Mrmike's Journal
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10/23/2008 09:47 #46270
Inspired by Drew's AvatarCategory: holiday
One of my favorite holiday traditions. It may have lost a step from its early years, but is still miles ahead of most sitcoms. I know where I'll be on Nov 2.
10/21/2008 15:17 #46234
Aud Layne SighCategory: rant
Most you guys probably didn't get much use out of Memorial Auditorium in its heyday. It was quite the dump, but it was our dump. This blog came though the email and looking at the pictures was a little bittersweet. .
The old hot box was short on comfort, but had some amazing sightlines for concerts. It was good to move forward but the Aud was the place where I first saw the Who, Bruce Springsteen, U2, Bob Seger, Eric Clapton (in lieu of my high school prom), REM, as well as a slew of Sabres games and, watch as I show my age, a few Buffalo Braves games.
The city as usual screwed up. This is a venue that hosted everything from Elvis Presley to Led Zeppelin and while esthetically underwhelming, held a lot of firsts for people. I know the money was never there thanks to this region's prediliction for "suing first, asking questions later," but it would have been cool to find a mixed use for the spot similar to what happened to Montreal's old Forum. It wasn't exactly the Taj Mahal either, but it got new life being chopped up for retail and entertainment and the old center (excuse me) centre ice spot got preserved. It's a crazy notion, incorporating one's history into one's future, but Montreal all showed it can work.
Here, we have another asbestos farm.
The old hot box was short on comfort, but had some amazing sightlines for concerts. It was good to move forward but the Aud was the place where I first saw the Who, Bruce Springsteen, U2, Bob Seger, Eric Clapton (in lieu of my high school prom), REM, as well as a slew of Sabres games and, watch as I show my age, a few Buffalo Braves games.
The city as usual screwed up. This is a venue that hosted everything from Elvis Presley to Led Zeppelin and while esthetically underwhelming, held a lot of firsts for people. I know the money was never there thanks to this region's prediliction for "suing first, asking questions later," but it would have been cool to find a mixed use for the spot similar to what happened to Montreal's old Forum. It wasn't exactly the Taj Mahal either, but it got new life being chopped up for retail and entertainment and the old center (excuse me) centre ice spot got preserved. It's a crazy notion, incorporating one's history into one's future, but Montreal all showed it can work.
Here, we have another asbestos farm.
theecarey - 10/24/08 10:57
oh wow, those pics jolted my memory of (e:pyrcedgrrl) and I having just turned 14 years old, and we took a bus from Lewiston to go see New Kids on the Block (with Dino and Sweet Sensation) concert. I remember a guy hanging out at those pillars after the show trying to sell pictures of NKOTB that were clearly pictures of pictures from a magazine. Thanks for the trip down memory lane!
oh wow, those pics jolted my memory of (e:pyrcedgrrl) and I having just turned 14 years old, and we took a bus from Lewiston to go see New Kids on the Block (with Dino and Sweet Sensation) concert. I remember a guy hanging out at those pillars after the show trying to sell pictures of NKOTB that were clearly pictures of pictures from a magazine. Thanks for the trip down memory lane!
imk2 - 10/22/08 09:15
dont forget MC Hammer. He was at the Aud too.
dont forget MC Hammer. He was at the Aud too.
metalpeter - 10/21/08 18:54
As Much as I like the New Arena thinking back Buffalo did the wrong thing. It is to Bad that Buffalo doesn't have enough people to have had two Arenas. I think it gets the wrecking ball starting Nov. 1st, maybe if that is true and I'm still up and drunk from the Halloween party I'll go down and take some pictures I want to make it down there some time that day. Oh yeah Looking back I wish that the money they spent to Build the HSBC (marine midland center back then) Arena they could have used to fix up what needed to be fixed. Yes those orange seats where very scary and it looked like one trip and you would die and the ramps where scary, Yeah and the Sound sucked. I wish I Had Digital Pictures from when the Bandits won the championship there. As much as I like the Bandits in the New Arena I think there was something about sitting in those Gold Seats. I also wish that once the Aud Closed they thought to take out the gold seats then before all the Damage Happened to them I'm sure you could get some great money for them. I don't have any specific memories from there, I know I went to some hockey games and maybe Metallica played a show there that I saw but not sure. One thing that I do remember from Toronto is when Air Canada Center first opened LaCrosse was still played (maybe for only one season) at Maple Leaf Garden (still standing as part of a building not sure if it is still used today) There and I went to a Bandits game there. Yes it was old and kinda Scary. But see what is cool about those old places is they aren't all the same, and the ice isn't all the same. Lets take prowrestling for an example or Hockey if you see the Arenas and take out the singns for say the teams I don't think anyone could tell them apart they all pretty much look the same. It is a shame that the Aud has to come down. The Ironic thing is where the New Arena is I think is a better spot for Bass Pro.
