Travellinbaen

Entries tagged as ‘Friends’

Peaking too Soon

April 6, 2009 · 11 Comments

Quote of the Day:     

Wrigley: Who are you looking for? 
Miles Massey: Tenzing Norgay. 
Wrigley: Tenzing Norgay? That’s someone she slept with? 
Miles Massey: I doubt it. Tenzing Norgay was the Sherpa that helped Edmund Hillary climb Mt. Everest. 
Wrigley: And Marilyn knows him? 
Miles Massey: No, you idiot. Not the Tenzing Norgay. Her Tenzing Norgay. 
Wrigley: I’m not sure that I actually follow that. 
Miles Massey: Few great accomplishments are achieved single-handedly, Wrigley. Most have their Norgays. Marilyn Rexroth is even now climbing her Everest. I wanna find her Norgay. 
Wrigley: But how do you determine which of the people on here are… 
Miles Massey: How do you spot a Norgay? 
Wrigley: Yeah. 
Miles Massey: You start with the people with the funny names. 

–dialogue from Intolerable Cruelty 

It’s a common cliche this time of year, often applied to college basketball teams who had great success in February only to come up short in their drive for a national championship. Undoubtedly the Sports Center guys are wearing out the phrase “peaked too soon” in describing teams from the Big East. TB also hears the phrase quite often in everyday life, usually framed as some sort of mild insult towards a person who has not lived up to the expectations of the speaker in some way. I have been home, Pascagoula, for a few days and I’ve seen a lot of friends, old and new, and I’ve had time to surf the Facebook pages of a lot of friends I can rarely see anymore. It occurs to me in these dark days of economic turmoil and uncertainty, that in spite of it all a lot of folks are peaking these days.

The great unspoken logical flaw in the accusation, “He peaked too soon” is that there is only one high point in a life and that everything following the apex must necessarily be a failure since never again can one achieve what once was possible. I think what we fail to realize sometimes is that people can reach the crest of the wave in many ways and at many places. I say this with some small measure of defensiveness, because you see in some ways, I know the phrase can be and probably has been applied to me.

A treasure trove of statistical proof of my glory days appeared unexpectedly this weekend. It was a recap of the 1987 summer league season when my friends and I won the Mississippi Dizzy Dean State Championship and finished tied for third in the World Series held in Pensacola, Florida. I led our team in most hitting categories with a .459 average, 4 doubles, a triple, two home runs and ten RBI’s and only a single strikeout in 35 trips to the plate. Frankly, I was surprised to see these numbers because 1987 was the back end of my athletic life’s peak. I had a much better year in 1986. But after the summer of ’87, weakening eyes and a crumbling shoulder quickly led to the demise of what had been a promising career. I peaked at fifteen and sixteen, there is no doubt. Not much to live for after that, right?

Many of my old friends, the asshole runnin buddies similarly peaked in those years. Some reached their zenith in sports, others in popularity or appearance or a combination of all of those essential high school achievements. A pair of brothers who are new friends had highs in football and the musical scene that are now but sweet memories. Some of the girls have some lofty peaks in their histories as well. World travels, education in the Rockies, the fast life in Jacksonville, stage appearances all part of their respective pasts now. Sad? Hardly.

Those girls I’ve been fortunate to reconnect with through the miracles of Facebook are now living in the capital of the world teaching and constantly smiling, creating art, writing, and reveling in their families. My new friends are raising families, one moving in to a new phase of business life, the other producing beautiful music and finding peace, elusive for many years. The ARB’s are buying houses and losing weight and laughing more. A couple are  brewing excellent beer and brainstorming the perfect names for bottles and the brewery they will one day build. Another is working a job far below education and intelligence level to provide for family, leaving a painful past a little further away with each new day. I’m especially proud of him and I believe in him. And two more generally spending so much time with kids that its difficult to get away for a few hours with TB on a couple days notice. As for old TB, with my two girls as constant companions and modern technology to keep my friends near in heart and mind, I’ve never been happier. Even counting 87, a good year to be sure. It seems like the people I know have finally left the old achievements behind in favor of moving forward to new ones. Everyone seems more interested and supportive of the rest than we used to be. It is making them/us stronger, happier and more successful. Without consciously considering it, we have rejected the idea that we “peaked too soon” and instead have embraced the idea that there is always another peak to reach and so we should get on with the climbing.

