. No, no, good thinking, really. Both candidates are pushing for renewable energy. Here's something I don't understand: Renewable energy is renewable. It comes back. Why, then, is it so friggin' expensive? If a commodity is dissipating, why is it less expensive than something that "renews?" And if my understanding is incorrect and the energy itself is actually less expensive, why is the initial cost to get to a point where one could utilize it so prohibitive? Sure, a hybrid uses less fuel, but costs five grand more. Solar panels cut down on the electricity my house uses but costs 25 grand to install. But it'll save me $500 a year in electricity. Let's see, I'll have earned my initial investment back in 50 years! <br /><br /><b>Bumper Stickers:</b> Truly, I find few things to be more cowardly than bumper stickers. People make their pithy snide comments as they zip past you anonymously in their 1987 Ford Station Wagon. They announce to everyone their opinions on politics, religion, sports, music, etc as though anyone had asked them to do so. (sound like a blog? At least you can tell me where I'm wrong once you've read it.) If these people felt so strongly about these matters, I say we put bumper stickers on our houses. No more anonymity. No more avoiding responsibility for what we've affixed to our property. Suddenly, we are accountable for what we've chosen to display. People can knock on our door, put a letter in our mailbox, or affix an opposing view house sticker on their own home. What has gotten me this fired up? Ignorant bumper stickers. For example, I've seen the following bumper stickers with my own eyes: "You keep prayer out of my schools and I'll keep thinking out of your church." "Impeach Bush, Nixon did less!" (Nixon was not impeached.) "World Champion New York Giants" (OK, so they may have earned that one... somehow...) Anyway. I think that we'd be much more careful with what we say and how we say it if we were suddenly responsible for our comments.<br /><br /><b>Monogamy:</b> More and more these days I'm hearing people claim that we, as humans, simply weren't made to be with just one person. According to them, monogamy is something that we try to force our our species and that is why we are continually fighting against it. (I was in a crafty-ACMoore-ish store and they had plastic "educational" animals for sale. The little booklet that came with the bald eagle said, "Unlike humans, eagles mate for life." Excuse me?!) Here is the problem that I see with that argument. Even with people that subscribe to that line of thought, when a relationship ends and they prove their theory to be "true" there is still so much pain involved! I've spoken with people who were in an "open" relationship (where both they and their partner have the freedom to mess around with others) who either felt jilted when it ended, or began to become envious because they wanted to be the only one! The happiest people in the world are not the ones who have been married seven times. Nor are they the single swingin' people who are alone in their sixties. The happiest people are the ones who know that they've fought the good fight, stayed the course, battled through thick and thin and have a relationship tough as leather, strong as cinder blocks, and precious & beautiful as gemstones. If nothing else, our desire to explain our tendency towards infidelity as instinct and excuse ourselves from trying to remain faithful because it's unnatural does nothing more than expose and magnify our slavery to sin. It also displays our intrinsic knowledge of it. We're doing something we know is wrong, so we try to explain it away as just the way we are.<br /><br />So, there's just my opinion, what's yours?Marchttp://www.blogger.com/profile/15278012407263103991noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-15442926.post-13180471691324999092008-06-21T20:46:00.005-04:002008-06-24T16:03:35.859-04:00A Few Thoughts<b>Fatherhood:</b> It is hard to believe that our little Full House is already two years old! Let me tell you: This second year flew by so much faster than the first. I look back at pictures from his first birthday and I am amazed at how much he's grown; both physically and developementally. He already has so many of our cultural norms under his belt. He is so excited about his "baby sistour." I think I understand now when parents say "it went by so fast." It's been two years in the blink of an eye.<br /><br /><b>Gloucester:</b> It would be difficult for anyone to have missed the <a href="http://www.gloucestertimes.com/punews/local_story_171221140.html">story</a> coming out of Gloucester the past few days. With a dramatic spike in teen pregnancies, the principle of GHS decided he was going to get to he bottom of the situation. What he learned was shocking and concerning. Many of the girls had made a pact with each other <i>to get pregnant!</i> No one is quite sure why. Theories range from they wanted to experience pregnancy together to they wanted someone who would love them unconditionally and many in between. While I admire the concept behind the school system providing free child care for high school moms so that they can stay in school, I can't help but think this advantage aided in the girls decision to procreate. While this story by itself is jaw-dropping, I think the response by the medical staff of the high school was even more amazing! The nurse and the advisor to the entire school system suggested that the best solution would be to <b>prescribe more contraceptives.</b> They felt so strongly about this that when the school system (and parents) declined to take this action, they both resigned out of protest. Does this make any sense to anyone? Here are girls making every effort to get pregnant (One so much that she slept with a 24 year old homeless man). These are girls who were <i>disappointed</i> when their <i>school-provided</i> pregnancy tests were negative. Yet your solution to prevention is to prescribe pills that we all know they won't take?! I would hope they were fired for their stupidity! When will we realize that most solutions are only attacking the symptoms? <br /><br /><b>Sports:</b> If not for 35 seconds in the Super Bowl, Boston would have had the championships in MLB, NFL, and NBA in one year!<br /><br /><b>Final Thoughts:</b> One more (pitiful) request. With our move out of state and a sharp decline in comments, I feel that the readership of this blog has sharply declined. So, if you are reading this blog, please let me know by dropping a little boring comment on this post. It's been so long because two posts ago I mentioned that our Little Full House broke his leg, and no one said a thing. So even if you just say "reading" it'll mean a lot to me. Thanks.<br /><br />Be sure to catch my review of <a href="http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0995061/">The Business of Being Born</a> on the post below!Marchttp://www.blogger.com/profile/15278012407263103991noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-15442926.post-14422921613362447442008-06-21T20:45:00.004-04:002008-06-24T16:09:46.789-04:00Review: The Business of Being Born2008/Not Rated(Probably PG-13)/Documentary<br /><br />I was slightly apprehensive to view this film as the Queen of Hearts and I are expecting our little Wild Card in September. But, <a href="http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0995061/">The Business Of Being Born</a> was recommended and I thought it ought to be viewed far from the actual delivery as possible... just in case.<br /><br />I was pleasantly surprised by the genuine, non-emotional, statistically backed argument put forth by Ricki Lake and the other producers of this piece. It wasn't full of scare tactics like some other documentary film makers (Michael Moore), and it wasn't an emotionally wrenching tug-at-your-heart-strings attempt to get people to change how they give birth. This was a straight forward, well balanced recommendation for home births.<br /><br />I'm an excellent audience member for this film. Several times the film brought up the realization that, for centuries, women have been giving birth at home but we've only been giving birth hospitals for a few decades. I'm someone who won't take an aspirin because pain medication is so new, so that evidence resonates with me.<br /><br />However, the flip side of that is that the mortality rate of mothers and children was incredibly high in the middle ages (whereas so few people die of a headache...). I believe that moving birthing into hospitals wasn't simply a "business" move as the film depicts, but was an attempt to lower maternal and infant mortality rates. The trouble with that is two fold: Healthy pregnancies don't need all of the precautions that an at risk pregnancy does. Secondarily, as we become a more litigious society, doctors are moving faster in implementing the interventions, which is causing unnecessary complications for perfectly normal pregnancies.<br /><br />Personally, I'm not even considering a home birth. My ideal would be what we had for our little Full House. Mid-wives at a birthing center close to a hospital. This way one has the chance for a natural close-to-home birth, but also has the convenience of the hospital nearby if necessary. <br /><br />One of the most compelling storylines of the film was that of the producer. She was going to have a home birth but had complications and had to go to the hospital. If nothing else, the footage of the cab ride from her apartment to the hospital was enough to dissuade me from having a home birth.<br /><br />All in all, I felt it was a very compelling argument for midwives verses hospitals. Not only that, but it was a very disturbing and enlightening expose on what we did to women who had hospital births earlier in the century. Some portions were a tad long and unnecessary but they had a great mix of crunchy to average midwives and had a few doctors who shared their opposition or support of the practice of home births. If you are pregnant, thinking about having kids, or have kids and want more, I would recommend checking out this documentary to assist you in the very important decision of how and where to have your child.<br /><br />3.5 out of 5.Marchttp://www.blogger.com/profile/15278012407263103991noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-15442926.post-14791497619674415792008-06-10T22:42:00.008-04:002008-06-12T13:49:49.999-04:00Things BrokenDespicable.<br /><br />Disturbing.<br /><br />Detestable.<br /><br />Wrong.<br /><br />The officiating in the NBA finals, even more so than the playoffs up to this point, has been the ugliest thing I've seen since Conan gave us a glimpse of what Steve Buschemi and Joan Rivers' child might look like. <br /><br />And it goes both ways. Game two was just as bad as game three. I'm watching the home team get touched as they begin their two step drive and they head to the line. I see the away team get hammered as they jump to shoot and somehow the foul occurred before they were in the act of shooting. <br /><br />I've also never seen ref who waited to see if the shot went in before he decided to call a foul. Look, it was either a foul or it wasn't. Oh, did I mention this was only ever done for the home team?