Thursday Pickin

Quote of the Day     “I’ve lost my mojo, baby.”     –Austin Powers

Waldo Pepper is the patriarch.  The penultimate power wielder has been Sweet for several years now.  But perhaps from long association or possibly it may be innate, whatever the reason, TB has a great connection to the power that influences sporting events worldwide.  My theory is by publicizing my picks to a worldwide audience, I angered the power or maybe taunted it.  Not only did I lose 4 of 5 regular picks, but I lost my pick of the week in blowout fashion, got Alabama on the cover of Sports Illustrated, and probably contributed to Mississippi State’s embarrassing defeat just as an extra kick while I was down.  The gambling gods are obviously displeased with my decision to go public with my predictions, and must have laughed heartily at my decision to choose my second most hated team (sometimes most hated) as the loser in my first public pronouncement.  

But the strange thing about the power is that it cannot be walked away from.  It cannot be looked away from.  No matter how much pain, disillusionment, shock and financial ruin it causes you, once you have wielded the power, you cannot help but see if it can be recaptured each weekend.  So I will carry on.  

Last week we had a ringer chime in with Tennessee and Wake as locks.  Flash may be a pro, but you know the pros pretty much suck.  With a site like Flash has, I’d expect better than break even.  We’ll see if he/she/it shows up to look for redemption this week.

Joining TB as week one POTW losers were RockStarRambler, Madd Dawg, OB, BR, and Stone who gets two losses for the price of one. I may deduct extra points from Stone just for spite.  The biggest winner of the week was Fig who correctly called the Bama win and Florida cover, but gets just a single point.  TB has decided mid-game to penalize those who pick two losers but not reward those who pick two winners, especially when they come at my expense.  The rules are subject to change each week by the way.  Ed, Supercynic, and Smiley get credit for a win, though Smiley loses the tie-breaker for the week of this trio for going with Miss State as a third pick.  Fig gets bonus points for a nice playlist, and Ed gets a bonus for picking up on the idea of making a thematic music choice.  RSR got enough musical points to take the lead in the loser’s bracket and the ladies’ division.

So after week one, its Fig, Ed, Supercynic, Smiley, RockStarRambler, Flash for the Cash, OB, BR, Madd Dawg, TB, and Stone.  TB hasn’t decided yet how to allocate the points, partly because I just decided points should be awarded as I typed this sentence.  This means new competitors are still in the running for the season championship in addition to the weekly ones.  So join in, friends and strangers, each Thursday.

This week’s 5 picks are:

  • Vanderbilt     +9′
  • So. Miss        +17′
  • Stanford        +14
  • Kansas          -21
  • Ga Tech        +7
The pick of the week is Ole Miss +8.  Ole Miss is good.  They can score a lot of points.  The gambling mojo gods are torn between taking my money and my heart, but they usually go for the heart.  The Rebs are ascendant.  Dammit.
Finally, here’s a few more tunes to ease the pain of a football season devoid of joy already, this first weekend of September:
  • If I Had a Million Dollars–Barenaked Ladies
  • Jealous Again–Black Crowes
  • Say it Isn’t So–The Outfield
  • Man of Constant Sorrow–The Soggy Bottom Boys
  • Gone to Carolina (Live)–Shooter Jennings
Posted in Uncategorized | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | 31 Comments

Snowman and the Bandit

Quote of the Day     “For 50 years, all I’d done was take, take, take.  I decided from now on it is going to be giving.  And I’m way behind.  We’re all way behind. We live this life like what’s down here is what it’s all about. We’re temporary, son, like a wisp of smoke.”     –Jerry Reed

This isn’t a eulogy, and I’m not even going to write about Jerry Reed’s passing today. But I happened to read one of his obituaries and saw this beautiful quote, and I couldn’t let it go without sharing here.  I love that last sentence.  

And let me tell you something else.  Smokey and the Bandit was a damned good movie.  It is perhaps the most underrated quotable movie of all time and is funny as hell from the premise to the facial expressions to the incredibly, poetically, foul language.  Jackie Gleason, Burt Reynolds, Jerry Reed, and Sally Fields all had their greatest roles in this movie as far as I’m concerned.  The landscape of the 1970’s South that passes by in a Trans-Am blur is drably beautiful.  Why Big Enos and Little Enos didn’t have a huge career after their transcendent performances is a mystery, but the movie couldn’t have begun or ended without them.  The local yokel extras who delivered their lines with such aplomb, the hot pants, the illicit Coors beer, East Bound and Down…my God, they must have had a helluva good time putting all this together. It’s a definite top ten of all time contender for TB.