As Much as I like the New Arena thinking back Buffalo did the wrong thing. It is to Bad that Buffalo doesn't have enough people to have had two Arenas. I think it gets the wrecking ball starting Nov. 1st, maybe if that is true and I'm still up and drunk from the Halloween party I'll go down and take some pictures I want to make it down there some time that day. Oh yeah Looking back I wish that the money they spent to Build the HSBC (marine midland center back then) Arena they could have used to fix up what needed to be fixed. Yes those orange seats where very scary and it looked like one trip and you would die and the ramps where scary, Yeah and the Sound sucked. I wish I Had Digital Pictures from when the Bandits won the championship there. As much as I like the Bandits in the New Arena I think there was something about sitting in those Gold Seats. I also wish that once the Aud Closed they thought to take out the gold seats then before all the Damage Happened to them I'm sure you could get some great money for them. I don't have any specific memories from there, I know I went to some hockey games and maybe Metallica played a show there that I saw but not sure. One thing that I do remember from Toronto is when Air Canada Center first opened LaCrosse was still played (maybe for only one season) at Maple Leaf Garden (still standing as part of a building not sure if it is still used today) There and I went to a Bandits game there. Yes it was old and kinda Scary. But see what is cool about those old places is they aren't all the same, and the ice isn't all the same. Lets take prowrestling for an example or Hockey if you see the Arenas and take out the singns for say the teams I don't think anyone could tell them apart they all pretty much look the same. It is a shame that the Aud has to come down. The Ironic thing is where the New Arena is I think is a better spot for Bass Pro.
gardenmama - 10/21/08 17:41
Ah, yes, remembering when... I went to some great concerts there (Stevie Wonder (twice); Fleetwood Mac (twice); some I think I was too stoned to remember), and other stuff too. I remember as a kid going to Disney on Ice, Ice Capades, the circus. Lots of cool stuff. It was a strange, funky kind of building - sort of sad to see it go - guess some progress is better, though, than just standing still.
Ah, yes, remembering when... I went to some great concerts there (Stevie Wonder (twice); Fleetwood Mac (twice); some I think I was too stoned to remember), and other stuff too. I remember as a kid going to Disney on Ice, Ice Capades, the circus. Lots of cool stuff. It was a strange, funky kind of building - sort of sad to see it go - guess some progress is better, though, than just standing still.
joshua - 10/21/08 16:17
Philly found a use for the Spectrum... sort of a shame that the Aud has been standing vacant for 12 years. Back when we were very young our dad used to occasionally drive us from Jamestown to the Aud to see the Sabres play, and I have many fond memories of the Aud. I swear, and this may be weird, but I can still imagine the heat, the smell, the view of the ice as you cut through the turnstiles, the ramps with the weird paint, the steep upper level, the circular sound suppressors hanging from the ceiling. I remember the crowd noise seeming really intense for such a space. My favorite player was Christian Ruutu. The last time I entered the Aud was in 1996, when the Sabres opened the Aud to the public to unveil their new black and red uniforms.
The ice was too small and it became obsolete... I was enthralled when we got our new building but the HSBC Arena has none of the mystique that the Aud had. Good times.