Categories: Life · Philosobaen
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A Very Special Thursday Pickin (Bowl Edition)

December 18, 2008 · 38 Comments

Quote of the Day     “Whoa, lemme tell you about Bo Jackson.”     –Keith Jackson (at least in popular lore), the greatest sports broadcaster ever 

It’s college football bowl season almost, and that means a clean slate for everyone in the pickin world. If you held back from pickin because you didn’t tune in until mid-season, here’s your chance for glory. I realize its a bit early for pickin  the big games, but odds are the TB site will lie dormant on the next couple of Thursdays, so here are my picks and my tunes. Your challenge, in addition to pickin winners, is to produce the ultimate end of year/new year playlist. I know that’s kind of tough, so feel free to stretch the connection. There’s also a poll question which should satisfy Zeek and others in getting their shot at good tune pickin recognition on the greatest pickin game on the worldwide web.

My winners:

  • Southern Miss  +4′
  • Florida State -4′
  • BC  -3′
  • USC  -9
  • Texas  -9
  • Utah  +10

Pick of the Bowls–Florida -3

Upset Special–Hotty Toddy wins outright in Dallas

My Tunes to Ring it all in

  • Come on Eileen–Dexy’s Midnight Runners (CoachTeejay remember rockin out to this on the way to the President for the Millenium?)
  • Champagne Supernova–Oasis
  • Steal My Kisses–Ben Harper
  • Cannonball–The Breeders (Takes me back to a French Quarter New Year’s with the whole gang and  the most frightening ride ever with Holly H. at the wheel.)
  • Ob-La-Di, Ob-La-Da–The Beatles
  • Furnace Fan–Robert Earl Keen (Takes me back to the Hana Highway)

Special Bonus Christmas Song–Merry Christmas From the Family–Robert Earl Keen click here to listen

And finally, a Thursday Pickin Poll–vote early and often.

Categories: Music · Sports
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Thursday Pickin Closin Ceremonies

December 11, 2008 · 8 Comments

Quote of the Day     “If you ain’t first, you’re last.”     –Ricky Bobby, Talladega Nights

TB did not want to be the winner of the inaugural season of Thursday Pickin, the best pickin game on the worldwide web (TM). Each week, when I tied with somebody, I bumped them ahead of me. I started givin bonus points away with reckless abandon. It didn’t matter. I had the pickin year of my life. Larry actually had a better record than me on Picks of the Week, but he was horrible in his bonus choices. Pitalo may have beaten me if he hadn’t missed the first three weeks. And MD had a good run on POTW’s but was subpar on bonus picks, missed a week and brazenly ignored the musical portion of the game. Nobody else was even close, really. See for yourself:

Final Season Standings, Thursday Pickin, Year One

  1. Travellinbaen POTW 9-5, Bonus 43-25
  2. Fig E  7-7; 27-26
  3. RMac 8-5
  4. RockStarRambler    7-7
  5. Feidt’s Follies  5-6-1; 35-23
  6. Ed  7-5-1
  7. Pitalo  7-4; 27-20
  8. Larry  9-4; 18-31
  9. Stone  7-6; 12-14
  10. Sweet  5-6-2; 18-35
  11. Supercynic 7-5; 21-27
  12. Zeek  5-6; 16-31
  13. Maddawg 8-4-1; 9-15
  14. OB 6-5; 22-29
  15. JLM 3-7-1; 42-27
  16. Smily 6-4; 21-16
  17. TKH 1-9; 28-22 (wow)
  18. BR 4-7; 10-18
  19. Greeg 3-5; 15-10
  20. Face 4-5; 9-13

Inside the numbers:

The TB community’s overall record was 118-112 on POTW’s and 373-382. If we decide to use our picks in Vegas we need to dump Sweet and Zeek at the curb on bonus picks and ignore TKH’s POTW’s.

Ten of twenty had winning records on POTW’s and eight of seventeen were above .500 on bonuses.