<br /><br />Why is this so bad? Well, the home team is free to play smothering D knowing that nothing is going to be called. The away team is afraid to get anywhere near their opponent because if they breathe on them funny, they're going to the line. Not only that, but the away team starts to get <i>really</i> frustrated. And you can't really blame them. When the away team is 2 for 2 on free throws and the home team is 7 of 12 and it's the <i>first quarter</i> something isn't right!<br /><br />I'd like to point out to every ref who has work these last three games something that they might have overlooked in the rule book. I know, it's hard to remember all of those rules and when they do and don't actually apply. But this is kinda key: Basketball is a <b>non-contact</b> sport! And that needs to go both ways!<br /><br />It's been long believed that the NBA (more than any other league) maneuvers game outcomes so that they can land the biggest bucks. Just look at the two huge market teams in the finals. And I'm not the only one saying these things. Check out this <a href="http://sports.espn.go.com/nba/news/story?id=3436401">court shaking article</a>.<br /><br />Something simply must be done.<br /><br />On an entirely unrelated note: our little Full House broke his leg. Well, truth be told... his daddy caused a hairline fracture in his leg. <br /><br />We were trying a friend's Wii. I was bowling, I brought my knee up and didn't realize that the little man was running toward me. My knee made contact with his head and his head made contact with the floor. We're still not sure how that broke his leg...<br /><br />He has a little blue cast on. He calls it his boot.<br /><br />Even as I type this, I cannot even begin to express how terrible I feel for the incident. Thankfully, the little guy has forgiven me, but will probably never let me pick up a Wii-mote again.<br /><br />Now, as we all know, I can't tell a "<a href="http://acesoneights.blogspot.com/2005/08/overview.html">what I did today</a>" <a href="http://acesoneights.blogspot.com/2006/01/it-aint-my-fault.html">story</a> <a href="http://acesoneights.blogspot.com/2005/08/queen-of-hearts-and-whiffle-ball.html">without</a> having a point to it. Here it is:<br /><br />What's wrong with our healthcare system?<br /><br />The injury occurred at about 7 PM yesterday. We didn't see any evidence of the injury so we thought we'd see how he was doing today. In the morning he still wouldn't put weight on it. So we called his doctor.<br /><br />Appointment 25 minutes from home: 1:30<br />Referral to radiology<br />Travel back 25 minutes to get Daddy<br />Travel 40 minutes to children's hospital<br />X-rays: 3:48<br />results confirmed<br />Cast on: 4:15<br />out of the hospital<br />Back home <i>through city traffic</i>:5 PM<br /><br />Injury to remedy: 22 hours.<br />Out of pocket expense: 0 dollars<br /><br />So I ask again, what is wrong with our healthcare system?Marchttp://www.blogger.com/profile/15278012407263103991noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-15442926.post-72026678880389980552008-05-23T10:40:00.008-04:002008-05-23T15:29:25.052-04:00Review: Runner, Eragon, and Wilson'sDue to the length of time that has passed since I viewed <i>Kite Runner</i> and <i>Eragon</i> I feel that a full review would be lacking. Therefore, I'll review them here, along with <i>Charlie Wilson's War</i>.<br /><br /><b>Review</b>: <i><a href="http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0419887/">The Kite Runner</a></i>: 2007/PG-13/Drama<br />What I appreciated most about this movie was the cross-cultural universal themes. Bullying, competition, and patriotism are often considered to be primarily American ideals. I often forget that these things occur in other countries. The portrayal of them in Afghanistan was incredibly believable and opened up a new understanding of the people who lived there. Additionally, there was a sense of fidelity and manhood that is missing in our culture that we would do well to emulate. <br /><br />One of the major reasons I appreciated this film was the consistency that it showed in the character flaw with one of the main characters. In the back story (which was far to lengthy) he is shown as a coward. When he finally shows some courage in living out the fidelity that he was taught he still reverts to his cowardly ways. The moment was so real and believable yet shocking because I was expecting this film to be "Americanized" as so many are.<br /><br />There is one disturbing scene where the action is suggested rather than shown. Overall:<br /><br />3 out of 5 stars.<br /><br /><b>Review</b>: <i><a href="http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0449010/">Eragon</a></i> 2006/PG/Fantasy<br />Puh-Leez! There was a lot of "trying" in Eragon. Eragon was trying to be a fantasy film. Names and titles are so important in fantasy! Nearly all of the character's name fell short of what was desired (with the possible exception of the Vlern). First, the movie is about dragons and the title character's name is "dragon" with an E and sounds so much like one of the more famous fantasy characters in literature (Aragon from The Lord of the Rings). Not only that, but the antagonist has some unpronounceable name (Galbatorix). I was trying not to laugh as one of the most eloquent speakers in film (<a href="http://www.imdb.com/name/nm0000460/">Jeremy Irons</a>) shared the screen with a man who has difficulty speaking like the rest of us (no, not Christopher Walken, but <a href="http://www.imdb.com/name/nm0000518/">John Malkovich</a>)!<br /><br />The movie was trying to be a classic hero story (unknown beginnings, mentor, prophecy, death of mentor, coming into his own) but it was so cookie-cutter obvious and forced! The villain (Durza) is some type of wizard who was trying <i>really</i> hard to be a wizard villain. <br /><br />Truthfully, it was almost painful.<br /><br />1 out of 5 stars.<br /><br /><b>Review</b>: <i><a href="http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0472062/">Charlie Wilson's War</a></i> 2007/R/Drama<br />If you liked <i><a href="http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0146309/">Thirteen Days</a></i> you will love <i><a href="http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0472062/">Charlie Wilson's War</a></i>. It's an international drama riddled with intrigue and covert operations that stars <a href="http://www.imdb.com/name/nm0000158/">Tom Hanks</a> as a down home Texas boy Congressman with a drinking problem. <a href="http://www.imdb.com/name/nm0000450/">Philip Seymour Hoffman </a>(who seems to never miss) adds an Oscar caliber supporting performance as the somewhat rogue CIA operative who helps Charlie obtain the weapons necessary to run his war.<br /><br />This film made an interesting point that the original design for our support of the Afghani people was to give them just enough help to force the Soviets to send more and more soldiers to fight in the war, just as we did in Vietnam. It wasn't until Wilson visits a refugee camp in Pakistan that he realizes the urgency of "shooting down the helicopters." While preventing the Soviets from gaining a foothold in that region of the world was important to protect the oil supplies there, it was funded due to the humanitarian concerns of those who controlled the money. <br /><br />A lesson this movie put forth, that we would do well to listen to, is portrayed at the end. The Soviets have retreated and Charlie is trying to get $1 million to rebuild some schools in Afghanistan. They had just spent over $1 <b>b</b>illion to fight the war, yet they wouldn't give him the $1 million he asked for for the schools. We didn't help rebuild their country. The Talaban came in and took over and we then had to go in and dispose <i>them</i> as they fought us with the weapons we provided them. I don't think I need to specify the parallels that currently exist in the world.<br /><br />Wittily written and masterfully performed, (with the exception of <a href="http://www.imdb.com/name/nm0000210/">Julia Roberts</a> poor excuse for a Texas accent) <i>Charlie Wilson's War</i> is a movie I recommend not missing. <br /><br />4.5 out of 5 starsMarchttp://www.blogger.com/profile/15278012407263103991noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-15442926.post-68697724992737658882008-05-14T10:29:00.009-04:002008-05-14T15:37:03.918-04:00A few thoughtsTwo sports comments and a thought on parenthood. [that'll get a few of you to read all the way through (and a few others to just skip to the bottom...)]<br /><br /><b>Baseball:</b> So the Tampa Bay <strike>Devil</strike> Rays are in first place in the American League East. Now, after you've picked yourself up off the floor and gotten back into your chair, I think I know why. Clearly it's divine intervention. "Leave the name 'devil' in the dust and rise out of the ashes of last place," thus saith the Lord. If the Rays and the Marlins both win today it will mark the first time in MLB history that both teams have been in first place in their divisions for more than one day! Go Sea-life!<br /><br /><b>Basketball:</b> Seriously! In this round of the NBA playoffs <i>1 team</i> has won a game on the road. The Hawks took the Celtics to seven games because they won all of their games at home! Come on! I've railed about this before, but this is getting out of hand. <a href="http://acesoneights.blogspot.com/2005/10/owner-of-game.html">Here's what I wrote in 2005</a>:<br /><blockquote>The people who call the game, own the game. Where is my proof? How about this: Basketball. Every hoop in 10 feet high. Every court is identical. Every game is indoors. It's not like baseball where the outfields are different shapes, the infields are different materials, or some games are indoors, some are out. It is uniform. How is it possible, then, that the home team wins more than 65% of the time? The "home court advantage" is not the fans. These players are professionals! Crowd noise isn't going to throw them. It's the thing they can't ignore: the calls! The refs give the home team an advantage.</blockquote>Never before has there been such a burden of evidence that this is the case! I hope that the NBA takes a look at the huge discrepancy in foul shots attempted between the home and the away team during this post season. It is truly maddening!