Philly found a use for the Spectrum... sort of a shame that the Aud has been standing vacant for 12 years. Back when we were very young our dad used to occasionally drive us from Jamestown to the Aud to see the Sabres play, and I have many fond memories of the Aud. I swear, and this may be weird, but I can still imagine the heat, the smell, the view of the ice as you cut through the turnstiles, the ramps with the weird paint, the steep upper level, the circular sound suppressors hanging from the ceiling. I remember the crowd noise seeming really intense for such a space. My favorite player was Christian Ruutu. The last time I entered the Aud was in 1996, when the Sabres opened the Aud to the public to unveil their new black and red uniforms.
The ice was too small and it became obsolete... I was enthralled when we got our new building but the HSBC Arena has none of the mystique that the Aud had. Good times.
10/19/2008 16:12 #46192
Subterranean Homework Blues...I'm sitting here on a lovely sunny afternoon (cue the Kinks record) doing homework. Actually, I'm helping number one son learn to juggle his workload and finish off some of my own. And that is pretty okay.
I spent yesterday afternoon and evening outside at the Zoo with day 2 out of 4 on our Hayride event. Nothing like being out in the cold on concrete for a few hours to make you feel your age (or somebody considerably older). Came home to a cold beer really tired. Hung in there to watch Saturday Night Live kiss Sarah Palin's pentacostelist butt and faded to sleep.
Sprint sent me a free ring tone and I paid it no mind till it worked this morning. The Stock Exchange bell rang from my phone with a text from my eldest daughter asking for a ride home from an overnight. She needed picked up from the Riverside Area at 8:30. I rubbed my groggy eyes 8:07. Aargh!! Stood up to realize just how sore I was from Zoo duty. Made it to Riverside by 8:29. This guy's good. Deposited her at her post at the Zoo and was back in front of the coffee maker by 9. Still, a helluva way to start. Ensuring my descent to hell, I skipped church to do laundry and rest a little. Something renewing about an omelet and a Hogan's Heroes rerun in its place.
Nice to know I can still pass fifth grade math and social studies.
I spent yesterday afternoon and evening outside at the Zoo with day 2 out of 4 on our Hayride event. Nothing like being out in the cold on concrete for a few hours to make you feel your age (or somebody considerably older). Came home to a cold beer really tired. Hung in there to watch Saturday Night Live kiss Sarah Palin's pentacostelist butt and faded to sleep.
Sprint sent me a free ring tone and I paid it no mind till it worked this morning. The Stock Exchange bell rang from my phone with a text from my eldest daughter asking for a ride home from an overnight. She needed picked up from the Riverside Area at 8:30. I rubbed my groggy eyes 8:07. Aargh!! Stood up to realize just how sore I was from Zoo duty. Made it to Riverside by 8:29. This guy's good. Deposited her at her post at the Zoo and was back in front of the coffee maker by 9. Still, a helluva way to start. Ensuring my descent to hell, I skipped church to do laundry and rest a little. Something renewing about an omelet and a Hogan's Heroes rerun in its place.
Nice to know I can still pass fifth grade math and social studies.
gardenmama - 10/19/08 23:43
I don't exactly know how to say this without stereotyping or sounding condescending, but I think it’s really great how involved you are in your kid’s lives. Frequently, a non-resident parent sort of fades, or gets pushed, into the background. It’s not necessarily that they want it that way, but sometimes they just don’t know how to prevent it, or it’s even just logistics. Then on the flip side, they sometimes fall into the “Disney dad (or mom)†syndrome, where they’re not doing the “work†part, just the fun stuff. You obviously make a concerted effort to stay relevant - you’re a pretty cool dad. Someday your kids will really appreciate that.
I don't exactly know how to say this without stereotyping or sounding condescending, but I think it’s really great how involved you are in your kid’s lives. Frequently, a non-resident parent sort of fades, or gets pushed, into the background. It’s not necessarily that they want it that way, but sometimes they just don’t know how to prevent it, or it’s even just logistics. Then on the flip side, they sometimes fall into the “Disney dad (or mom)†syndrome, where they’re not doing the “work†part, just the fun stuff. You obviously make a concerted effort to stay relevant - you’re a pretty cool dad. Someday your kids will really appreciate that.
10/17/2008 15:45 #46159
Methusalah!!Category: work
I'm getting too old for this shit...