The girls went 18-19-1 on POTW’s vs the guys 100-93.

Direct descendants of Waldo went 8-11-2 and 33-45.

Non-Mississippians went 27-32 and 112-100, dispelling the myth that our best and brightest leave the state.

Now the Awards:

Best Overall Playlist–Larry edges out Fig. Both of these players can program TB’s Ipod anytime, but I can listen to Larry’s tunes allllllll night long.

The Thinkin Man’s Top Playlist–RSR; from the popular to the sublime and all over the spectrum, each week the tunes were put together with a purpose. Adding to the TB library in an attempt to improve my cool quotient.

Best Posts–Ed; everybody doesn’t get his humor, but he had TB rollin all year.

Livin Vicariously Award–Feidt’s Follies

Keepin the Blog Alive Award–Zeek and JLM, who post good comments on a range of topics. As I’ve said before, this page is a lot more fun when you add your two cents.

Terrorist Thread Hijacker Award–MD

I’m sure he had a good reason to quit in week XII award–OB and BR, both lefty pitchers. Coincidence?

Thanks for savin us all from havin to read about Third Week anymore award–MD; Ed and Stone I thought y’all were gonna step up on this one.

Beavis and Butthead Award–Smily

Miss you most award–RMac

Most Posts edited or deleted award–Sweet; Zeek had an early lead, but embraced the PG 17 nature of the site after a few weeks. I can always tell when Sweet’s drinkin.

Blank Stare Award–Smily

Pitalo Award–Pitalo; the only poster on this game I haven’t met. Hope you hang around during the off season.

All Blog Songs of the Year

  • Brother Love’s Travellin Salvation Show–Neil Diamond
  • Travellin Blues–Lefty Frizzell
  • Travelin Man–Widespread Panic 
  • Travelin Light–Robert Earl Keen
  • Hard Travelin–Woodie Guthrie (cover linked here)

Liar’s Award–TB–I really wanted to crush you all.

Categories: Music · Sports
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Thursday Pickin X

October 30, 2008 · 43 Comments

Quote of the Day     “But I somehow someway keep coming up with funky ass s**t every day.”  as sung by the Gourds covering Snoop, Gin and Juice

We had 9 POTW winners last week. TB and Pitalo were hard luck losers. Musical points were awarded to Zeek for Song of the Week for “Gin and Juice” by the Gourds. He had three votes and his shrewd decision to vote for himself propelled him past Pitalo for SOTW and past Feidt’s Follies as weekly champ. RMac took home theme of the week with three votes, list of the week had no clear winner, with one vote apiece to several players. Be sure to participate and vote on your tunes next week. And beware of TB’s wrath if you self vote and I deem it bad form. Last week’s standings, with bonus picks specified, POTW winners end with number 9:

  1. Zeek (4-1); a big move up the charts this week.
  2. RSR; brings it every week.
  3. Feidt’s Follies (4-1); The usual.
  4. Ed; a no points shout out for post of the week. I laughed out loud, though I daresay I may have been the only one.
  5. Sweet; seemed like old times last weekend.
  6. MD; still dizzy from the teapot rides.
  7. Adam (1-1); co-TB-right-wing tormenter of the week.
  8. Fig (2-3); go ahead and put your crap on the blog Fig–I don’t mind being outnumbered. I just hope y’all aren’t jumping all over me if we establish a Kremlin before Christmas.
  9. Face  (0-2); The Greenies are bound to be better next year.
  10. Pitalo (5-0); two votes for Train in Vain, and I almost voted for Ain’t No Sunshine–that broke the tie ahead of TB. BTW, Pitalo has kicked butt every week I think. Sweet, you watchin?
  11. TB  (5-0); I’ve been unconscious for three weeks. You might want to spend some money in Vegas going against me this week.
  12. RMac; Theme of the week winner
  13. TKH (4-1); Thanks for the invite to the money payin pickem game.
  14. SC (3-1); TB loves a link.
  15. Larry (3-1); I might need you to get me a prescription written.
  16. Smily (3-2); keep on pickin the Bullies.
  17. OB (2-3); so close to breakin through. 
  18. Greeg (1-2); glad you’re back.  
  19. BR MIA–dude? WTF?
  20. JLM–posted, then lit out for Horn without pickin. 