<br /><br /><b>Parenthood:</b> Daily our little Full House astonishes us with what he knows. I think he is simply amazing. And this makes me slightly apprehensive about becoming a Daddy again. How can I love anyone as much as I love this little man? When I think back to how I felt when I was an expecting Daddy for the first time, there was no way I could have conceived of the amount of love, joy, giddiness, hilarity, and awe that my little buddy provides me with. Shouldn't I, therefore be anticipating a similar response to our little Wild Card (who, f<b>r</b>ustratingly enough, <i>remains</i> a Wild Card)? I'm not...Marchttp://www.blogger.com/profile/15278012407263103991noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-15442926.post-76466556083747850492008-05-08T09:14:00.004-04:002008-05-11T02:25:51.363-04:00No Walk ThroughESPN.com (along with every sports news outlet in the land) is reporting that the highly anticipated "Matt Walsh Tapes" (or MWTs) provided <i>absolutely no new information</i> to the NFL.<br /><br />The tapes contained <b>no</b> (I repeat <i>no</i>) walk-through of the St. Louis Rams from the 2002 Super Bowl. No walk-through from the 2003 Super Bowl. No walk-through from the 2005 Super Bowl. In fact, no walk-thoughs. Ever. None. Nada. Zip. Zilch. Zero. <br /><br />All the MWTs did was confirm what the Patriots have already told the commissioner: Occationally, they taped the defensive coordinator. And if you'll refer to my comments when this story broke, I still have no idea how this is adventagious or why it's illegal since you can sit a man in the booth to study him and, as Mike Shanahan (former head coach of the Denver Broncos) said, "Our guy keeps a pair of binoculars on their signal-callers every game. With any luck, we have their defensive signals figured out by halftime. Sometimes, by the end of the first quarter." Not only that, but Bill has been saying since day one that it was a misinterpretation of the rule. Now we learn that his "illegal" taping has been uniform. There is no truth to the alleged taping that was rumored to be above and beyond what the Patriot's have already admitted to. <br /><br />Here is what I think is due (but in now way expect to happen): An apology from the Boston Herald, one from the Senator from PA who is such an Eagles homer that he launched an "independent" investigation to what may or may not have happened before the NE/PHILLY Super Bowl, one from every fan from every other team who has taken the allegations as fact, an apology from anyone who has displayed that "Cheaters" Patriots logo with the camera up to the Flying Elvis' face, and one from anyone who pretends that the Patriots are the only team who was doing this. If there's a rule about it, it's because it's rampant. Otherwise, the Patriots would have simply received a stern talking to. Furthermore, if it were only the Patriots who were engaged in this activity, there'd have been no reason to "make an example" of them by handing out the most severe fines and penalties possible.<br /><br />I'd also like to remind everyone that the Patriots won 17 games in a row without "cheating." If the Jets really wanted to stick it to the Patriots, they should have blown the whistle on them during week 15, not week 1. Basically, not much has changed since I <a href="http://acesoneights.blogspot.com/2007/09/patriots-caught-spying.html">first responded</a> to "Spygate."<br /><br />All the Patriots have to worry about is continuing their winning ways. I'm amazed that this season they seem to have landed an easy schedule. Even the Giants could win a few with the opponents New England will be facing. Really anything less than 14-2 would be disappointing. Not only that, but their first 6 games are looking fairly easy. It appears the bar for most consecutive regular season games won is going to be set at about 25! That's quite a feat!Marchttp://www.blogger.com/profile/15278012407263103991noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-15442926.post-79419401270672536992008-05-02T00:08:00.002-04:002008-05-02T00:19:38.344-04:00Review: The Pursuit of Happyness2006/PG-13/Drama<br /><br />Another "based on actual events" movie that somehow misses the lesson that <i>ought</i> to have been learned by the main character. Chris Gardner is struggling to make ends meet selling a medical device into which he invested his family's life savings. His wife is stressed as she works two shifts to earn the bulk of their income and still care for their son. Chris decides to try to get a job as a stock broker. Of course, that means starting out with a non-paying internship. <br /><br />As this movie dragged on it became less of a drama and more of a mellow drama. It was as though we were watching the beginning of Job unfold before us. His wife leaves, he can't pay his rent, he misses major appointments, he losses key pieces of equipment, the IRS takes all of his money, he gets evicted, etc, etc, etc. Not only did it get tiring, but it became depressing.<br /><br />I understand that this film was designed to be a rags to riches story. I understand that it was through perseverance and wit that this man rose from the wreckage of his life. I kind of even like the message that this movie puts forth about how anyone can be successful if you actually try and don't make excuses for why you can't do it.<br /><br />However, what irks me about this movie is that the way he obtained his success was through irresponsibility. His wife was working double shifts while he was ogling corvettes. She was missing work to pick up their son while he was struggling to sell what turned out to be a terrible investment. <br /><br />Not only that, but the entire movie is about the pursuit of happiness. His wife pursues it by leaving. His son's pursuit is by being with his dad. His pursuit of happiness seems to be the pursuit of money. If it were for stability, he could have gotten a paying job during the week and tried to sell his contraptions on the weekends (which he does while interning and going without pay). If it's love, he has the love of his son, and he could have worked to keep the love of his wife.<br /><br />In the end, all of the things that he did: not taking a real job, not working to save his marriage, not ensuring that his son had a stable place to live, not being responsible enough to keep his car; they were acceptable because he made it. I was willing to give the filmmakers the benefit of the doubt until the final "epilogue" was written on the screen. It left no doubt, the emphasis of the movie was on the money.<br /><br />I think the most difficult part about this movie is that <a href="http://www.imdb.com/name/nm0000226/">Will Smith</a> and his son <a href="http://www.imdb.com/name/nm1535523/">Jayden</a> put forth fantastic performances. Their frustration, struggle, and moments of love and levity are so true and real that we experience those events right along side of them. If the movie were more poorly acted, it might have been easier to watch.<br /><br />I knew what the movie was about and yet it <i>still</i> depressed me. The acting was good, the message and emotional after taste was terrible. From here on out I shall refer to this movie as "<a href="http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0454921/">The Pursuit of Crappyness</a>":<br /><br />0.5 out of 5 stars.Marchttp://www.blogger.com/profile/15278012407263103991noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-15442926.post-79735394092956243962008-04-29T00:21:00.003-04:002008-04-29T00:34:16.734-04:00Review: 212008/PG-13/Drama<br /><br /><i><a href="http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0478087/">21</a></i> is the exciting story of six MIT students who live the life many of us wish we could experience: They lead common and, to most, mundane lives during the week, and on the weekends they fly off to Vegas where they fleece the casinos for hundreds of thousands of dollars by playing Blackjack. How do they do it? Their brilliant MIT professor has a practically fool-proof way of counting cards. While this is not illegal, it is <b>very</b> discouraged in Vegas. So much so that if you are caught, you might be counting your teeth at the end of the night to see how many you still have.<br /><br />While it sounds like something only a seasoned screenwriter could concoct, this film is based on real life. I saw the documentary a few years ago and the movie is surprisingly true to the actual events. Of course, they took some dramatic liberties in an effort to make the conclusion more exciting and, unfortunately, more "American."<br /><br />You see, we seem to have trouble ingesting a story where the hero doesn't end up on top in the end. And because of that, <i>21</i> becomes yet another time when Hollywood falls short of actually saying something meaningful.<br /><br />We can trace theater's roots back to ancient Greece where the art form was even more part of the culture than movies are today. Theater for the Greeks was an avenue to self-betterment, it was the ancient "self help" section. Their heroes had some tragic flaw that nearly always lead to their demise (hence "Greek Tragedy"). The audience was expected to recognize the flaw and purge it from themselves. Theater was a type of catharsis.<br /><br />Several times in the past few years, Hollywood has had golden opportunities to follow in the footsteps of their Greek forefathers. And every time they have succumbed to the whims of the "movies-are-only-for-entertainment" Americans and ignored the lesson that ought to be learned from the very story they have told.<br /><br />The main character's greed drives him to the point where he loses everything. Truth be told, up until the final 2 minutes of the film, I thought that the makers of <i>21</i> were finally going to allow their viewers to fully experience a Greek Tragedy. What looked like certain success was going to end in complete failure because of his greed. But no, they wave a little magic wand and rescue him causing him to end the movie rich and me to leave the theater disappointed, yet again.<br /><br />The technical side of the movie was very good. All of the performances were enjoyable with one notable exception (<a href="http://www.imdb.com/name/nm1683094/">Aaron Yoo</a> was unnecessary and never made his character very compelling). You can never go wrong with <a href="http://www.imdb.com/name/nm0000228/">Kevin Spacey</a> who plays the very intense "I'm-your-friend-until-you-screw-up" MIT professor. <a href="http://www.imdb.com/name/nm0836343/">Jim Sturgess</a> morphs well between the weekday book worm and the weekend high roller. And you can't cast any better villain than <a href="http://www.imdb.com/name/nm0000401/">Laurence Fishburne</a>. Especially if it's a villain you want people to eventually like. Even the dramatic liberties were well thought out, with the exception of the very end of the film.<br /><br />Just like <i><a href="http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0177971/">The Perfect Storm</a></i>, <i>21</i> forgoes making society better in favor of watering down the ending of their picture.