I hope ole Burt’s got a good asshole runnin drinkin buddy tonight.

Posted in Entertainment, Movies, People | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , | 9 Comments

Catch-up Post–Labor Day Weekend

Quote of the Weekend     “#%!*&$! Bulldogs!”     –Travellinbaen

TB’s been vacationing in sunny Oxford, MS, for Labor Day and away from the laptop, but there’s been lots to talk about over the last few days.

First, my ten-cent analysis on McCain’s VP choice, Sarah Palin.  I think he made a shrewd choice.  Obviously, McCain really believes he can take some Hillary voters whose only issue is having a woman in the White House, and this is a good way to further that goal.  She’s a favorite of the oil companies so campaign funding should flow freely.  And she’s definitely a DC outsider which plays to his mythological status as a “maverick”.  I can’t help but marvel at the irony of him choosing someone with no experience all the while basing much of his criticism of Obama as being too inexperienced.  Likewise, I can’t help but marvel at the Obama campaign’s criticism of Palin as too inexperienced.  Then, I am reduced to a blank stare at the right wing talker’s indignation of the Obama campaign playing the “inexperience” card.  It is well to keep in mind as emotions rise among voters for both camps that none of these people are in this game on our behalf.  

Gustav, as I am told by The Weather Channel this moment, will be damaging, but not catastrophic.  It’s going in at Morgan City, and I hope the best for those folks, but I’m glad they drew the short stick too. Now to wait on Hanna and her sisters lined up back to Africa and awaiting their fates upon being struck by the croquet mallets of the gods.  Whatever the cause, it sure seems like their are more strong storms than ever the last few years.  I hope those in west Louisiana have their insurance policies up to date and the will to sue State Farm et al when they get their lowball settlement offers.

The first weekend of college football is winding down and my school’s season is in all likelihood a lost cause.  I’ve attempted to settle the rambling frenzy of frustrated and angry thoughts in to a cogent written summary of what I go through every time State lays an egg like they did Saturday.  Don’t worry though, the rant is coming on my “Bulldog” page soon.  Shadenfroiders rejoice.  I also saw most of the Ole Miss game live.  They looked very good on offense.  Their new quarterback is good.  He’s not as good as advertised, but probably half as much so, and that’s plenty.  Defense, not so much.  But they’ve got a good chance to win 7 or 8 games. 

It helped soothe my bitter soul by going to the Memphis Zoo yesterday.  I haven’t been since around 1993, and in the intervening 15 years, the place has really changed.  It’s not huge, but the exhibits are great and the variety of animals is good. There’s lots of shade, plenty of good snacks and drinks available and some good shows. The monkeys are my traditional zoo favorite and these didn’t disappoint, but I’ve never seen a polar bear nor a kimono dragon before Sunday, so those were the highlights. I had a great day.  It’s a reminder that there’s a lot of better ways to spend a weekend than sitting in front of a TV watching a hopeless football team.

Updated 9-2-08

As information has come out over the last couple of days, I am thinking my initial reaction to the Palin VP choice was a bit hasty.  From association with a secessionist movement, to family values issues, to pursuing a family vendetta with government influence, and several other potential scandals I’ve not had the interest to even read about, this lady might be just a little too loony for comfort.  Who knows whether these embers will become blazing infernos or simply ashes taken away with the wind, so for now, I’ll not call her a huge mistake.  I think we’ll know more in a couple of weeks, but it doesn’t look like nearly as shrewd a choice as it did a few days ago.

Posted in current events, Mississippi, Ten Cent Analysis | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , | 1 Comment

Pickin on Thursdays

Quote of the Day     “For most men (till by losing rendered sager), Will back their opinions with a wager.”     George Gordon, Lord Byron, from “Beppo”

Before you act on any of the information contained in today’s post, be forewarned that TB has had only brief interludes of success in his gambling career.  But the weekend’s comin and it’s football season which means you have to pick college games against the spread. I’m going to give you five regular picks plus a five star, guaranteed, money back, free picks for the rest of the year if I lose, lead pipe, shoo-in, lock of the year, pick each week. If you have a pick of the week, please leave it as a comment.  I’ll report each week on the success or lack thereof on each picker, and create some major awards at the end of the year for the best and worst prognosticators.