The updated standings:

  1. TB  273
  2. Fig  263
  3. Feidt’s Follies  263
  4. RMac  262
  5. Rock Star 251
  6. Pitalo  232
  7. Supercynic  231
  8. OB  226
  9. Ed  219
  10. Adam 219
  11. Sweet 209
  12. Larry 203
  13. Face  191
  14. Smily  188
  15. Zeek  187
  16. MD  179
  17. JLM  150
  18. Greeg 140
  19. BR  130
  20. TKH  130

My picks:

  • West Virginia  -4′
  • Florida -5′
  • BYU  -14
  • Arkansas +6′
  • Oklahoma -21′

POTW–Texas -3′

My Tunes

Categories: Music · Sports
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The Great A.R.B. Movies

September 30, 2008 · 12 Comments

Quote of the Day      ”Louis, I think this is the beginning of a beautiful friendship.”      Rick, to Louis at the close of Casablanca

Reminiscing about the life and career of Paul Newman and reading the comments to the “End of Cool” post got me thinking about the great asshole runnin buddy movies. I’m not sure how to define what makes a great ARB movie, but I know one when I see it. Here’s my list:

  1. Wedding Crashers–This movie may not be considered classic enough for some since its pretty new. But Vince Vaughn and Owen Wilson perfectly capture the essence of the term in their portrayal of the title characters. 
  2. Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid–Heresy (you may say) that, especially this week, I put Newman and Redford second, but I call ‘em like I see ‘em. It had a long reign as number one.
  3. Smoky and the Bandit–Burt Reynolds and Jerry Reed, the other classic duo that was recently halved. How about a Burt-Redford old guy movie for old times’ sake?
  4. The Big Lebowski–This gets better and better every time I see it. Jeff Bridges and John Goodman are deadpan hilarious. Bonus for Sam Elliot’s small but critical role. The Dude is perhaps the best movie character of the last twenty years, and one of the best ever.
  5. Clerks–I could listen to Randal and Dante talk for hours. They should release sequels every year, but with less plot, more talk.
  6. Ferris Bueller’s Day Off–Only a true ARB, even a wimp like Cameron, would give in and let you take Dad’s hot rod into Chicago for a day of school skipping frivolity. 
  7. The Blues Brothers–Two dudes drive around the midwest finding their old ARB’s and convincing each of them in an average of 3.6 seconds apiece to leave their jobs, girlfriends and wives in the name of “getting the band back together.” Nice.
  8. The Sting–One of TB’s top movies of all time regardless of category. It’s only this low on this list because its borderline ensemble which is not exactly what I was going for. But I bumped Newman and Redford to second place, so I need to give them the only multiple appearance on this list. As movie ARB’s go, they are still the overall champs.

Categories: Lists · Movies
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Thursday Pickin Round V

September 25, 2008 · 59 Comments

Quote of the Day       “Most loathsome events become humorous tales with the passage of time.”     –Jimmy Buffett, from “Tales From Margaritaville”

TB is off to a really good start on his picks this year. Unfortunately, my Mississippi State Bulldogs are, once again, so bad I cannot enjoy the season. 38-7 last week against Georgia Tech. Ouch. My playlist, below, will reflect the mood those damn dawgs have put me in.