Been doing Bikram Yoga for two weeks and while I'm not all amped to go (not exactly oozing confidence in my abilities yet), I've been keeping myself on a schedule. It's sort of my own way of being the grumpy gym coach you hate.
We have one of the last events of the year this weekend at the Zoo. Trick or Treating on Zoo grounds, which is fine, but to set up it's the marketing and development folks (my merry band) who decorate, set up tables, generally acting like something between roadies and packmules. So, you work, which is fine, but in still getting used to the Hot Yoga fun, I was a little strung out when I got to work yesterday morning from my Tuesday night class. We started running all over, stopping for me and boss to have one of "those" talks with a subordinate. So, when I left work, didn't want to go, didn't want to go, didn't want to go. But, made my lard butt go. I'm still crawling out of there, but I'm noticing good things and it did feel pretty good to forgot about the sundry bullshit that fills a work day. Maybe there is something to that. Made me not look forward to more set up today, but what are you gonna do.
Trick or treat indeed.
Gonna go watch the keepers feed the anaconda!
Been doing Bikram Yoga for two weeks and while I'm not all amped to go (not exactly oozing confidence in my abilities yet), I've been keeping myself on a schedule. It's sort of my own way of being the grumpy gym coach you hate.
We have one of the last events of the year this weekend at the Zoo. Trick or Treating on Zoo grounds, which is fine, but to set up it's the marketing and development folks (my merry band) who decorate, set up tables, generally acting like something between roadies and packmules. So, you work, which is fine, but in still getting used to the Hot Yoga fun, I was a little strung out when I got to work yesterday morning from my Tuesday night class. We started running all over, stopping for me and boss to have one of "those" talks with a subordinate. So, when I left work, didn't want to go, didn't want to go, didn't want to go. But, made my lard butt go. I'm still crawling out of there, but I'm noticing good things and it did feel pretty good to forgot about the sundry bullshit that fills a work day. Maybe there is something to that. Made me not look forward to more set up today, but what are you gonna do.
Trick or treat indeed.
Gonna go watch the keepers feed the anaconda!
mrmike - 10/18/08 09:40
Yeah, the hayrides are part of it. It runs next weekend as well.
Yeah, the hayrides are part of it. It runs next weekend as well.
gardenmama - 10/17/08 21:06
Doesn't it just suck working weekends when you've done the regular gig all week? I have to work tomorrow too - crap. The district is holding it's annual parent conference tomorrow at the convention center so I'm on duty for registration and whatever from 7:30 a.m. till mid-day. At least I get 1.5 time for the day. Not sure it really makes it worth it though. I like my Saturdays.
Does the Zoo do a hay-ride along with the trick-or-treating? Also, is tomorrow the only day you guys are doing this or does it run next weekend too? It might be a fun thing for my granddaughter - she really likes the zoo.
Doesn't it just suck working weekends when you've done the regular gig all week? I have to work tomorrow too - crap. The district is holding it's annual parent conference tomorrow at the convention center so I'm on duty for registration and whatever from 7:30 a.m. till mid-day. At least I get 1.5 time for the day. Not sure it really makes it worth it though. I like my Saturdays.
Does the Zoo do a hay-ride along with the trick-or-treating? Also, is tomorrow the only day you guys are doing this or does it run next weekend too? It might be a fun thing for my granddaughter - she really likes the zoo.
tinypliny - 10/17/08 21:03
All this exercise mania hitting (e:strip) (you with Bikram yoga, (e:dragonlady) with the read-n-cycle, (e:Paul) and (e:James) with the Gym workouts) is making me feel like the laziest person on the planet. Maybe that's who I really am. Haha
All this exercise mania hitting (e:strip) (you with Bikram yoga, (e:dragonlady) with the read-n-cycle, (e:Paul) and (e:James) with the Gym workouts) is making me feel like the laziest person on the planet. Maybe that's who I really am. Haha
10/14/2008 10:28 #46106
I'm tired...let's just vote already.This electoral cycle is seeming ceaseless.
It's funny, because in 2000, I might have voted for John McCain. He made sense, he ran his own world and maverick wasn't a word that Sarah Palin can't spell. Eight years later, the politics of fear is stinking up everything. He did make one statement recently that I couldn't help but respect. He opened up and said that Sen. Obama "was an honorable man with whom I have some profound policy differences."