A surer bet and a good way to forget about losing your weekly office pool is to turn off the TV at some point on Saturday, open a beer if you haven’t already, and listen to some good tunes over the weekend.  In that spirit, I also offer a six song playlist from my Ipod library and invite you to add a song or a few that ought to go on it.  So here we go.

  • Illinois +8′ over Missouri   
  • Hawaii +35 over Florida
  • USM -10′ over ULaLa
  • Michigan -3′ over Utah
  • Memphis +7′ over Ole Miss

TB’s PICK OF THE WEEK–Clemson -4′ over Alabama

I may look at all of these differently come Saturday morning, and I really have no analysis as a basis for the picks other than Memphis usually plays Ole Miss close and I heard Clemson was supposed to be good this year.  So feel free to castigate me, but don’t come cryin that you relied on TB and blew your paycheck.

This weekend’s playlist, and I’m playin it loud:

  •  Turn it Up–Todd Snider
  • Amarillo Highway–Robert Earl Keen
  • Late Last Night–Cross Canadian Ragweed
  • Hurricane Party–Cowboy Mouth  
  • Pump it Up–Elvis Costello
  • Oh, Atlanta–Little Feat
I’m feelin a little thirsty all of a sudden.
Posted in Music, Sports | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | 16 Comments

The Approaching Storm

Quote of the Day     “Squalls out on the gulfstream, Big storm’s coming soon”     –Jimmy Buffett, “Trying to Reason with the Hurricane Season”

Well, we knew it would happen, and sooner rather than later.  A big storm is entering the Gulf of Mexico, almost three years to the date after Katrina.  Two song lines came to me as possible quotes of the day for this post and I used the Buffett one because its a melancholy song.  The other one is the Leon Everette song “Hurricane” and the line “don’t mind the strain of a hurricane, it comes ’round every June.”  Three years ago I’d have chosen that line, probably because I wasn’t born when Camille hit and the Mississippi hurricanes of my lifetime–Frederic, Elena and Georges– were not devastating.  I thought they were at the time, but Katrina showed the falsity of my assumption.

Pre-Katrina, I’d laugh at the projections that would start when a storm was several days away.  I knew from experience that most storms weakened, veered away from us, and were hyped by melodramatic weathermen excited to have their day in the sun.  (I know, that’s pretty bad, but I’m leaving it.)  I was tougher than any hurricane.  In fact, I thought it was a good time to get some beer, hang with an ARB or two and enjoy the day(s) off.  Maybe grill up all the fish and meat in the freezer.

But TB ain’t gonna lie.  These storms scare the hell out of me now, and I don’t even live on the coast anymore.  They scare me because I know how Katrina changed people I know and love.  I know she killed some of our weaker and older people on the coast before their time, and I’m talking about in the years after, not just the hours and days.  I know there are a lot of people that are gonna have a hard time facing the repairs they’ll have to make even if the storm isn’t another big one. I know State Farm and Allstate will screw them again. Those people on the coast, in Pascagoula and Jackson County in particular, are tough and self reliant and resilient.  I just hope and pray they don’t have to be any of that in the next week or so.

Posted in Life, Mississippi | Tagged , , , , , , , , | 3 Comments

9 Year Old Pitcher Banned–A Conversation and 10 Cent Analysis

Quote of the Day     

Morris Buttermaker–Come on guys, remember what I told you.  There’s no “I” in “Team.”

Matthew Hooper–Yeah, but there’s an “M” and an “E”.

Tanner Boyle–“There should be an “F” and a “U”.

      –a conversation in “The Bad News Bears”

ESPN’s website published an article today about a 9 year old boy who was banned from pitching by a kids’ league in Connecticut.  Dan Patrick discussed it on his radio show at length and fielded numerous calls on the subject.  And TB got an email that he should feature the story on Travellinbaen.com.  As a man of the people, I’m happy to comply with requests, so after running the story through my prism of peculiarity, I offer the TB take.