On to the weekly winner……It came down to Feidt’s Follies and Sweet, both 3-0 with good picks of the week. Both are on a POTW winning streak, thus accumulating equal bonus points. But Feidt weighed in with the two funniest lines of the week so he gets the 50 points plus a little extra for the wit. Third place was a tie between RMac, now 3 for 3 on her all or nothing POTW and some non-TB genre tunes and Greeg at 5-1/POTW plus awesomely weird musical submissions. As much as I hate to put him this high, Stone was next, going a straightforward 1-0/1-0 with bonus points for correctly picking against his Rebels. OB bounced back from Ike with a nice 3-1/1-0 week and Ryder Cup concurrence. Zeek picked up Ryder Cup bonus points and went 3-2/1-0 and a nice playlist. TB turned in a solid week, going 3-2/1-0 and a bonus for 3 POTW’s in a row. TKH was next at 3-2/1-0, then MD with a tepid 1-2/1-0 mark, the last correct POTW. Had he been in a tie, I was prepared to award bonus points for sparing us his unsophisticated musical tastes. BR was the number one loser, 2-1/0-1 by virtue of his Market Street reference. JLM and Face tied at 3-2/0-1 and 2-1/0-1, respectively with both blowing a chance to break the tie with deductions for JLM’s Mickelson/TB comment and Face’s Al Queda loving Ryder Cup pick. Smily limped in at 2-1/0-1, but dropped off some nice tunes. RSR went all in and missed the POTW, but got a bonus for a great playlist hearkening back to the Concerts post and the shout-outs to other Travellinbaen posters. Fig is clinging to his perch at the top of this game with a 2-3/0-1, though he gave us another solid list. Pitalo went 2-3/0-1, Larry went 1-3/0-1 with a bonus deduction for losing a pick on his favorite team. But I restored the point after listening to his tunes. Ed went all in and lost, and though he got a shout from JLM on his song, he knew it was not his best effort. Something about having to “work”. Inexplicably, or maybe explicably, SC was MIA and picked up a goose egg.

The updated standings:

  1. Fig–125
  2. TB–123
  3. Feidt’s Follies–100
  4. RMac–92
  5. RSR–79
  6. Sweet–75
  7. OB–72
  8. Ed–58
  9. SC–56
  10. JLM–55
  11. Stone–43
  12. MD–40
  13. Greeg–40
  14. TKH–38
  15. Larry–35
  16. BR–33
  17. Zeek–30
  18. Smily–24
  19. Face–18
  20. Pitalo–12
TB’s Picks
  • Navy +16′
  • NC State  +9
  • Bama  +7
  • Auburn  -6′
  • Notre Dame  -1
Pick of the Week
*Disclaimer–if I was willing to bet against my own team, LSU -23 would look pretty good, but I’m not.*
  • Pitt  -15′
The depression playlist, consistent with the times themselves, and Mississippi State football, all the time
  • Sunday Morning Comin Down–Johnny Cash
  • The Thrill is Gone–BB King
  • Personality Crisis–New York Dolls
  • London Homesick Blues–Jerry Jeff Walker
  • Northern Sky–Nick Drake, a mellow light at the end of the tunnel
As always, newcomers are welcome to join.

Categories: Sports
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What We Like

September 24, 2008 · 11 Comments

Quote of the Day     “Enjoying living was learning to get your money’s worth and knowing when you had it.”     –Jake Barnes in “The Sun Also Rises”, Ernest Hemingway

I’ve been thinking about doing this for awhile, and the recent uptick in readership and participation has inspired me to go ahead and do it. I’m going to add a page to this site on “What We Like.” The categories I’m starting with are travel/destinations, restaurants, tech/gadgets, books, movies, music and websites. Not original, I realize, but if you are anything like me, when you go online to look for reviews you either get overwhelmed with information or can’t find a thing. And I always question the authenticity of the reviews.

In each category, TB will give recommendations and you will leave a comment if you have another recommendation, or if you agree or disagree with mine. I’ll move the comment into the body of the page and delete the comments to streamline things. We’ll have a subjective rating system that you can use if you choose to rate TB’s judgment as well as any other poster. I’m counting on TB’s regular readers to chip in because I know there is some good knowledge among you. Just look at travel–we’ve got Mississippi covered of course, but we also have residents of Houston, DC, Baltimore and Carolina that check in along with former residents of New Orleans and Tampa. And all of us have travelled. I want to know your favorite places and things to do. Another example–I got fed up with my Dell laptop last year and decided I wanted to try a Mac. I didn’t know anyone I could ask about it, so I finally went out on a limb and took a chance. Luckily, it worked out. You will see my Mac Laptop on the gadgets/tech list, and if you’re curious about them and want some non-wonk info on my experience, you’ll know who to ask. In music, I’ve already downloaded about ten songs ya’ll have reminded me of or introduced me to, so I know I can get reliable recommendations in that category as well. Since most of us know one another, maybe we’ll get some information or endorsements we’re more willing to rely upon than elsewhere. If the new page stays silent and ya’ll don’t think its nearly as good an idea as I do, I’ll quietly delete this post and the page and we will never speak of this again.

