But not necessarily any wiser....
47 years ago, Monday, the Beatles arrived, I waited until a day later.
Nothing reminds you that it is anything but a milestone when you get notified that the child is throwing up. Instantly, the morning at home coffee tastes slightly like the swill at the office and the delight of the digital greetings generated by Facebook and a few well-meaning bots during the overnight get dampened a little with the reminder that even though I took off, as a parent you are never really off.
So, as I sip the evening’s ale, cleaning out some random notes as I head a little closer to grumpy old man hood.
I, like at lot of hockey fans here, have been following the gossip leading the Buffalo Sabres‘ new owner. Out of the hullabaloo and the questionable practices of recent months, I have an admiration for Lindy Ruff as a stand up guy. He wouldn’t slip any contract extension under the public relations wire. That is a nice show of integrity that combined with Mr. Pegula’s supposed Cup desires might make Buffalo desireable for free agents and guys with Kaberle-like no trade agreements. It does kind of stink to see Rene Robert upset with the club, Don Luce and Craig Ramsay succeeding in other colors, and one of the hottest GM possibilities, Rick Dudley, landing elsewhere.
I’m not really concerned that the national anthem got a little butchered at the Super Bowl. I don’t think it was intentional, stuff does happen. The bloated faux patriotism of reading the Declaration of Independence by football folk past and present seemed rather shallow.
I never been huge fan of the remastering of classic albums. I’ve picked up a few a long the way, but I’m not enough of an audiophile to always pick up on the subtleties. The packaging and production is getting pretty elaborate. When the anniversary remaster of Bruce Springsteen‘s “Darkness on the Edge of Town†was announced. I was really intrigued because there was a lot of there there, so to speak, but not enough to justify the $80 price tag. Well, gift cards are good things as with the aid of amazon largess, only $30 will bring that home to me. Got to buy yourself a present sometimes, ya know.
I’m shocked, shocked I say that Hassan was found guilty. Yes, that is sarcasm dripping off your screen. If anything the local version of “trial of the century†was a nice demonstration on how accused should probably think twice about representing themselves. I am a little relieved that all the media folks can go cover something else.
Go see the Skiffle Minstrels play sometime. Try to have a bad time, you can’t do it, I dare you. You’ll be in a good mood by the end of “All Night Diner.†If you aren’t tapping something at the very least, then I’m pretty sure you need a check up.
You never have to check tire pressure on a warm day, it’s always days like today where the wind is blowing and your gloves are just bloated enough to ensure you got remove ‘em. One of Murphy’s laws that makes me want to smack Murphy with a bag of hammers.
I’ve been checking on the Sabres game while writing this and coverage on the Versus network is still headache inducing, including Tampa-rooting announcers. That just seem wrong on a number of levels.
Yeah, 47…the new 37.
Mrmike's Journal
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02/09/2011 06:31 #53578
Another year olderCategory: random
01/29/2011 10:15 #53509
The first HooptyCategory: random
My favorite television program, my can’t miss, never get sick of it show is “Top Gear.†I never miss it, discovered courtesy BBC America a few years ago and have been hooked ever since. The next season of new episodes returns on February 7th and to celebrate that and my birthday on the 8th (although I suspect more likely the former), the producers put out a call for first car stories on the Top Gear website. to tell your tale of automotive woe.
Presenting mine:
Gruesome, isn’t it. That isn’t the exact car. Mine was black and and the black paint job couldn’t cover up for what a bad idea this was. When I picked up the car, the radio was the easiest thing to fix. When I got rid of the car 16 months later, it was the best part of the car. In the intervening months, I believe it was trying to kill me.
Ford had a good thing going with the mustang, but the 70s were not the best of times for that brand. With an alarmingly regularity, various parts of the car daisy-changed their ineffectiveness to rob me of sanity and spare change. While both my judgement and Mustangs in general have righted themselves, I think it took experience for both of us. The car had a thing. It didn’t like Maple Road to get me to my bookstore job, always hitting the red light by UB, all the better for the 4 cylinders of the engine to scream in pain and torture as the car made it up the hill. The patch of ice that sent me for a 100 foot or so skid on Sheridan Drive. The seat that lost its latch while I was driving, while my Mom was in the car. Yes, kids, the days before Carfax were not pretty ones. In between those incidents was a steady display of mechanical revolt, a impressive daisy chain of automotive uprising. I was almost a believer that FORD did at one time stand for FOUND ON ROAD DEAD. At the time, it was a 50/50 split on whether that would be the car or me. Since those days, we’ve both smartened up. The mustang still intrigues me. It looks more like it should, back closer to Carroll Shelby instead of Carroll O’Connor.