 First, here’s how I imagine the initial conversation between the league official and the kid’s coach, who couldn’t have dreamed this would happen:

 League—Hey coach, that Jericho kid is dominating our league.

 Coach—Yeah, he’s something else ain’t he?

 League—We don’t want him to pitch any more.

 Coach—Ha ha!  I don’t blame you.  I wouldn’t want to face him myself.

 League—He’s banned.

 Coach—Dang right he throws sand.

 League—You don’t understand.  The kids can’t hit him, he’s banned for the year.

 Coach—Well he fanned 18 a couple of games, but averages about 16 so I’d say he’s fanned about 100 so far this year.

 League—We’re not communicating.  He’s prohibited.

 Coach—Yes, I don’t want to jinx him, but he’s certainly the prohibitive favorite for MVP.

 League—He’s out of the league coach.

 Coach—Hehheh, out of this world, more like.

 League—I think I better write this down for you—(writes with bat in dirt) B-A-N-N-E-D

 Coach—Blank stare.

 

My ten cent’s worth is first that the complaining parents and league have done this kid a tremendous favor.  The national press is cool, but the value of this apparently idiotic move will stay with Jericho his whole life.  Can you imagine the b.s. sessions with his ARB’swhen he’s a bit older.  Kid one, we’ll call TB says “man I loved Little League, I hit .610 one year.”  Then some kid we’ll call Sweet– “I once struck out 18 kids in a 6 inning game and didn’t even get my name in the paper.”  “Then, I don’t know…Larry–“I was good enough to play with the 9 and 10 year olds when I was 8.” Jericho—“ya’ll suck.  I was so damn good when I was 9 they kicked me out of the whole freakin league.”  End of discussion.

 

Posted in Humor, Sports | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , | 3 Comments

Follow My Anguish

I just wanted to leave a reminder for you readers to check in on the “My Life as a Bulldog” page a bit more often.  Now that football season is here I’ll be updating it regularly.  I’m separating posts by date and title so you ought to be able to find where you left off.  Newest posts will be toward the top.

Posted in Mississippi, Sports | Tagged , , , , , | Leave a comment

An Old Story TB Hopes is as Funny in Print as it is Live

Quote of the Day      “You got to listen to me!”     TB, circa April, 2000

I was asked some time ago to tell some old stories on this blog and someone else specifically mentioned Key West since TB had featured it in some posts.  So here goes. What follows is true.  The names and places have not been changed to protect the idiotic, well other than I’m using my alter ego occasionally in the third person.

TB, Ed and Stone were road warriors back at the turn of the century and among our airline rewards were numerous free Air Tran flights.  As Fort Lauderdale is the best place Air Tran flies from Gulfport and as driving from there to Key West and drinking for a few days is a helluva lot of fun, we decided to take a few days and do just that.  

TB at the time was the only single guy of our triumvirate and as such was always expected to be ready to drink a beer any time one of the married dudes was.  So while Stone drove us down the A1A (he was low on the totem pole), TB settled in to the back seat of our Mustang convertible and removed his shirt for some gut tanning over the next 4 hours or so.  But just as we left the mainland and before even hitting Largo, Ed pulled out two beers, turned around and showed me one and simply raised his eyebrows.  I’d been out the night before and was slightly hungover, so I hesitated, even balked, but Ed persisted with his patented blank stare in my direction.  Eventually (perhaps 3 seconds elapsed) I grudgingly accepted the beer. Ed gave a self satisfied and slightly sinister chuckle “I knew I could count on you”, and we toasted our freedom. 

And away we merrily rolled.

We killed 8-10 beers apiece before arriving in Key West a couple of hours before sunset where Stone was finally able to partake in the festivities.  It was about this time TB’s body told him he should get a little sleep–a power nap at least–but sadly, it was not to be.  We threw our bags in the suite and rushed out to the hotel bar.  TB only had time to snag a bottle of 2-way from the shaving kit.  For the uninitiated, 2-way is (or was–it may be banned now) an ephedra pill popularized by truckers who had to stay awake for, like, 88 hours in a row.  Anyway, TB popped two, chased them with some beer and barreled out the door in pursuit of my compatriots.