<br /><br />The ending was so disappointing that even though the rest of the movie was enjoyable, it still only warrants:<br /><br />2 out of 5 starsMarchttp://www.blogger.com/profile/15278012407263103991noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-15442926.post-54518707601720593942008-04-15T10:31:00.004-04:002008-04-15T15:12:23.146-04:00A New Curse Reversed?When I first heard that a construction worker had buried a Red Sox jersey in the concrete beneath the visitors locker room in the new Yankee Stadium, I thought it was a hoax. However, yesterday I saw footage of two workers jackhammering into the floor so that they might <a href="http://www.nytimes.com/2008/04/14/sports/baseball/14jersey.html?em&ex=1208404800&en=beb30cd4426cc6c4&ei=5087%0A">remove</a> the jersey. The story was true. It appeared that an attempted "curse" was avoided. (Why the construction worker who planted the jersey blabbed, I'll never know. It would have been so much more interesting as an "Urban Legend" 5 years from now when the Yankees were wallowing in a perpetual 2nd place.)<br /><br />In an unrelated story, David Ortiz has been mired in a terrible batting <a href="http://www.newsday.com/sports/baseball/yankees/ny-spyside0413,0,4448692.story">slump</a>. Until yesterday he had gone 1 for his last 29 at bats and his average for the season was .070 (3 for 43)! Well below the Mendoza line. <br /><br />But wait, are these two stories unrelated? When the jersey that had be exhumed from the floor of Yankee Stadium was <a href="http://sports.espn.go.com/mlb/news/story?id=3344825">displayed</a> for the myriad of news cameras it turned out to be #34 David Ortiz. What happened the day after his jersey was freed from it's concrete prison? David Ortiz goes 2 for 5 and increases his batting average by 50%!<br /><br />I think the construction worker ended up cursing the wrong party! I guess Hank was right when he said "it's never good to be in concrete in New York!" I'm thrilled that the Yankees did the dirty work in removing David's jersey so that he can be back on track for another MVP caliber season! Go Sox!Marchttp://www.blogger.com/profile/15278012407263103991noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-15442926.post-27600227695603583732008-04-12T02:21:00.002-04:002008-04-12T02:25:55.120-04:00Touchy Subjects?Inevitably, when some time has passed between posts, the one that finally breaks the silence has a few different topics on which I'd like to comment. In order to encourage my readers to finish, I think I'll arrange the subjects from least controversial to most.<br /><br /><b>The Olympics</b> I'm having difficulty finding words that express how annoyed and saddened I am at the conduct of the protesters in regards to the Olympic Torch. I understand their anger at China. I get their desire to see change in Tibet. I can't even begin to comprehend what they are hoping to accomplish as they attack the torch bearer. Here is an athlete, usually from their home country, whose life accomplishments are being honored with the privilege of being selected to carry the Olympic Torch (A symbol of peace, sportsmanship, and international camaraderie) for a few miles and these hooligans are threatening the runner and trying to extinguish the torch. I'd say that the actions of the protesters warrant the dousing of the Olympic Torch. These people are in no way displaying a desire for peace, sportsmanship or international camaraderie. Basically, they are attacking their neighbor in the hopes of attracting the attention of the king. Foolish, pointless, ignorant.<br /><br /><b>Virginia Tech</b> The state of Virginia has settled for $11 million with most of the families of those hurt or killed during the VT shooting. The settlement was designed to prevent a court battle aimed at determining "if anyone other than the shooter was to blame" for the tragedy of that day. Yes, the families are hurting but is the blame game going to ease that pain? The settlement (thankfully) isn't even $11 million per family, that's a total amount. Is the money going to soothe the wounds? What good does it do for the courts to decide that the school was partially responsible? Or the state? What about your loved one who took no action in the room while the shooter <i>reloaded</i>? If we are going to extend blame to the farthest reaches, let's be thorough. Let's have blame fall on the students who poked fun at him, to his parents who raised him wrong, the government that doesn't allow prayer in schools, the gun maker who manufactured the weapon, the desk maker whose product didn't stop the bullets, where does it end? The agreement is for a lump sum to the families of those who were killed and a promise to pay for all medical expenses for those who were injured. Some of the families have not agreed to the settlement and may still sue. Apparently a cut of $11 million isn't enough. Makes me sick.<br /><br /><b>What Liberal Media</b> People who claim that there isn't a liberal bias in the news media like to point to Rupert Murdoch as their coup d'état. Apparently, Mr. Murdoch is known to be a staunch conservative and controls many of the parent companies who control what we hear, see, and read when it comes to the news. I thought I'd take a brief moment to list some of the projects that Mr. Murdoch (or his companies) have been involved in the the past few years: <br />Borat<br />Boy's Don't Cry<br />The Day After Tomorrow<br />Dirt<br />Family Guy<br />Fast Food Nation<br />Fern Gully<br />In Living Color<br />Kinsley<br />Kissing Jessica Stein<br />Married with Children<br />Nip/Tuck<br />Once Upon A Forest<br />The Shield<br />The Simpsons<br />and Thirteen<br />Looks to me like the only "right" Mr. Murdoch cares about is the "right" to make money. If his principles are so strong as to slant the news to the right, why would he allow these left leaning programs to be produced by his puppets? Just wondering.Marchttp://www.blogger.com/profile/15278012407263103991noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-15442926.post-31784584800296627832008-04-11T08:49:00.007-04:002008-04-12T02:08:07.471-04:00Review: Stardust2007/PG-13/Fantasy<br /><br />A momentous occation! Here is the first of (hopefully) many reviews that have been requested by <i>you</i>, my faithful (and not so faithful) readers!<br /><br />Let me start off by saying that I thoroughly enjoyed this film. The story was engaging and the twists on the "who-will-be-king" story were inventive, particularly the outcome for those that failed in their quest for the crown. It did have the advantage of being based on a book/graphic novel, but the story held up well even in the whittled-down, two-hour version.<br /><br />Even though his Pre-Potter parallel worlds story borrowed from several movies that preceded it, it did so in a fashion that was more praise than plagerism. The most notable homage was to the classic <i><a href="http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0093779/">Princess Bride</a></i>. The captive who falls in love with her captor, the antaganist desires the girl's death, and the reluctant pirate. Another movie that was painfully parroted in regards to the main message of the film was <i><a href="http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0119116/">The 5th Element</a></i>. Yvaine (<a href="http://www.imdb.com/name/nm0000132/">Claire Danes</a>), a fallen star, mentions how watching Earth with all of it's hate, wars, and mistreatment, would be unbearable if not for love. This is the same arguement that the 5th Element gives for saving the planet.<br /><br />The "all-star" supporting cast (<a href="http://www.imdb.com/name/nm0000132/">Danes</a>, <a href="http://www.imdb.com/name/nm0000134/">DeNiro</a>, <a href="http://www.imdb.com/name/nm0000201/">Pheiffer</a>, <a href="http://www.imdb.com/name/nm0005212/">McKellen</a>, <a href="http://www.imdb.com/name/nm0000391/">Everett</a>, and <a href="http://www.imdb.com/name/nm0000564/">O'Toole</a>) allowed them to make an amazing casting choice with the male lead, Tristan. They went with relative unknown <a href="http://www.imdb.com/name/nm1214435/">Charlie Cox</a> who put forth a great performance. With apparent ease he convinced us he was an ambitious yet socially awkward "Shopboy" in England, (Note: Claire Danes starred in <a href="http://acesoneights.blogspot.com/2008/03/review-shopgirl.html"><i>Shop<b>girl</b></i></a>), an out of place lovestruck explorer in the land of Stormhold, and a seasoned couragous man by the end of the film. It was an amazing, yet fully believable transformation that audiences never saw coming. <br /><br />Unlike most fantasy movies, this picture's story was multi-layered and compelling. A starry-eyed young lover on a quest to retrieve a fallen star to prove his love, two brothers warring to obtain a kingdom-promising gemstone, an ancient witch hoping to be young again, and a long lost mother searching for her son. Throw in some pirates, mix with a touch of magic, splash in some intellegent humor and you have <i><a href="http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0486655/">Stardus</a>t</i>. The moment that set this movie apart for me was near the end as Yvaine is walking towards the wall and there were four different parties racing to beat her there, all with a different intention.<br /><br />I do have a few critisisms of the film. The ending was inexplicable for me and seemed to be a bit of a "easy-way-out." I don't understand how Lamia was defeated by the Yvaine's actions (That's me trying really hard not to give too much away). Also, the ending of the movie provided no hope that the kings children wouldn't revert to the actions of his uncles. <i>(there was a deleted scene that spoke to this concern, but did so in a way that needed to be removed from the movie. It should have been rethought rather than just removed)</i>. And the <a><i>Titanic</i></a> (note: so bad that it doesn't deserve a link) reference on the pirate ship shall be overlooked, forgotten, and ignored.<br /><br />All in all, this movie should become a modern classic enlisting a following only slightly smaller than that of Princess Bride or Lord of the Rings. <br /><br />4.5 out of 5 starsMarchttp://www.blogger.com/profile/15278012407263103991noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-15442926.post-52762935323594113762008-04-03T13:17:00.004-04:002008-04-07T01:52:17.463-04:00What Did You Say?There have been a few things said in the past few days that I thought deserved comment. <br /><br /><b><a href="http://www.cnn.com/2008/POLITICS/04/01/democrats.pa/index.html">Hillary Clinton</a></b>: "<i>Rocky</i> and I have a lot in common" <a href="http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0075148/">Rocky</a>, huh? Well, I have to assume that Senator Clinton was referring to Rocky's perseverance and never-quit attitude. Do we remember <i>Rocky</i>? Let me refresh some memories: The main character is a washed up has been who is trying to win against all odds. He risks everything at a shot at the big time. There are those that would say he didn't know when to quit. He uses unconventional tactics proposed by his trainer and despite his tenaciousness, he still loses to the black guy. Hmm, are you sure you're like <i>Rocky</i>? (I could also have mentioned the "Sniper Fire" comment, but this one is much more fun!) <br /><br /><b><a href="http://archives.cnn.com/TRANSCRIPTS/0803/29/bb.01.html">Barack Obama</a></b>: "Look, I got two daughters — 9 years old and 6 years old. I am going to teach them first about values and morals, but if they make a mistake, I don’t want them punished with a baby" Gosh, I have one punishment already and one on the way. Come to think of it, Barack already has two! (Some liberals have attempted to spin this by saying that he wasn't referring to the baby, rather to the unwanted pregnancy. So is the baby different in a wanted vs an unwanted pregnancy? Is there something in the DNA of an unwanted child that makes it soulless? Less human? Disposable? Whether he meant the baby or the pregnancy, it's the same thing.) Can you believe the calloused disregard this man has for human life? An unwanted child is not only a choice, oh no, now it's a punishment! The child isn't even a natural consequence. It's an 18 year "timeout", a lifetime grounding, a cosmic spanking. Is a baby now on par with an STD? How can someone who has an absence of respect for life to this extent run a country? Doesn't his party purport to support the weakest, poorest, and least fortunate among us? Who fits that profile <i>more</i> than an unwanted unborn child? I'm sorry, unwanted punishment...