In the meantime, my current GM product is sailing along just fine, finally got it some dry pavement to go on here on the ice planet Hoth, and it went like a puppy on a romp in the park. But I think about that car periodically as one of my colleagues at the Zoo has a black mustang (a proper one), a bad idea wrapped in a decent paint job. When a vehicle’s main attribute is looking cool in the windows of Casey’s Nickelodeon (where Talking Leaves is now), that should be a problem.
Lord knows the Mustang thought so.
Presenting mine:
Gruesome, isn’t it. That isn’t the exact car. Mine was black and and the black paint job couldn’t cover up for what a bad idea this was. When I picked up the car, the radio was the easiest thing to fix. When I got rid of the car 16 months later, it was the best part of the car. In the intervening months, I believe it was trying to kill me.
Ford had a good thing going with the mustang, but the 70s were not the best of times for that brand. With an alarmingly regularity, various parts of the car daisy-changed their ineffectiveness to rob me of sanity and spare change. While both my judgement and Mustangs in general have righted themselves, I think it took experience for both of us. The car had a thing. It didn’t like Maple Road to get me to my bookstore job, always hitting the red light by UB, all the better for the 4 cylinders of the engine to scream in pain and torture as the car made it up the hill. The patch of ice that sent me for a 100 foot or so skid on Sheridan Drive. The seat that lost its latch while I was driving, while my Mom was in the car. Yes, kids, the days before Carfax were not pretty ones. In between those incidents was a steady display of mechanical revolt, a impressive daisy chain of automotive uprising. I was almost a believer that FORD did at one time stand for FOUND ON ROAD DEAD. At the time, it was a 50/50 split on whether that would be the car or me. Since those days, we’ve both smartened up. The mustang still intrigues me. It looks more like it should, back closer to Carroll Shelby instead of Carroll O’Connor.
In the meantime, my current GM product is sailing along just fine, finally got it some dry pavement to go on here on the ice planet Hoth, and it went like a puppy on a romp in the park. But I think about that car periodically as one of my colleagues at the Zoo has a black mustang (a proper one), a bad idea wrapped in a decent paint job. When a vehicle’s main attribute is looking cool in the windows of Casey’s Nickelodeon (where Talking Leaves is now), that should be a problem.
Lord knows the Mustang thought so.
mrmike - 01/31/11 23:41
Lib, I like the older ones as they actually didn't look all alike, but that car was a piece of shite
Lib, I like the older ones as they actually didn't look all alike, but that car was a piece of shite
paul - 01/30/11 11:44
I guess I am glad we did not pick a ford. I really enjoyed this story.
I guess I am glad we did not pick a ford. I really enjoyed this story.
tinypliny - 01/30/11 08:36
If I ever missed having a car (I don't), I would probably get a Smart-for-2. Feels like I don't belong in bigger cars. Everything is massive in scale and I feel like I am sinking in them.
If I ever missed having a car (I don't), I would probably get a Smart-for-2. Feels like I don't belong in bigger cars. Everything is massive in scale and I feel like I am sinking in them.
libertad - 01/29/11 23:33
I don't really appreciate cars all that much like some people do but I really love that car. I would love to have that car in the picture. Are cars like that cheaper to fix than new cars because they are easier or is it harder because parts aren't available?
Sometimes I miss having a car and other times I love not having one. I'm definitely glad that I don't NEED a car.
I don't really appreciate cars all that much like some people do but I really love that car. I would love to have that car in the picture. Are cars like that cheaper to fix than new cars because they are easier or is it harder because parts aren't available?
Sometimes I miss having a car and other times I love not having one. I'm definitely glad that I don't NEED a car.
01/28/2011 13:20 #53504
The Blizzard of 77Category: weather
Sure, it stunk getting into work this morning, then I got the reminder about this lovely storm from somebody who had the termerity to not be alive when it hit. 34 years ago today, I got a whiff of capitalism. Neighbors went to Florida two days before and hired me to shovel their driveway while they were away, figuring they’d pay me for a couple of passes. Can you say eight?? My best childhood chum and I went on a record purchasing bender at National Record Mart with our proceeds.
Till that storm, helping my dad with the snow removal largely consisted of staying out of the way while he ran our behemoth of a snow blower. Mom would say “perhaps you should help your dad.†I could sincerely reply “I am†while watching tv. This made sense as the snowblower was a big one and the last thing you needed while running it was somebody else “helping†at one end of the driveway.