Finally, though the post is directed to regular readers, anyone who stumbles by here is encouraged to participate and hang around. There’s some funny and insightful stuff, occasionally in the posts and often in the comments.

Ya’ll let me know below yay or nay if you like the idea and are willing to participate.

Categories: Life · Travel
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On the Road

September 21, 2008 · 10 Comments

Quote of the Day     “I had nothing to offer anyone except my own confusion.”      –Jack Kerouac

Somebody who sticks the word “travellin” on his name, to say nothing of a person who sets out to be well read, should not go through life without reading “On the Road” by Jack Kerouac. Having just completed it, let me endorse now the reading of it at any age, but by all means before your twenties have flashed by. The book gained fame as the progenitor of the beat generation, but I believe it endures because it identifies the aimless paths and infinite possibilities that life in those years can take. TB’s no book reviewer, nor critical literature thinker. I long ago gave up trying to see what professors and experts tell me is in a book. I’m happy to interpret it on my own terms as it applies to my own experiences. So don’t use this post on a test, it’s just a short essay on what I thought about as I read. And one of those thoughts was that I wish I’d read it ten or twelve years ago.

First, its not what I expected. I knew there was drinking and sex and travellin which were three good reasons to dive in. It was a disappointment to find these vices gave Jack’s alter ego, Sal Paradise, so little real pleasure, and absolutely none for his asshole runnin buddy Dean Moriarty. There are probably tomes in university libraries’ stacks about the meaningfulness of these names, but I’ll simply note the obvious choice of Moriarty as homage to Sir Arthur Conan Doyle’s character who was the criminal intellectual equal of Sherlock Holmes, one of my favorite duos in all of literature. Moriarty is also the crabby tank crewman in the classic flick, “Kelly’s Heroes” who is often crossways with “Oddball”, the character with much more in common with Kerouac’s Moriarty. But I digress.

On the road starts out with Sal taking off from New York to meet his friend Dean Moriarty in Denver. Sal sets out with a bit of cash, a vague plan, and a romantic fantasy of what lies before him. His entire first day takes him further away from his destination than he started and forces him to spend almost all of his cash. Kerouac thusly warns us from the start, this book may not be full of laughs and sophmoric escapades. In fact, it gradually becomes more cynical, more disappointing and more depressing as the years slip by. But through all of that, Sal seems to grow wiser, more empathetic and more appreciative of the people and places he sees. Through his personal setbacks and even more from watching those around him struggle, Sal comes to know himself and finds acceptance in the world’s imperfection if not his own.

Sal mentions several times that after their time on the road, he realized Moriarty was a rat. It seemed to me he thought nothing of the sort, but rather loved him as a great friend. Moriarty was a guy that almost everyone Sal knew considered a rat, and because nobody knew of the man’s great shortcomings more than Sal, he felt obligated to admit they were right. But in the relating of how he came to know Moriarty was a rat, Sal only tells us about Moriarty’s better qualities along with the personal history and inner demons that forced the ratlike behavior to come to the fore. It is a reminder that to maintain a deep and abiding friendship, it is much more important to overlook one another’s faults than to appreciate the attributes. And that the depth of fallibility can only be revealed to the truest of friends. As the cross-country treks begin and end, Moriarty loses more and more of his sanity, abandons wives and children over and over, and abandons even Sal when he’s most needed. This is what forces Sal to acknowledge he’s a rat, though deep down, he seems to understand and forgive.

The parallel story is about the America that exists on the wrong side of the tracks. Though Sal’s education, upbringing and social circle are decidedly middle class, he becomes fascinated with the hidden society of the poor, especially the blacks and hispanics. He embraces jazz and marijuana to say nothing of as many girls as possible, picked up in the bars, bus stations and all night diners along his way. He lives like many of them do, on short term jobs, mooching off friends, and the occasional petty theft. He cries for their distress, but marvels at their family ties and their little pleasures, and he’s uplifted by their endurance and persistence. Sal’s observations reinforced something I’ve learned sitting across a desk from people at their wits end: most people, especially those with the least going for them, are doing the best they know how to do, and just trying to make their way in the world. 