<br /><br /><B>The NFL</b> <i>(What's a JMO Post with out a little sports?)</i> "For the 08-09 Season, the NFL is doing away with the "Force Out" rule." What's the "Force Out" rule? Here is what the NFL rule book currently states: "A forward pass is complete when a receiver clearly possesses the pass and touches the ground with both feet inbounds while in possession of the ball. If a receiver would have landed inbounds with both feet but is carried or pushed out of bounds while maintaining possession of the ball, pass is complete at the out-of-bounds spot. " Next year, this will not be the case. If the receiver is pushed out or carried out, too bad: Incomplete pass. Typically, the NFL changes rules to increase scoring. This change will do just the opposite. There is at least an average of one touchdown per week awarded due to the force out rule. That's 16 fewer touchdowns and countless drives ended due to this rule. Especially late in the game were the sideline becomes your best friend. Now, he's a turncoat. I expect to see this rule return to it's rightful status for the NFL's 09-10 season. There will be too many complaints by QBs and WRs who lose yards, completions, stats, TDs and even <i>games</i> because the NFL doesn't trust their officials. <br /><br /><i>(On a side note: While I was searching for links to the direct quotes of the candidates, I had to look no further than the first 3 suggestions on Google to find Hillary's quote. However, even when I input the full quote, I had to search to page 5 on Google before I found a respectible news source that listed this gaffe. Granted, Hillary did her Rocky thing on April 1st, and Obama's statement was March 29th. There's no Obama love or liberal bias in the media though...)</i><br /><br />Well, that's what <i>I</i> have to say!Marchttp://www.blogger.com/profile/15278012407263103991noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-15442926.post-19834662714297377522008-03-31T10:09:00.005-04:002008-03-31T13:29:51.377-04:00Review: The Queen2006/PG-13/Drama<br /><br />This movie supposedly chronicles the reactions and emotions that were present in the British government (specifically inside the Prime Minister's office and behind the Royal Family's closed doors) immediately following Princess Diana's death in 1997.<br /><br />Had I known the plot synopsis prior to ordering this movie, I probably wouldn't have requested it. I, for one, never really understood the Diana worship that permeated both the US and the UK. And, while her death was tragic, it was the "love" of the public that encouraged the paparazzi to hound her which lead directly to her death.<br /><br />My biggest difficulty with a film such as this as the viewer can be tempted to believe that what they are seeing is exactly what happened. This is the same complaint I have with movies like <a href="http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0177971/"><i>The Perfect Storm</a></i>. We simply don't know what happened in the inner chambers of the palace. What we know is what they did and said publicly, the rest is speculation.<br /><br />Having said that, I didn't particularly believe much of what was portrayed. Prince Charles was a wishy-washy momma's boy who was afraid to express his opinion and supposedly loved Diana very much. He basically spent the whole movie talking about what a great mother she was to her children. Way to be one-dimensional. As I mentioned in my <a href="http://acesoneights.blogspot.com/2008/03/oscar-reactions.html">Oscar's post</a>, there is a new equation regarding what gets a little gold statue. While the Queen was a very layered character and mimicked to near perfection, her veiled dislike of the Princess (that translated into a dislike of her subjects who were mourning her passing) that was disguised in the utmost concern for her grandsons was difficult to believe.<br /><br />The story began very slow. Once the conflict between the Prime Minister, the Queen, and the tabloids was fully established it proved to be too simple to carry the whole movie. The performances of <a href="http://www.imdb.com/name/nm0000545/">Helen Mirren</a> (Queen Elizabeth) and <a href="http://www.imdb.com/name/nm0790688/">Michael Sheen</a> (Tony Blair) definitely carried this character driven drama, but were not strong enough to overcome the lack of story. <br /><br />The Princes were noticeably absent and the Prince Philip was noticeably obnoxious. Overall, the movie had some interesting things to say regarding the disconnect between a Monarch and her subjects, the Monarchy and it's government, and the mindsets of the Royal Family and the modern day governed. This film raises the question "Can a Monarchy survive in the twenty-first century?" and leaves it up to the audience to answer.<br /><br />2 out of 5 starsMarchttp://www.blogger.com/profile/15278012407263103991noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-15442926.post-69585360181496322302008-03-28T10:47:00.006-04:002008-03-28T15:28:01.868-04:00Sports BriefsNo, not athlete's underwear, short comments regarding the wide world of sports from your favorite blogger! (Actually, <i>I'm</i> writing them... but close enough)<br /><br /><b>Baseball</b>: <i><a href="http://sports.espn.go.com/mlb/news/story?id=3315212">Bye Bye Barry!</a></i> The San Francisco Giants are removing any and all references to their "beloved" "home run king" for the start of this season. His image is being removed from the left field wall (they can now bring the wall back to its original size, they had to make it larger to fit Barry's noggin on it), there are no references to "#756" (the home run that "broke" Hank Aaron's intact record), and the #25 (Bond's jersey) is not being displayed anywhere in the park. The team plans to put a plaque where home run 756 landed in the stands. I guess the team has figured they've milked the Bondimonium as much as they dare, what, with his perjury charges pending, and all. <br /><br /><b>Football</b>: <i><a href="http://www.newsday.com/sports/football/giants/ny-spbriefs275627516mar27,0,4124309.story">Speaking of Giants</a></i> Each year, the winner of the Super Bowl opens the following season with a game to test their strength to see if they are the same team they were just six months earlier. Indianapolis faced off against New Orleans, the team that lost in the NFC Championship game to the Bears. When New England won, their first game was against arch rival Indianapolis. New England also had to face Pittsburgh to start a season following a Super Bowl victory. Tampa Bay played Philadelphia, the team that represented the NFC in the big game that year. Who have the football executives decided the New York Giants should face? Which of the NFL's Powerhouse teams must they square off against? Division rival and best-record-in-the-NFC Cowboys? Nope. AFC runner up Chargers? Wrong. Ok, how about NFC runner up: the Favre-less Packers? No. Ready? The dreaded 9-7 Washington Redskins! Third place in their division! At least they managed to steal a playoff spot from the Vikings who couldn't buy a win at the end of the season. The best part about it... the Giants will still lose.<br /><br /><b>NCAA Basketball</b>: <i>The Final Four (C)</i> Yet another cultural colloquialism that is becoming more of an epitaph. It looks like the terms "March Madness" and "Final Four" have been copyrighted! Just like Super Bowl, Fenway Park, and "You're Fired" (though The Don failed at his bid to copyright the last one) if these terms are to be used in advertising or marketing of any kind, money must change hands. The Bracket that I filled out this year said "Hoops Hysteria" and another website said "Tourney Time." In fact, I have a jar next to my computer for every time I type Super Bowl, Final Four, or March Madness. Whoops, there goes another $75! Right now I'm in first place with the bracket competition at my former place of employment. However, as I foolishly chose Georgetown to win it all and Pitt to be in the Final Four, I think the best I can do is 3rd. (I did get all four of last nights games right, though.) My best shot at winning is for Wisconsin to beat UNC to go to the finals, play a UCLA team that beat Michigan State to get there, and for Wisconsin to win it all. Go Badgers!Marchttp://www.blogger.com/profile/15278012407263103991noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-15442926.post-12118367590944443022008-03-27T11:30:00.006-04:002008-03-28T10:12:50.395-04:00Religion in Culture?There have been a few stories that have cropped up in the news recently where religion has permeated the culture and those who follow the religion have made requests for companies and institutions to alter their policies to suit their belief system.<br /><br />There have been two instances of note, both regarding female Muslims. The more widely reported situation is regarding the workout facility on Harvard's campus that is providing <a href="http://www.foxnews.com/story/0,2933,334390,00.html">women-only</a> gym times. They've honored a request from a Muslim student group so that the Muslim women can wear clothing that is more appropriate for working out and not feel uncomfortable due to the apparent immodesty of wearing workout clothes around men.<br /><br />The second, and lesser known, complaint comes out of Britain. Female Muslim doctors are objecting to a more rigorous <a href="http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/main.jhtml?xml=/news/2008/02/03/nislam403.xml">hand-washing</a> standard. The new requirement is that they wash their hands and arms up to their elbows to prevent the spread of dangerous bacteria. Their view is that this is forcing them to be immodest because they should not be displaying their arms above their wrists. Some women at Birmingham University have said they would change careers rather than comply.