This was mammoth snow and the blowing made things impressive until you had to move them. My childhood home had such an odd shape that a roughly eight foot wall formed outside the back door, but left enough of a canal to the garage that we could make it to the garage to access our “Battery of snow-fighting equipment.†It was a rare occurence as usually helping my Dad clear the driveway meant staying out of the line of fire (and usually inside), but I think even my brother was party of the relocation of the driveway campaign.
The winds made it a multiple day chore, but by the time the worst was over, I was an ace snowblower pilot and using that on those Florida bound neighbors, who are still stuck listening to everybody else’s Blizzard tales.
My longtime partner and crime used the almost two weeks off from school on some arctic architectural pursuits, constructing a snow fort still legendary in its expanse, two floors, complete with slide to get from the balcony level down to the mezzanine.
Even the neighborhood bully was impressed
Till that storm, helping my dad with the snow removal largely consisted of staying out of the way while he ran our behemoth of a snow blower. Mom would say “perhaps you should help your dad.†I could sincerely reply “I am†while watching tv. This made sense as the snowblower was a big one and the last thing you needed while running it was somebody else “helping†at one end of the driveway.
This was mammoth snow and the blowing made things impressive until you had to move them. My childhood home had such an odd shape that a roughly eight foot wall formed outside the back door, but left enough of a canal to the garage that we could make it to the garage to access our “Battery of snow-fighting equipment.†It was a rare occurence as usually helping my Dad clear the driveway meant staying out of the line of fire (and usually inside), but I think even my brother was party of the relocation of the driveway campaign.
The winds made it a multiple day chore, but by the time the worst was over, I was an ace snowblower pilot and using that on those Florida bound neighbors, who are still stuck listening to everybody else’s Blizzard tales.
My longtime partner and crime used the almost two weeks off from school on some arctic architectural pursuits, constructing a snow fort still legendary in its expanse, two floors, complete with slide to get from the balcony level down to the mezzanine.
Even the neighborhood bully was impressed
metalpeter - 01/29/11 14:31
love that picture of that car..............
love that picture of that car..............
mrmike - 01/29/11 08:59
Tiny, yeah, I forgot what intersection it was, but I liked it because it gave an idea as to just how much snow fell. People downtown were walking out of some second floor windows. Nothing we've had since could compare
Tiny, yeah, I forgot what intersection it was, but I liked it because it gave an idea as to just how much snow fell. People downtown were walking out of some second floor windows. Nothing we've had since could compare
tinypliny - 01/29/11 03:23
hey, I have seen that traffic light photo somewhere... maybe on your blog last year?
hey, I have seen that traffic light photo somewhere... maybe on your blog last year?
paul - 01/28/11 17:05
However much I generally hate snow, that looks pretty fun to play in. My parents said I was born during this storm and no one could visit me. I guess that is better than being born stuck in a car in the blizzard.
However much I generally hate snow, that looks pretty fun to play in. My parents said I was born during this storm and no one could visit me. I guess that is better than being born stuck in a car in the blizzard.
01/20/2011 13:43 #53459
The Rubber Chicken circuitCategory: work
I embark on my least favorite aspects of my job at a reception this evening. The business development or sponsorship stuff falls to me and that is okay, I can fake sincerity with the best of them. I'm pretty good at it, but that sort of thing can be exhausting.
There is a raft of networking events here and I guess that is good, but seeing the facebook note about me being an "Executive to Connect" with makes me laugh.
Those of us with that distinction have to man a table and wait for people who attended come and network, hopefully become a sponsor or something like that.
The whole exercise reminds of those personal ads on late night tv, the phone services and what not. I'm thinking I should start one to encourage partnerships.
"Hi, I'm Mike and you want my public. People came to me over 400,000 times last year and signed up for more. You need my marketing demographic, you crave their power, you want them to scream your name. Come by, say hi, meet my people (eye wink, light glistening off tease.) Thousands play with our animals, shouldn't you."
Well maybe not, but it is easy for your mind to go out for a long walk when some carpeting salesman is telling you how hard it is to sell fiber based padding in these market conditions.
Hopefully, stuff comes from it that makes it worth it, but by the 12th or 13th commemorative pen, I'll be thinking about getting home in time for the Office.
There is a raft of networking events here and I guess that is good, but seeing the facebook note about me being an "Executive to Connect" with makes me laugh.
