Coincidences.

November 17th, 2018

In one of those odd historical coincidences, exactly ten years to the day after the Heidi Bowl

…was the one and only telecast of “The Stars Wars Holiday Special”.

Review of the Platinum Edition DVD from Lawrence.

Historical note, suitable for use in schools.

November 17th, 2018

50 years ago today, at about 3 PM Central Time on November 17, 1968, the New York Jets and the Oakland Raiders began a football game.

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Obit watch: November 16, 2018.

November 16th, 2018

Roy Clark. NYT. Nashville Tennessean.

“You can go and get educated, but you can come to ‘Hee Haw’ and get another education,” Mr. Clark said in discussing the show’s far-reaching popularity in a 2016 NPR interview. “The critics all said that the only listeners that we had were country. And I said, ‘Wait a minute — I was just in New York City, and I was walking down the street and a guy yells across and says, “Hey, Roy, I’m a-pickin’.” ’ Well, I’m obligated to say, ‘Well, I’m a-grinnin’.’ ”

William Goldman, noted writer. I loved Which Lie Did I Tell?: More Adventures in the Screen Trade and I keep looking for more of Goldman’s books.

Also, I should look for a copy of “The Ghost & the Darkness” while I’m out and about this weekend.

One more from the road.

November 15th, 2018

I took this one with the baby Nikon and did a little editing on the phone. This is another one that I think came out pretty well: I wanted to get the two graves in front of Geronimo’s into the shot as well, and those markers are actually legible (if you view the photo at full size).

(If you can’t read them, the one on the left is Eva Geronimo Godeley, daughter of Geronimo and Zi-Yeh. Zi-Yeah, one of Geronimo’s wives, is on the right.)

TMQ Watch: November 13, 2018.

November 14th, 2018

Sorry about last week, folks, but between the elections and our wanderings over the state of Oklahoma (motto: “It’s not Scotland.”) we just flat ran out of time before this week’s edition rolled around.

After the jump, this week’s TMQ

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Obit watch: November 13, 2018.

November 13th, 2018

I was in cars all day yesterday, and wanted to give this a chance to shake out after it was announced

For the historical record: Stan Lee. NYT. LAT. WP.

Douglas Rain, “who performed for 32 seasons with the Stratford Festival in Ontario”.

Mr. Rain was somewhat more famous as the voice of HAL 9000 in “2001: A Space Odyssey”.

Firings watch.

November 11th, 2018

Bobby Petrino is done at Louisville.

2-8 so far this season, and 0-7 in conference.

I like the way this one came out.

November 9th, 2018

French 75, U.S. Army Artillery Museum, Ft. Sill, OK.

Obit watch: November 8, 2018.

November 8th, 2018

Christopher Lehmann-Haupt, noted book critic for the NYT.

Administrative note.

November 7th, 2018

I get a lot of hits on the contact information for Austin City Council members page.

Just so everyone knows, I will be updating that and the other contact pages, but not until after the new folks take office, which I think will be January.

That’s not a knife…

November 7th, 2018

World’s largest Bowie knife, Bowie, Texas.

Obit watch: November 7, 2018.

November 7th, 2018

Kitty O’Neil, noted stunt woman and holder of the women’s land speed record.

The Motivator accelerated rapidly, though silently for Ms. O’Neil; she was deaf. Her speed peaked briefly at 618 miles per hour, and with a second explosive run measured over one kilometer, she attained an average speed of 512.7 m.p.h., shattering the land-speed record for women by about 200 m.p.h.

For Ms. O’Neil, her record — which still stands — was the highlight of a career in daredevilry. She also set speed records on water skis and in boats. And, working as a stuntwoman, she crashed cars and survived immolation.

Travel day.

November 7th, 2018

Going to be on the road for a few days. Blogging will be catch as catch can, though I do intend to get some stuff up.

In the meantime, please enjoy this coded musical interlude. I think I’ve posted these before, but what the heck: they’re still great songs.

Update from the legal beat.

November 6th, 2018

I don’t have much to say about this, partly because I’m still busy as all get out, and partly because I don’t know what there is to say.

But: Terry Thompson, the guy who was married to a sheriff’s deputy and choked a man to death outside a Denny’s, was convicted of murder yesterday. (Previously.)

Firings watch.

November 5th, 2018

In great haste: last night was busy, and that’s continued well into today.

David Beaty is out as head coach of Kansas at the end of the season.

Beaty, in four seasons at KU, is 6-39, including a 2-31 record in Big 12 games, 1-19 in road games and 2-2 against FCS opponents.

Please to remember…

November 5th, 2018

I don’t have a lot to add to what I’ve said previously, and I’m busier than a one-legged man in a butt-kicking contest, but:

I wanted to make sure, before it got too late in the day, to wish everyone (especially my peeps in the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland) a happy Guy Fawkes Day.