<br /><br />I have two different types of responses to these situations: Specific and broad.<br /><br /><b><i>Specific</i></b><br />In regards to the women-only gym time at Harvard, my initial response is to disagree. Even though it's only one gym that has instituted these hours, and even though the times are when the gym is least used, I still don't agree with the decision. It's sexist and there are other solutions. If the women as so concerned with modesty then buy a New Jersey jogging suit and work out with your head covering. Don't like working out with men? Join Curves. If a Christian group was uncomfortable working out with homosexuals, would the gym bend to their wishes? What if a "fat-guy" group wanted a non-women/non-athletic male workout time, would it be granted? What if a Muslim group requested a non-Jewish workout time, where does it end? Truthfully, this isn't really about religious freedom. If your religion requires certain actions that would forbid certain activities, don't try to get the activities changed so you can participate in them. If I'm a devote Catholic and I don't believe in eating meat on Friday, I'm not going to ask them to move the hot dog eating contest to Saturday and I'm not going to ask them to change it to a carrot eating contest. It's not other's responsibility to cater to my religious beliefs.<br /><br />The issue in Britain is even worse. Ok, so the guys can workout in another gym or at another time, but these doctors are potentially putting their patients at risk because they don't want to expose their arms. Maybe they should have some women-only arm washing times. However, I fully respect those who have said that they would change professions rather than comply with the regulation. That is the correct course of action. If my work forced me to work Sunday morning, I'd find different work.<br /><br /><b><i>Broad</b></i><br />Now, having said all of that, here's the flip side: As a Christian, don't I make similar requests on my culture? Do I really believe that "It's not other's responsibility to cater to my religious beliefs." I vote Pro-Life, I support films that encourage family values and redemption, I patron establishments that are family friendly. Perhaps the difference is that my actions are all within the bounds of our current culture. I'm not asking culture to change. Rather, I'm changing myself to be counter-cultural (Something we're often encouraging our youth to do. It's no coincidence that our youth group is called "<a href="http://www.myspace.com/noncon4mers">NonCon4mers</a>"). Is it not more radical to for go some of life's "luxuries" because they conflict with your religion than to attempt to force the "luxuries" to cater to your religious convictions? Didn't <i><a href="http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0082158/">Chariots of Fire</a></i> teach us anything?<br /><br />Well, there's <i>my</i> opinion, what's yours?Marchttp://www.blogger.com/profile/15278012407263103991noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-15442926.post-41842395740074977612008-03-19T12:07:00.025-04:002008-03-19T15:29:46.966-04:00Beijing BoycottBoycotting the Olympic Games has been a favorite way for countries to express their displeasure with the host nation. The US boycotted the Munich and Moscow games and Communist countries boycotted the LA Olympics in 1984 in retaliation.<br /><br />Now a cry arises for all countries who believe in human rights to boycott the 2008 Beijing Games. This is due to the escalating violence in Tibet as those who are protesting for their freedom are being mistreated.<br /><br />Why is an Olympic boycott seen as the solution? Truthfully, I can think of few actions that would be more unfair and less effective than an Olympic boycott. Here are amateur athletes who dedicate four years of their lives training, preparing, and dreaming for a chance to compete against the rest of the world on the biggest stage and their government decides that they can't go because they have a political beef with the host country. <br /><br /><a href="http://bp0.blogger.com/_ZdMMZ_sbBek/R-FJ9OhtbdI/AAAAAAAAAA8/0bJdvcOTuZc/s1600-h/blackpower.jpg"><img style="float:right; margin:0 0 10px 10px;cursor:pointer; cursor:hand;" src="http://bp0.blogger.com/_ZdMMZ_sbBek/R-FJ9OhtbdI/AAAAAAAAAA8/0bJdvcOTuZc/s200/blackpower.jpg" border="0" alt=""id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5179502362673114578" /></a>Why not let the athletes decide? If they feel strongly about the situation, they can boycott individually. A better idea might be to find a way to display your feelings during the games. Remember Tommy Smith and John Carlos? The 1968 Olympians who silently lifted their black-gloved fists as a display of solidarity for the civil rights movement? What good would it have done them to have boycotted? How much louder would the athletes who find themselves on the medal podium be holding a "Free Tibet" sign, or displaying the "Free Tibet" emblem, than not competeing at all? I can't think of a better way to show the Chinese government and the world how you feel about the situation in Tibet. "Out of sight out of mind" if we boycott; "Front and center" if we don't.<br /><br />Thankfully, the <a href="http://sports.espn.go.com/oly/news/story?id=3298673">United States</a> and the <a href="http://sports.espn.go.com/oly/news/story?id=3297702">EU</a> have agreed to attend. <a href="http://sports.espn.go.com/oly/news/story?id=3301156">France</a> showed some of their true colors by saying that it was an economic decision on their part. While that may be true for the other countries, at least they are trying to make it <i>sound</i> like the decision is on behalf of the athletes.<br /><br />It's the right call. Don't punish the athletes to make a political point. China is punishing Tibet's citizens to make a point, isn't that exactly what we would be trying to stop if we <i>did</i> boycott? There you have it: Just my opinion.<br /><br /><i>(On a final, mostly off the subject, note: what if Saddam's final act was one of selflessness? Think about it: He kicks out the UN inspectors knowing that the US would invade. If they invade they'd have to rebuild the country. Reports are coming out that the Iraqi economy is much worse than we originally thought. Did Saddam sacrifice himself to trick the US into rebuilding his country? I doubt it, but it's fun to consider.)</i>Marchttp://www.blogger.com/profile/15278012407263103991noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-15442926.post-4714857062435679972008-03-18T23:35:00.015-04:002008-03-19T08:50:44.822-04:002008's 1st baseball postBaseball is almost in full swing (get it? "full swing?") and already many things are shaping the coming season. Beckett's back, Dice-K's debuting, Crisp could become a Cub... <br /><br />But the biggest story is one that many of us may have missed. We don't often pay attention to which agents are representing which players. However, when the agent's name is Scott Boras, we sit up and take notice. Yes, one of Boston's fan favorites has switched agents. Manny Ramirez is now under the secretive umbrella of the Boras Bastion (Battalion?).<br /><br />Why does this matter? Boras is viewed by players as the best agent in the game and viewed by owners as the most annoying to deal with. Which means that Boras equals Bad news for fans. If you think that baseball players make way too much money and that free agents are bought for much more than market value, you have Scott Boras to thank for much of that.<br /><br />Most agents will inform the teams interested in a certain player what the going rate is. Not Scott, he makes sure that the GMs who want his players are completely in the dark about what other teams are offering. It's against the rules MLB for GMs to communicate regarding such things. Let us suppose both the Angels and the Astros both want Boras' free agent star pitcher. The Angels really want him, so they offer a higher than market value 4 year $20 million deal. Now, if the Astros <i>knew</i> this they could offer 5 years at $22.5 million. It's a longer contract, but less per year. Now the player has a difficult decision. However, because Scott doesn't let the Astros know what's already on the table, if they <i>really</i> want the pitcher they might offer 5 years $30 million because they feel they can't risk someone under bidding them. Sometimes, Scott has been known to swing a high price for a player that only has one team interested, because they just don't know who else might be making a play.<br /><br />Good business? Yeah, for the player and his agent. For the fan? No. Scott thrives because there is no salary cap in baseball. (And don't try to tell me the luxury tax is prohibitive. If teams want to spend for a player, they'll pay the tax.) This is why teams with superstars that are on their second or third contracts have to charge $60 for bleacher seats, $35 to park, $9 for a beer, and $6.50 for a hotdog. We, as fans, pay the prices that Scott manages to negotiate for his players. We pay his 10%. We are the victims of his "good business."<br /><br />Not only that, but he acts as a trainer for his players. Even has even been known to go so far as to request that a pitchers regular pitch count be lowered. No doubt, so that when he hits the free agent market, he isn't out there as damaged goods.<br /><br />How can one man have so much power? Here are just a few of Scott's clients (and what they made as of opening day 2007 in millions of dollars):<br /><br />A-Rod...................28<br />Manny Ramirez........17<br />Barry Bonds.............15<br />Carlos Beltran..........14<br />J D Drew................14<br />Andruw Jones..........14<br />Adrian Beltre...........13<br />Johnny Damon.........13<br />Magglio Ordonez.......13<br />Carlos Lee..............12<br />Pudge Rodriguez.......11<br />Jason Varitek...........11<br />Derek Lowe.............10<br />Greg Maddux...........10<br />Kevin Millwood.........10<br />Barry Zito...............10<br />Mark Teixeira..........9<br />Kenny Rogers...........8<br />Jarod Wasburn.........8<br />Jeff Weaver.............8<br />Daisuke Matsuzaka.....7<br />Eric Gagne...............6<br />Matt Holiday.............4<br />Xavier Nady..............2<br /><br />Scott has 2 of the 4 highest paid players in the game. He controls 5 of the top 20 and 11 of the top 50.<br /><br />Scott Boras is probably the most powerful man in baseball. If you want a superstar, chances are very good you'll need to go through him. And with Manny joining the ranks, they just got a little better. <br /><br />And baseball just got a little worse.