For the sake of brevity, but in an effort to not compromise the true nature of the evening, I’ll now summarize the side stories that occurred that night, some of which have been referenced on the blog before.  For purposes of the principal story, be reminded that beer was continually consumed over the next 6-7 hours and an additional 2-way, or two was ingested each hour, something TB had never done before and has never done since.

Stone meets and rejects a Polish heiress, Ed gets us kicked out of 3 bars…well two unless you count Irish Kevin’s twice, Ed gives his watch to Stone for safe keeping then attempts to buy a coke from a machine with a hundred dollar bill, Stone intervenes to save TB from being arrested for being falsely accused of dumping a trash can directly in front of a cop, Stone and TB eat late night pizza at one place, then breakfast at another before stumbling back to the Hilton safely.

Stay with me.

TB’s body was whipped, but my ephedra addled brain was still a whirlwind of activity.  It alerted me shortly after falling asleep that I should get up and relieve myself, but then lost the train of thought that would’ve led me to the loo.  Instead of heading there, TB somehow stepped outside the room. If you have ever stayed in a hotel, you may be aware of the fact that the door locks when it’s closed so you must always carry your room key.  Seeing as how TB did not intend to leave the room, I did not carry said key with me.  Still mostly asleep, I realized I was in the wrong place and turned to try and open the door from which I’d come, but as you may have predicted, it was locked.  Nonplussed, I headed down the hallway where I apparently spied a door I thought I should go through.

Well, as luck would have it, when you leave some hotels after midnight, and this Hilton in particular, their public access doors automatically lock. I remember staring at the door as if it may magically open.  The stare may have lasted a millisecond or ten minutes–I can’t recall.  What I do recall is thinking to myself, “I’m locked out.” Then looking around and realizing, “I’m outside.”  Then squinting in the distance and remembering, “I can’t see squat without my glasses.” Then looking down and finding “I’m in my underwear.” It only took a few more moments to combine those four thoughts, innocuous in their own right, but devastating upon being combined.

I knew there had to be a way back in, and it needed to be fast because I still had to pee.  And I just knew those cops from earlier in the evening would be looking for another chance to run me in. Of course I couldn’t see more than ten feet away so my only option was to walk the perimeter of the building.  Being that I was in my underwear, I decided to sprint.  Being that I was barefooted and didn’t want to stub a toe I was high stepping.  (Pause here for mental image to coalesce). Several sprints led me to doors that would not open. One sprint sent me spiralling off course down a pier full of docked yachts and charter boats. One sprint led me through an active sprinkler system.  And a final sprint led me behind some tropical foliage from which I could see the lobby.  Seeing no other choice as I peered around a banana leaf, I bucked up, determined to tell the girl at the front desk the truth so far as I could piece it together and headed for the front door of the Key West Hilton in all my glory.

As I walked through the automatic doors, I saw the girl go to the back room, so I went to the desk and awaited my fate.  When she didn’t come for a few seconds I looked around and noticed some stairs and this is where my luck kicked in.  My speed addled brain managed to send the message that up those stairs could be meeting rooms and that meeting rooms often featured house phones.  

So up I went.

There was indeed a house phone and I sat down, wiped the water out of my eyes, crossed my legs and picked it up.  The girl downstairs answered and I asked her to ring my room.  She asked what number and I had to confess I did not know.  So I gave her my name, but the room wasn’t registered to me.  And not to Ed. But finally, to Stone.  She rang the room.  After about 88 rings, Stone answered.  Our conversation follows:

TB–Stone, you got to come get me.

Stone–Dude, you’re in bed.

TB–No, man you got to come get me.

Stone–I put you to bed myself.

TB–Stone, you got to listen to me.  I’m locked outside, in my underwear, I can’t see, I’m wet, I got to pee and I’m lost.  You got to come get me.

Stone–Go back to sleep.

TB–(interrupting and louder)–Stone, you got to listen to me!  You got to come get me!

Stone–Ok, ok, where are you?

TB–I don’t know.

Stone–(after several moments of silence–I suspect he blank stared into the receiver)  Well, describe your surroundings.

TB–(describes surroundings, evidently pretty well).

Stone–Ok, I think I can find you.  Don’t move.

TB–You got to come get me.

Denoument–Stone did, in fact, come get me.  And I don’t believe anybody ever even saw those mad dashes around the complex, up the pier and through the lobby.  Well, nobody other than those bastard late night security guards that sicced the sprinklers on me.