Political discourse should have that tenor. If he could have kept to that tone, we might have had some meaningful exchanges and some honest issue based discussions. I read a column by William Crystal in the New York Times who mentioned that McCain ought to fire his campaign. That's a little drastic, but he did point out that McCain is top heavy with lobbyists in his campaign heirarchy. I don't really care one way or another, lobbyists are part of the process, but they do in general terms, suck at running campaigns.
They've got him crowing on about William Ayers while the left is trumpeting about Palin's association with an Alaskan secessionist. Too many years of Cheneyesque answers of "vote for us or an attack...." has pervaded everything. Obama should be clear, while Palin is in denial about abuse of power charges? I'm not even amused at this point, just weary.
The debates to me are unwatchable. All the candidates are giving canned versions of their stump speeches. McCain rallies have energized the wacko portion of the GOP base with screams of "Arab" (???) and "Kill him." My personal "favorite" was the sheriff in full uniform who used Obama's full name to inspire a little more ill-begotten fear.
Given the economy is in a bi-partisian free fall (Please George, the more you hide, the better the market does), the ill-advised war continues, food isn't getting cheaper, you'd think a straight talker would pick times to do just that.
I want candidates to tell me why I should vote for them. It's laughable to see an ad for Dale Volker saying he'll fix what's wrong in Albany. Dude has been in Albany for 36 years, long enough to realize that he is part of what is broken. McCain has been in Washington for 26 years and isn't speaking to what people in general care about. A friend of mine from the Pittsburgh area went to a speech and emailed me that when he got off the fear-mongering, he started talking about local industry and life in a steel town, conveniently forgetting that we haven't been a steel town in almost 20 years.
Government shouldn't be about that. There should be hope. Events of the past month show that whoever wins just got their agenda strangled considerably. Tell me what's good about you, not what you dislike about the other guy.
People want to have some hope, not be yelled at to get off the grass by the grumpy old codger in the neighborhood, even if you can see Russia from his hot neighbor's taxpayer subsidized front yard.
I'm tired, tired of Karl Rove like smear campaigns, tired of candidates being asked a question and giving a rehearsed answer to SOME OTHER question, tired of the name calling, tired of everybody screaming about "That One," when nothing could matter less.
Quit worrying about connotation, Senator, revive my interest and talk about what you would do.
The platitudes denuded Tom Brokaw in the last debate. While Obama has basically kept on his message, McCain/Palin are all over the place. I hate sports analogies, but the Obama campagin has a large lead in the fourth quarter, with three minutes left and is just running up the middle, while the McCain campaign is trying to get the ball back.
Let's just fucking vote already.
It's funny, because in 2000, I might have voted for John McCain. He made sense, he ran his own world and maverick wasn't a word that Sarah Palin can't spell. Eight years later, the politics of fear is stinking up everything. He did make one statement recently that I couldn't help but respect. He opened up and said that Sen. Obama "was an honorable man with whom I have some profound policy differences."
Political discourse should have that tenor. If he could have kept to that tone, we might have had some meaningful exchanges and some honest issue based discussions. I read a column by William Crystal in the New York Times who mentioned that McCain ought to fire his campaign. That's a little drastic, but he did point out that McCain is top heavy with lobbyists in his campaign heirarchy. I don't really care one way or another, lobbyists are part of the process, but they do in general terms, suck at running campaigns.
They've got him crowing on about William Ayers while the left is trumpeting about Palin's association with an Alaskan secessionist. Too many years of Cheneyesque answers of "vote for us or an attack...." has pervaded everything. Obama should be clear, while Palin is in denial about abuse of power charges? I'm not even amused at this point, just weary.
The debates to me are unwatchable. All the candidates are giving canned versions of their stump speeches. McCain rallies have energized the wacko portion of the GOP base with screams of "Arab" (???) and "Kill him." My personal "favorite" was the sheriff in full uniform who used Obama's full name to inspire a little more ill-begotten fear.