But Sal only watches. He does nothing to help the people who need it. Of course, there was little to nothing he could do for most of the people he encountered. Maybe he couldn’t even help Moriarty. In the end, they part ways, forever it appears. He turns away from Moriarty, and is wholly justified in doing so. He reclaims his regular life and old academia friends. He settles down. He sits on a pier in sadness and guilt as he thinks of his friend, though he knows his only choice was to escape Moriarty’s ever increasing insanity and self destructiveness.

Kerouac’s talent as a writer is that he conveys so many ideas in so few relative words. A real book review would discuss his style–it’s sort of a stream of conscious meets jazz meets drugs and booze prose. I’ve said nothing about the great early character “Mississippi Gene”, the irony of his companionship and divergent path, and nothing of his descriptions of the American landscape, one of the main reasons I wanted to read the book in the first place. I’ve also not touched on the great topic conveyed in the book but never directly addressed–Sal’s war experiences, their effect on him and the great uncertainty of American life in the early years of the nuclear age. The book only mentions his G.I. check, never how he came to earn it. Finally the book describes in passing the painful birthing process of American culture into the modern world. It’s a book that demands introspection from its readers. I’m glad for the mental and emotional workout, and glad to be past it. I just wish I’d taken it on when I was a bit younger, when the exercise might’ve done me a little more good.

Categories: Books · Writing
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Thursday Pickin Round IV

September 17, 2008 · 49 Comments

Quote of the Day     “Horse sense is the thing a horse has that keeps it from betting on people.”     –W.C. Fields

Welcome to the Premier Pick’em Game on the Worldwide Web.

You may be asking yourself, “why should I participate in this silly pick’em game?” My answer: you don’t really have anything better to do, right? Actually, there is also the pride of a wild guess made good, the ability to see your success published internationally and read by literally several people, and the potential for some mystery reward. TB has a couple of ideas. You can be certain the reward will have little to no intrinsic value, much like the American dollar. And if you were paying attention to the playlists last week, you got some real gems to add to your collection, be it on the ipod or cassette tape. Many of you collected on the music bonus last week, but the tune of the week had to go to Ed for his back story, linked live performance, appropriateness, and quality. All the others were so close that no tiebreakers were needed, though special thanks go out to Larry for contributing two new songs to my library. I hope ya’ll are enjoying the music sharing as much as I am, from the current to the oldies to the sublime and the ridiculous.

Here’s how it went down last week. Gripe if you want, but I’m awarding TB the first place 50 points for picking USM correctly as POTW, going 3-1-1 on the bonus picks, and choosing songs I definitely like. I took a tie on Georgia’s victory, even though the line went down before game time and I would’ve won (and did elsewhere) with that extra half point shaved off. I credited those of you who took the same game with the line as it stood when you made the pick. Two weeks in a row, TB’s on a roll. Rock Star was second with a very close NC State victory and an appropriately timed and rockin atom-smashing playlist. Supercynic took third with a winning POTW, 2-1 bonus record and a seasonal selection by Better than Ezra. Feidt’s Follies next with a POTW, 3-2 bonus, and odd choice of Patsy Cline–are you mocking the game Fido? I’ll be watching you.Stone regained a bit of respectability with a POTW and good list. RMac hit her second POTW in as many tries, and is obviously uninterested, though maybe she can find enough humor here to bring her back. Sweet was right on their heels with a POTW, 1-0, a timely Michigan retraction, and his Culture Club DVD. JLM was the last to get her POTW, though it was done outside the blog. Ed tied his POTW, along with MD (2-1 on bonus). POTW losers, with their bonus picks in parentheses were Larry, BR (2-0), TKH (3-2), Fig E (2-2-1), and OB in last place (1-4) though he was obviously hampered by Hurricane Ike. Smiley went 3-1 without choosing a POTW and Zeek jumped in early this week and gets a single point just for the hell of it. All you POTW losers get kudos for your tunes as well, even Smiley for his PHS carpooling song shout-out.