Posted in Humor, Life | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , | 15 Comments

TB’s Inaugural Ten Cent Analysis

Quote of the Day     “Don’t let your ego get too close to your position, so that if your position gets shot down, your ego doesn’t go with it.”      –Colin Powell

TB has the idea that I can offer as good or better analysis than the talking heads on the issues of the day. Important issues, like how the wild card has affected Major League Baseball, whether Brittany got her body back without drugs, and whether the new Iphone 3g justifies the hype (it does).  Today, I weigh in on Obama’s selection of Joe Biden as his Vice Presidential running mate.

First and foremost, I enthusiastically endorse the choice.  Biden brings gravitas.  He offers experience.  He’s an old white dude.  He lends credibility to the ticket, even to some Republicans.  I was a bit surprised by the positive comments released by Dick Lugar and Arlen Specter, and a bit less by the endorsement of Chuck Hagel.  In a fight, Biden is more of a street brawler to Obama’s penchant for fencing.  As all of the TV analysts keep repeating, he brings great foreign policy credentials to the ticket which is perhaps Obama’s most vulnerable area on genuine issues.  On the whole I think he is good for Obama from an electability standpoint, but more importantly, from the standpoint of providing good counsel in the Oval Office.  

There are a few other reasons I think this choice was so shrewd and I daresay you’ll not get this from other sources.  First, Biden will be in his mid seventies by the time a new Democratic nominee is needed (assuming an Obama win this November).  At that age, there’s a good chance he won’t decide to seek the top job and this possibility may be enough to mollify Hillary Clinton and her puma supporters that she’ll get another chance (though she won’t).  Second, an Obama-Biden win will get Biden out of the Senate where he does much good work but does a lot of damage in his zeal to protect credit card companies and other corporations domiciled in Delaware.  With Biden gone, maybe we can finally get some sensible legislation passed to restrict the use of the Federal Arbitration Act and to increase consumer protection with regard to credit cards. Finally, if the Obama campaign fails, there will be no stigma attached to a candidate who would otherwise have a legitimate shot to win in 2012 such as Evan Bayh.

It sounds like McCain will choose Mitt Romney.  Check back with TB no matter who he chooses for a couple of nickels’ worth of analysis.

Posted in Politics, Ten Cent Analysis | Tagged , , , , , , , , | 1 Comment

Presidential Runnin Mates

Quote of the Day     “The man with the best job in the country is the vice-president.  All he has to do is get up every morning and say, “How is the president?”      —Will Rogers

TB posts from time to time about his “asshole runnin buddies”, a term of art coined by my friend Gig Tisdale. In being forced to follow the interminable cable and internet coverage of Obama’s vice-presidential selection process and now the actual selection of Joe Biden, TB’s mind travelled to the parallels between “Running Mates” and “ARB’s.”  The similarities are not inconsequential as it turns out.

Wolf Blitzer tells me a VP candidate must take on the role of attack dog.  Of ARB’s we say they must always have your back which is simply another way of stating the same thing.  Both VP’s and ARB’s must be in substantial agreement on policy issues.  For example, a VP should have the same opinion on tax policy and foreign affairs as the President and ARB’s should have the same ethics on girl chasing and how much contact constitutes a foul in pickup hoops.  Their policy positions may have some differences however, that can actually strengthen the partnership, such as having a VP with an opposing view on abortion or gun control and an ARB with a differing view on lite beer or college football affiliation.  VP’s often have a history of criticizing their partner in party primaries while ARB’s may have occasion to trash their pal with other ARB’s, but neither will countenance criticism by outsiders.  And a VP candidate’s number one job is to help his running mate be more popular.  He essentially takes on the common ARB role of wing man except that a wing man’s job is only to help his buddy with a particular girl on a particular night.

Of course the fact the two jobs parallel one another does not make them identical.  ARB’s come together–they are not chosen.  And ARB’s are equals, unlike running mates.  Most importantly ARB’s are permanently joined together while running mates typically stay together only as long as expedience dictates. Nevertheless, the parallels are striking.  After all, who but an ARB would you offer the chance to take the best job in the world?

Posted in Humor, Life, Politics | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , | 1 Comment