Given the economy is in a bi-partisian free fall (Please George, the more you hide, the better the market does), the ill-advised war continues, food isn't getting cheaper, you'd think a straight talker would pick times to do just that.
I want candidates to tell me why I should vote for them. It's laughable to see an ad for Dale Volker saying he'll fix what's wrong in Albany. Dude has been in Albany for 36 years, long enough to realize that he is part of what is broken. McCain has been in Washington for 26 years and isn't speaking to what people in general care about. A friend of mine from the Pittsburgh area went to a speech and emailed me that when he got off the fear-mongering, he started talking about local industry and life in a steel town, conveniently forgetting that we haven't been a steel town in almost 20 years.
Government shouldn't be about that. There should be hope. Events of the past month show that whoever wins just got their agenda strangled considerably. Tell me what's good about you, not what you dislike about the other guy.
People want to have some hope, not be yelled at to get off the grass by the grumpy old codger in the neighborhood, even if you can see Russia from his hot neighbor's taxpayer subsidized front yard.
I'm tired, tired of Karl Rove like smear campaigns, tired of candidates being asked a question and giving a rehearsed answer to SOME OTHER question, tired of the name calling, tired of everybody screaming about "That One," when nothing could matter less.
Quit worrying about connotation, Senator, revive my interest and talk about what you would do.
The platitudes denuded Tom Brokaw in the last debate. While Obama has basically kept on his message, McCain/Palin are all over the place. I hate sports analogies, but the Obama campagin has a large lead in the fourth quarter, with three minutes left and is just running up the middle, while the McCain campaign is trying to get the ball back.
Let's just fucking vote already.
tinypliny - 10/18/08 09:08
I remember general elections in India a while back and this cross-smearing craziness is exactly what they carried out. It was revolting and depressing at the same time. :(
I remember general elections in India a while back and this cross-smearing craziness is exactly what they carried out. It was revolting and depressing at the same time. :(
metalpeter - 10/14/08 19:24
Well to use the sports thing (e:MrMike) I think McCain is going to get the ball back and kick the last second field Goal to win the game as the clock exspires, or to use another one he is going to line up to kick it Barrack calls a time out it is missed and on the 2nd attempt it is good (yes that really did happen in football this weekend).
Well to use the sports thing (e:MrMike) I think McCain is going to get the ball back and kick the last second field Goal to win the game as the clock exspires, or to use another one he is going to line up to kick it Barrack calls a time out it is missed and on the 2nd attempt it is good (yes that really did happen in football this weekend).
ladycroft - 10/14/08 16:17
what can i say; it's pretty cool to not have tv AND not live in the country :)
what can i say; it's pretty cool to not have tv AND not live in the country :)
theecarey - 10/14/08 15:43
20 days countdown..
I had hoped for a more illustrious and intelligent campaign on both sides. What a circus.
20 days countdown..
I had hoped for a more illustrious and intelligent campaign on both sides. What a circus.
gardenmama - 10/14/08 13:44
AMEN! to that. I'm sick of both of them, and all of their bullshit. The negativity is just exhausting. It would be so incredibly refreshing to have them both actually stand up and say:
I'm not getting sucked into the finger-pointing, name calling, truth-stretching crap about the other guy's campaign - I'm just here to tell you what I plan to do...
Unfortunately, not likely.
AMEN! to that. I'm sick of both of them, and all of their bullshit. The negativity is just exhausting. It would be so incredibly refreshing to have them both actually stand up and say:
I'm not getting sucked into the finger-pointing, name calling, truth-stretching crap about the other guy's campaign - I'm just here to tell you what I plan to do...
Unfortunately, not likely.
leetee - 10/14/08 11:41
pulease, i am growing older by the second. like a whore staring at the ceiling, can't ya'll just get it done?
pulease, i am growing older by the second. like a whore staring at the ceiling, can't ya'll just get it done?
Your Avatar is kinda Ironic since bases on the previews one of the stories will be a Charlie Brown spoof.
THAT was super halloweenirarious! :)
Glad my avatar inspired you. In all truth, yours inspired me to change mine, and I had to pick my second favorite Halloween tv tradition, since you beat me to the best.
no tv and no beer make homer somethin somethin..
haha!