<br /><br /><i>Here is a very good, fairly unbiased article on <a href="http://sports.espn.go.com/mlb/news/story?id=3039348">Mr. Boras</a></i>Marchttp://www.blogger.com/profile/15278012407263103991noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-15442926.post-64460463640801275132008-03-18T00:12:00.004-04:002008-03-18T08:32:59.550-04:00Review: Shattered Glass2003/PG-13/Drama<br /><br />The true story of the boy who cried wolf, to the extreme. <a href="http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0323944/"><i>Shattered Glass</i></a> tells the story of Steven Glass, a young <i>New Republic</i> "journalist" who fabricated at least part of (if not all of) 27 out of 41 articles that he wrote.<br /><br />This film is remarkably compelling for a picture where 90% of the action takes place in the office for the magazine. Truth be told, it boarders on thriller as we watch the main character slowly drown in his own lies. <br /><br />A modern Greek tragedy, we see the flaw in the character, we see how it destroyed his life (to a point) and hopefully remove it from our own. Not only that, but it allows us to have a brief glimpse into the mind of a pathological liar. We feel the betrayal of being lied to; We feel the disgust over the repetition of it; And yet, we sense the panic, we feel the walls closing in, and we get it. We understand Steven for a brief, disturbing moment.<br /><br />The performances in this piece are fantastic (with one notable exception) which, with a movie that is nearly entirely interior, is completely necessary. <a href="http://www.imdb.com/name/nm0765597/">Peter Sarsgaard</a> won many well-deserved film festival awards for his work. <a href="http://www.imdb.com/name/nm0000279/">Hank Azaria</a> shows his range with a great non-comedic effort. <a href="http://www.imdb.com/name/nm0001721/">Chloe Sevigny</a> is both believable and empathetic as a heavily duped co-worker. Even <a href="http://www.imdb.com/name/nm0001872/">Steve Zahn</a> managed to create a non-zanny, realistic headhunter out for blood, but in a strangely likable way. <a href="http://www.imdb.com/name/nm0159789/">Hayden Christensen</a>, once again, manages to destroy a great role. Half hearted emotion and tired revisions of the same facial expressions harken back to the destruction of <a href="http://www.imdb.com/character/ch0000005/">Anakin Skywalker</a>. What Hayden needs to do is lose his quirky annoying manner of speaking. Oh yes, and take some acting lessons.<br /><br />Another requirement of a character driven film is the music. Too big and the movie is trying to be something it's not; too small and it becomes too documentary-esque. This film got it just right.<br /><br />The cinematography was astonishing considering the confines and repetition of the sets and all this proves a great debut for director <a href="http://www.imdb.com/name/nm0712753/">Billy Ray</a>. Amazingly, it avoids the feel of the two-headed monster, biggest first-director flaw "written and directed by." I've probably allowed him to slip by this distinction due to the brilliance, poignancy, and vision of the last few shots of the movie. To say more would remove the need for any readers to view the movie. However, while Billy Ray was able to prevent this movie from feeling like a "W&DB," it still could have been better if he'd handed his baby off to another director.<br /><br />As this story was experienced by reporters, it is very well documented and much of the screenplay is verbatim from recorded conversations, notes from reporters, and articles from the time of the narrative.<br /><br />Something is holding this movie back from being a great film. It could be the simplicity of the story-line, the phenomenally poor performance by the title character, or perhaps some intangible "W&DB" flaws that lie just below the surface. Whatever the reason, this film (while compelling, interesting, and true) only warrants:<br /><br />3.5 out of 5 stars.Marchttp://www.blogger.com/profile/15278012407263103991noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-15442926.post-88964738448772050492008-03-13T10:48:00.004-04:002008-03-17T13:01:01.125-04:00Review: Shopgirl2005/R/Romance<br /><br />The Q of H once suggested for one of our long car rides that it might be fun to listen to a book on tape [or rather CD... look, I'm dating myself (which is a rather funny phrase by itself... I digress)]. <a href="http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0338427/"><i>Shopgirl</i></a> was one of the books that we listened to and I was interested to see how the somewhat compelling story would translate onto film. The verdict? Not well.<br /><br /><a href="http://www.imdb.com/name/nm0000188/">Steve Martin</a> wrote both the book and the screenplay, which means that the movie was very loyal to the story in the novella. However, because the book needed to be whittled down to fit in the confines of film, the motion picture was lacking when compared to the book.<br /><br />Not fair to compare the movie to the book? Ok, I'll take the movie at face value. The question that kept ringing in my ears as I watching this movie was: Why tell this story? A lonely, twentysomething, girl from VT in LA searching for love, finally finding something that resembles it in the person of a 50 year old man, only to learn that it never was love. She has, on one hand, boy of her own age who is inept and broke; and on the other, a wealthy, divorced, older man who showers her with attention and gifts. She falls in love with the older man and eventually realizes that he doesn't, and never did, love her. During the course of their romance, the young man has become just that: a young <i>man</i>. He returns and they fall in love. Again... why was this story told?<br /><br />The last line of the movie is regarding the older suitor and how he thought it strange that he felt a loss when she left him; especially seeing as he had done his best to keep her at arms distance. Reflecting on how he treated her the omniscient narrator states: "Only then does he realize that wanting part of her and not all of her had hurt them both and how he cannot justify his actions except that... well... it was life." It was life? Pphhhpht. That's almost as much of a cop-out as the incoherent whisper at the end of <a href="http://acesoneights.blogspot.com/2005/09/movie-review-lost-in-translation.html"><i>Lost in Translation.</i></a> As though it was ok because it was life. <br /><br />To go back to being unfair, the book has them remaining friends and assuming more of a father/daughter or uncle/niece relationship, something both of them lacked. The movie was unable to include this. Also, there was a secondary character who was devious and disliked in the book that Mr Martin tried to squeeze into the movie. The problem was that, while in the novella she definitely affected the plot, in the movie she was pointless and looked like an excuse to have a girl in lingerie.<br /><br />Overall the movie was well shot and acted. There were some lines that even Steve Martin couldn't make work even though he wrote them. I wouldn't suggest cancelling anything to see this picture, but it isn't terrible either. <br /><br />2 out of 5 stars.Marchttp://www.blogger.com/profile/15278012407263103991noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-15442926.post-90788702160789994752008-03-11T00:09:00.008-04:002008-03-11T02:54:03.891-04:00Review: This Film Is Not Yet Rated2006/Not rated (though would be NC-17 if it were)/Documentary<br /><br />This film was marketed as a documentary that took a look at the Motion Picture Association of America's (MPAA) secretive rating system. It was supposed to be an expose, unveiling favoritism and inconsistency in the ratings given by the MPAA. <br /><br />It was actually a whiny attack by a man who basically wants to see more sex in movies (allow more people under 18 to view it) and attempted to undermine the MPAA by slapping an undue "censor" moniker upon it.<br /><br />I had just watched the G-rated <a href="http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0371606/">"Chicken Little."</a> This movie was, at that the very least, PG and had no business being viewed by "all audiences." This is what I was thinking when I read that <a href="http://www.imdb.com/name/nm0225269/">Kirby Dick </a>(<i>Director</i>) felt that there was favoritism in the rating system. Does Disney get a G rating because they asked for it while <a href="http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0462538/">"The Simpson's Movie"</a> gets stuck with a PG-13? Does one director get special treatment over another? These were the types of secrets I was hoping to discover.<br /><br />Alas, what I got was an embittered man with an axe to grind upset that some movies receive the NC-17 rating while others get an R. His complaint was that it's primarily Indy films that get the NC-17, while studio pics get the R. Is this really a worthy discussion? Truth be told, I agreed with him in a round-about sort of way. One of his arguments was that sexually explicit movies get the NC-17 but really violent movies don't. His solution was to stop rating the quasi-porns as NC-17. Mine is to properly rate the violent movies.<br /><br />He did have some good points regarding the rating <i>system.</i> Why is it so secretive? Why aren't there some common guidelines? Why is it, in the appeals process, you can't reference another picture that got a different rating but had similar or worse footage? Like him, I have no answer for these questions and think that they deserve a second look.<br /><br />There was one part where he contradicted himself and lost nearly all of his credibility with me: He was partially campaigning for a set of standards and rules that filmmakers could follow so they could have a better idea of the rating they would receive. But at the same time, he was complaining about when the MPAA first started their regulations (this was before there was a rating system, they simply had hard and fast rules to which the studios had to adhere). So, on the one hand he wanted guidelines, and on the other when they existed, according to him, they were bad. I think he's forgotten that the time when the regulations were in place is referred to as the <i>Golden Age</i> of Hollywood because they put out so many <b>great</b> movies!<br /><br />All in all, his contention that the MPAA rating system is censorship was completely baseless. Not only is it a voluntary rating but it's now en vogue to have the "unrated" version (which only means the MPAA raters didn't see the footage, it doesn't mean it's NC-17 material.) He managed to learn the identities of all of the "super secret" raters and the people who do the appeals process and they still weren't able to censor his movie.<br /><br />My final thoughts: Don't bother wasting your time on this movie. I'm a little sorry that I did, but at least I can save some from making the same mistake.<br /><br />1 out of 5 stars.Marchttp://www.blogger.com/profile/15278012407263103991noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-15442926.post-76525998220924750702008-03-10T22:57:00.006-04:002008-03-26T00:28:14.800-04:00Oscar ReactionsWhy do I still care? Supposedly, my life aspirations no longer include holding up the golden idol named after a former winner's uncle. I no longer want to answer the question "who are you wearing" (truth be told, when I admitted to wanting to be at least an Oscar nominee, I didn't want to answer that question then either...) So, why do I still care? I don't know, but I do...