Here are the standings:

  1. Fig–112
  2. TB–95
  3. Rock Star–65
  4. Supercynic–56
  5. Ed–53
  6. RMac–52
  7. Feidt’s Follies–45
  8. OB–42
  9. JLM–37
  10. Sweet–30
  11. Larry–25
  12. MD–15
  13. BR–13
  14. TKH–11
  15. Smiley–9
  16. Stone–8
  17. Zeek–1
New players are always welcome. With heavy emphasis on nailing your POTW and backing it up with some good tunes, the standings can change fast. It’s 50 points for the weekly winner, dropping quickly to 40, 35, 30, then a lot of close scores from 29 down. No negative points this week and everybody’s Back in Black.
TB’s Picks this week
  • Arkansas +9
  • Notre Dame +8′
  • Tulane  -6
  • Minnesota  -6′
  • LSU  -2
Pick of the week — Georgia -6′
My Tunes, livin it up while I’m winning
  • Dizz Knee Land–Dada
  • Steady as She Goes–The Raconteurs
  • Elevation–U2
  • I’m Goin to Town–Robert Earl Keen
  • Theme from The Dukes of Hazzard–Waylon Jennings

Categories: Music · Sports
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Thursday Pickin Round 3

September 10, 2008 · 30 Comments

Ahhhhh, sweet redemption.  TB knocked it out of the park last weekend boys and girls. Four and one in my regular picks and a sweet “lose-but-cover” pick of the week by my Ole Miss Rebels (sorry Rebel fans, if my school didn’t suck so bad I wouldn’t mind so much that ya’ll are looking good). And two of my three underdog picks not only covered but won their games straight up. There’s a good chance I won’t have another week as good, so I need to get in my gloating now–so bear with me for a minute and if you know me picture a very smug TB for the next five seconds (if you don’t know me think Bill Clinton’s smirk).  Fig and OB, you are invited to join in the gloatacious revelry.

Gloat

Gloat

Smirk

Gloat

Ok, enough of that.  Let’s go to the scoreboard. In addition to my good week, Fig E and OB went 4-1 and nailed their POTW.  Fig gets his second weekly win (tied with me) by virtue of Florida’s running it up field goal and another solid playlist, backed up by a nice scheduling and arenas comment.  RMac joined the game and showed mid-season form with her Tulane pick and anti-Bush musical selection. Rock Star edges out Local Man and JLM by naming a POTW and putting up a nicely themed playlist. Local’s playlist edged him ahead of JLM though JLM made it close with a sweet hair band pair of tunes, and they both went 4-1.  But I never saw one labeled the POTW for these two, so that hurt their score. Larry went 2-3 but nailed his POTW and had a playlist in TB’s sweet spot. Sweet’s next with a winning POTW, followed by SC who got the POTW but went 0-3 on his bonus choices. Ed comes next for following directions well and providing another thematic and historically significant tune. BR’s Cult of Personality gave him the nod over TKH even though his 1-2 record was worse than TKH’s 3-2.  They both lost their big game.  MD went 1-1 but got mauled in his POTW and inexplicably didn’t throw out some Metallica for us. Stone was flat out horrible–a very weak effort.  And Smiley was missing in action.

Here are the current standings: Fig–100; TB–45; OB–32; Ed–31; RSR–25; RMac–25; SC–21; Local–15; JLM–14; Larry–10; Sweet–5; BR–(-)1; Smiley–(-1); TKH–(-)2;   MD–(-)5; Stone–(-20)

And now, the picks:

  • UCLA      +8
  • NC State +18′
  • Georgia  -7
  • Ga Tech -7′
  • Tulane   +12′
  • Pick of the Week — USM +1′
Some celebratory tunes this week
  • Jamming–Bob Marley
  • A Little Respect–Erasure
  • Shake Em On Down–North Mississippi Allstars
  • Superman–REM
  • The Pascagoula Run–Jimmy Buffett
Note–new entrants in to the POTW contest are always welcome.  Even TJ.

Categories: Sports
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