Those of us with that distinction have to man a table and wait for people who attended come and network, hopefully become a sponsor or something like that.
The whole exercise reminds of those personal ads on late night tv, the phone services and what not. I'm thinking I should start one to encourage partnerships.
"Hi, I'm Mike and you want my public. People came to me over 400,000 times last year and signed up for more. You need my marketing demographic, you crave their power, you want them to scream your name. Come by, say hi, meet my people (eye wink, light glistening off tease.) Thousands play with our animals, shouldn't you."
Well maybe not, but it is easy for your mind to go out for a long walk when some carpeting salesman is telling you how hard it is to sell fiber based padding in these market conditions.
Hopefully, stuff comes from it that makes it worth it, but by the 12th or 13th commemorative pen, I'll be thinking about getting home in time for the Office.
tinypliny - 01/21/11 02:18
as opposed to
"Hi, My name is Inigo Montoya, you killed my father, prepare to die"?
as opposed to
"Hi, My name is Inigo Montoya, you killed my father, prepare to die"?
01/13/2011 14:36 #53432
Joy Division“A female Jewish democratic congresswoÂman representiÂng a conservatiÂve district was saved by a gay Latino male rushing toward bullets. Meanwhile, the gunman was disarmed by a woman who’d already been shot by the gunman while a guy who was there and armed was deciding whether or not to use his handgun for defense. I believe some stereotypeÂs have been shattered here.â€
You would hope. While the events in Tucson over the weekend resulted in a lot of theme music and serious graphics, you also hope the dialogue gets a little more civil. Normally, a social media junkie, I turned away a bit as the postings got more raw and bitter.
Immediately, linguistic finger pointing and politicizing seemed to become the order of the day. The forums have quickly denigrated into a liberal Dems vs. arch con republican bashing.
There are ways to be a person and the folks around Congresswoman Gifford showed that. Here’s hoping those with microphones, jargon laden websites, and airtime do the same. It says something about the human condition that we didn’t have any outrage about that stuff till now. A social media forum tonight showed me inroads these dialogues are making, which I still believe to be a good thing. But I remember when the attempt on President Reagan’s life happened. It was a “everybody’s concerned†atmosphere. The public air seemed devoid out any rancor, just concern that the President was alright and by extension the country was okay. It’s okay to disagree, in fact, we’re supposed to, but we are supposed to be able to talk it out.
That is troubling for all the obvious reasons. Hopefully, the calls to quiet the metaphors will be heeded.
You would hope. While the events in Tucson over the weekend resulted in a lot of theme music and serious graphics, you also hope the dialogue gets a little more civil. Normally, a social media junkie, I turned away a bit as the postings got more raw and bitter.
Immediately, linguistic finger pointing and politicizing seemed to become the order of the day. The forums have quickly denigrated into a liberal Dems vs. arch con republican bashing.
There are ways to be a person and the folks around Congresswoman Gifford showed that. Here’s hoping those with microphones, jargon laden websites, and airtime do the same. It says something about the human condition that we didn’t have any outrage about that stuff till now. A social media forum tonight showed me inroads these dialogues are making, which I still believe to be a good thing. But I remember when the attempt on President Reagan’s life happened. It was a “everybody’s concerned†atmosphere. The public air seemed devoid out any rancor, just concern that the President was alright and by extension the country was okay. It’s okay to disagree, in fact, we’re supposed to, but we are supposed to be able to talk it out.
That is troubling for all the obvious reasons. Hopefully, the calls to quiet the metaphors will be heeded.
tinypliny - 01/21/11 02:21
To me, it's a strong statement about how people might be stepping closer to NOT thinking for themselves and converting to sheep. :/
To me, it's a strong statement about how people might be stepping closer to NOT thinking for themselves and converting to sheep. :/
Wish you a super-awesome year ahead, (e:mrmike)!
Happy birthday!! Yeah, the Skiffle Minstrels are lots of fun.
Happy Birthday!
The Skiffle Minstrels are pretty good
That entire deceleration thing is kinda odd fox has done it before though liked that Rice was part of it but found it odd that ward was doesn't he have a game to get ready for.... Even with the flub it was a great anthem and just blanked on the girl from Glee she was pretty good also...
Isn't 47 the new black?
That Hassan guy is such an asshole. The whole freaking trial was just so he could punish that poor woman he killed one more time. It was sickening.
Happy Birthday! Hope you have a wonderful 47.
Happy birthday! Hope you have q great year.