<br /><br />What annoys me slightly more is that I have lost my Oscar ballot. I know that I got 15 correct, missing on some majors and hitting on some lucky guesses. I hit on the first 5 before I started missing on some of the latter categories.<br /><br />I'm most upset because I timed the amount of time wasted by having the presenters walk to the podium after being introduced. I had documented the amount of time that we spent watching people walk. And it didn't even include the time taken for the winners to get from their seats to the stage! I was amazed at how much time could have been cut. <br /><br />But alas, I have lost my ballot. I've lost my notes, my thoughts, my victories and my losses. I suppose this post was basically unnecessary, but I told everyone that it was coming.<br /><br />One thing I've noticed as the Oscars mature, is that my old equation (white actor plays crazy/retarded actor = wins Oscar) has been replaced! There is a new equation in town and I think it's batting 1.000 since it's appearance a few years ago. It is (any actor portrays living or recently passed real person (still in the collective cultural conscience) = wins Oscar. Best actress this year (<i>Vie en Rose</i>), last year (<i>The Queen</i>), supporting actress (Reese Witherspoon as Johnny Cash's wife), Jamie Foxx (<i>Ray</i>), Phoenix was nominated for <i>Walk the Line</i>, Blanchet was nominated for <i>Elizabeth</i>. Peter's Entertainment was visionary when they tried to get Will Smith an Oscar for his portrayal of <i>Ali</i>, but they were a few years too early.<br /><br />I'll conclude with the following thoughts: This Oscar had what will go down as a most memorable all time moment: After the commercial they had the girl who won the award for best original song for <i>Once</i> come back out so she could say her piece, and it wasn't a litany of thank yous. She actually had something intelligent to say. Juno was the over-hyped movie of the year. And how could I have picked against Daniel Day Lewis? <br /><br />Oh well, maybe I won't care as much next year. hopefully.Marchttp://www.blogger.com/profile/15278012407263103991noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-15442926.post-89740531691580846962008-03-03T22:09:00.004-05:002008-03-03T22:20:57.374-05:00Let's Talk FilmThis is quite the momentous announcement! Our <a href="http://teamjuloa.blogspot.com/">good friends in Japan</a> have given us a fantastic Annibirthmas gift: A year of <a href="http://www.netflix.com">Netflix</a>! <br /><br />Now that we have unlimited access to all the movies we could ever want to see there will be far more movie reviews appearing on this blog.<br /><br />Here's where you come in: I've often had people say to me, "Hey, what did you think of this movie?" Or "Oh, there was a movie I was hoping you'd seen so we could discuss it, but now I forgot what it was!" And even the occasional, "Could you explain this movie to me..." <br /><br />This post will be a permanent link for you to recommend movies to us. Movies that you think that we will enjoy. Movies you want to hear my thoughts on. Movies that made you go "huh?!"<br /><br />Start recommending and I'll start reviewing!<br /><br />(Seriously, I am so excited!)Marchttp://www.blogger.com/profile/15278012407263103991noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-15442926.post-25006771792750666632008-02-26T23:11:00.007-05:002008-02-27T09:39:34.228-05:00Voting Booth, Volume IIIOk, so my Oscar reactions are coming shortly but I have to take a few minutes to weigh in on the current election climate; particularly on the Democratic side of the ring.<br /><br />What I am seeing from the Clinton and Obama campaigns is exactly what terrifies me about the prospect of a President. Any President. I'm not going to discuss their platforms. I'm not going to talk about their healthcare plans. I'm not going to mention any of their political view, votes, or visions. I'm getting ahead of myself...<br /><br />I've talked about it before: The President that I want is a person (see, I refrained from saying "man" even though I would have meant it generically)... a person who feels <i>called</i> to lead. One who begrudgingly takes the position of leadership because the citizens are begging them to. I want a George Washington, who twice retired from public office before finally being able to retire to Mount Vernon. I want a Caesar Augustus, who thrice refused to return as Caesar before he could ignore his fellow Romans' pleas no longer. I want Thomas Jefferson, who basically said that his name would be on the ballot and vote for him if you wanted to, otherwise, he'd be more than happy to stay at Monticello.<br /><br />I do not see any of these people from the left side of the aisle. What I am seeing in our Democratic candidates is a hunger, a drive, a desire, an incomparable yearning for the power of the White House. I see two similar candidates attempting to destroy each other because they both want the title so badly. These aren't people who are concerned about the status of their platforms. They share so many of the same ideas that it doesn't matter which one of them is elected: Healthcare would be a huge topic; the war would be altered; minimum wage would change... These are two people whose primary goal is the advancement of themselves, not their country.<br /><br />Compare this to Mitt Romney: He threw in the towel (to continue the boxing metaphor) because he wanted the Republican Candidate to be able to focus on a national campaign, rather than spend time and money attempting to sway like-minded voters. Here is a man who would rather see <i>another</i> Republican in office over someone who holds political views that differ from his own. <br /><br />The Democrats, meanwhile, are causing irreparable damage to each other as they attempt to claw their way to the nomination. Every sound-bite, every photograph, every stab, jab, and upper cut is ammunition that the Republicans can use <i>again</i> during the national campaign. <br /><br />It's not the office of power that frightens me. It is the person who so strongly and blatantly desires that power who does. I want a candidate, a President, who's first concern is for the country, not one who's first concern is for themselves. <br /><br />This is why I fear, yes <i>fear</i>, a Clinton or Obama Presidency. It is not their spoken plans, policies, or platforms. It is that characteristic that recklessly drives them to ceaselessly strive for the Oval Office, letting no one stand in their way. That need for power that knows no satisfaction. <br /><br />Of course, I could be wrong in all of this. It's possible that what I'm seeing as a desire for power is, in fact, simply a desire for posterity. If either were to win, they would be first in their respective uniqueness: First Woman, First African American. (Of course, the insatiable desire to have your name in the history books is not much of a step from the lust for power...) Or, perhaps once one is nominated and has the full support of their party all of this will change. But it won't remove it entirely. This episode will still remain, regardless of what type of national campaign they run. Right now, it's what I see, and it's just my opinion.Marchttp://www.blogger.com/profile/15278012407263103991noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-15442926.post-57260430500276490132008-02-13T13:30:00.013-05:002008-02-16T00:40:19.690-05:0035 SecondsThe more I think about it, the more I realize just how close the Patriots came to "perfection." They were in the lead until the last 35 seconds of the 4th quarter. 35 seconds. They were one muffed interception short, one unmade holding call short, one ball on a helmet short of 19-0. <i>35 seconds!</i> Read this paragraph 2 & 1/2 times. That's about 35 seconds. <br /><br />The jury is still out on if that thought is comforting, or more crushing than before. <br /><br />After reviewing the play that is still seeking a name (currently called <i>The Play</i>, <i>The Play To Be Named Later</i>, <i>The Great Escape</i>, and <i>Immaculate Reception II</i>) the more I am convinced that the egregious no-call was not the non-sack, rather it was the no call on the two offensive linemen holding and one blocking in the back. Those calls are not usually made when the offense happens as the QB is tackled, however, as soon as Eli "escaped" the flags should have flown. If all of the penalties could be assessed at once, it would have been 3 and 40. Of course, this is not possible, but they still would have faced 3rd and 15 rather than making Super Bowl history.<br /><br />For those of you who think that I'm just being bitter when it comes to my gripes about the officiating. Consider this: NFL.com had a segment called "Official Review." In this 5 to 8 minute video clip the NFL.com reporter grills the VP of NFL officials regarding questionable or obscure calls made that week. They even continued this during the post season. Why is it that the cowards at NFL.com (run by the NFL, mind you) decided that they would not have him explain the questionable calls during Super Bowl XLII? Could it be because the biggest question mark leads directly to a Giants victory? <br /><br />There is a Super Bowl "curse" that many may not be aware of: 7 of the last 9 losers of the Super Bowl failed to even make it to the playoffs the following year. A few of them ended up finishing dead last in their division. I predict a dramatic reversal of this curse. Not only will the loser of the Super Bowl make it to the playoffs <i>and</i> return to the Big Game. But I also predict that it will be the winner of this year's NFL Championship game that will fail to make next year's post season. (Especially if the Redskins are able to weasel Chad Johnson away from the Bengals) You heard it here first: we will not see Eli and the Giants in the playoffs next year.<br /><br />Here are the last nine Super Bowl losers. Which teams managed to claw their way back to the post season the year after their loss?<br /><br /><center>Bears XLI<br />Seahawks XL<br />Eagles XXXIX<br />Panthers XXXVIII<br />Raiders XXXVII<br />Rams XXXVI<br />Giants XXXV<br />Titans XXXIV<br />Falcons XXXIII</center><br />One record that was set this year by the Patriots will continue to notch additional tallies: Consecutive regular season wins spanning multiple seasons. They surpassed their own record of 18 this year having won the last three games of 2006 and all of 2007. If they have a decent winning streak to open 2008 this will be a record that will stand for a long <i>long</i> time!<br /><br />Now, having said all of that: Pitchers and catchers report tomorrow! Bring on the baseball! <br /><br /><b>Go Red Sox!</b>Marchttp://www.blogger.com/profile/15278012407263103991noreply@blogger.com