Please have fun, and try not to blow yourself up or get burned by flaming barrels of tar.

(I wish I knew somebody in the UK who could place an order from Ottery St. Mary for me. It doesn’t look like they will ship to the US. And it also looks like they don’t have the “You Are Here At Your Own Risk” pins any longer: I wanted to order a bunch of those and give them out as Christmas presents.)

Obit watch: November 3, 2018.

November 3rd, 2018

NYT obit for Paul “Dr. Z” Zimmerman.

(Previously.)

Tribute from SI.

I said “My name is Jimmy Traina, I’m a producer for the website and Dr. Z’s personal bitch.”
And I thoroughly enjoyed every minute I had in that role.

Obit watch: November 2, 2018.

November 2nd, 2018

Bernard Bragg, actor.

He graduated from the New York School for the Deaf in 1947 and enrolled at what was then Gallaudet College, studying theater there and acting in school plays. Though he enjoyed performing, there was no obvious career path in show business for a deaf person; instead he took a teaching job at the California School for the Deaf in Berkeley, occasionally performing skits and directing small shows at conventions and clubs for the deaf. Then, in 1956, he made a life-changing trip to see Marceau perform in San Francisco.
Marceau’s ability to hold the crowd’s attention without words so struck Mr. Bragg that he sought Marceau out after the show and, with a note, introduced himself and asked where he could study mime. Marceau asked him to return the next day with a sample of his work, which he did: He performed two original sketches, one in which he played Noah and all the animals on the ark, the other in which he depicted all the instruments of an orchestra. Marceau invited him to study with him in France.
He spent the summer of 1956 doing just that, and when he returned to the United States he began performing in nightclubs, schools and universities in the San Francisco area. His routines were generally a mix of set pieces and improvisation.

He went on to become one of the founders of the National Theater of the Deaf.

Paul “Dr. Z” Zimmerman, SI writer. I really didn’t follow his work for the magazine, but I do have a copy of A Thinking Man’s Guide to Pro Football somewhere. (I’ve heard good things about it.)

Obit watch: November 1, 2018.

November 1st, 2018

NYT obit for Victor Marchetti. (Previously.)

Willie McCovey. SFGate.

Firings watch.

November 1st, 2018

DJ Durkin, University of Maryland football coach.

This is a long and complicated story that I’ve only been paying a little attention to. The short version is that one of Durkin’s players, Jordan McNair, died of heatstroke during a practice in late May. Durkin was suspended while the university conducted an investigation:

…investigators found disturbing things about the program under Durkin’s leadership, including instances of bullying and humiliation by strength coach Rick Court. It also concluded that players did not feel comfortable going to Durkin with issues. But it also said the school had a dysfunctional athletic department that did not serve Durkin well in his development as a first-time head coach.

The university initially decided, earlier this week, to retain Durkin. But (as I read the coverage) this decision was made under pressure from alumni and boosters, and prompted a revolt among students and members of the football team.

Longer, more detailed timeline from ESPN.

TMQ Watch: October 30, 2018.

October 31st, 2018

There can be only one.

After the jump, this week’s TMQ. If it isn’t Scottish, it’s crap!

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Whitey.

October 31st, 2018

If you go back to yesterday’s post, it looks like both the Boston outlets and the NYT did updates (and corrections) in place instead of posting new links. Which saves me some effort…

The big piece of news since the story broke seems to be:

One of the workers said that the inmates were thought to be “affiliated with the mob.” A law enforcement official who oversees organized crime cases said he was told by a federal law enforcement official that a mob figure was believed to be responsible for the killing.

The Patriarca family, maybe? Kind of makes sense…

Howie Carr. I know I’ve mentioned this before, but I thought The Brothers Bulger: How They Terrorized and Corrupted Boston for a Quarter Century was a terrific book.

Firings watch.

October 30th, 2018

I think this counts.

Izaia Bullock, a linebacker for the Rutgers football team, has been dismissed.

“For violating team rules?” I guess you could say that…

…I do believe most teams have rules against murder plots.

Bullock, 22, “initiated a plot to murder the family members of an acquaintance” earlier in the week, according to a statement from the Middlesex County Prosecutor’s Office.
Bullock was charged Tuesday with two counts of attempted murder in the first degree and two counts of conspiracy to commit murder in the first degree.

I wonder if this was one of those situations you see played out so often on the Justice Network: rich child hires patsy to whack his parents while rich kid is off somewhere setting up an alibi…

Obit watch: October 30, 2018.

October 30th, 2018

Wow.

My brother and Mike the Musicologist sent this to me literally within seconds of each other, which goes to show you how well they know me:

James “Whitey” Bulger is dead. He was apparently stabbed to death in a Federal prison in West Virginia.

Details are kind of sketchy right now. Here’s the Boston Herald coverage: apparently he had just been moved to the WV facility from one in Florida.

This is still a developing story, and I’m not finding much coverage outside of the Boston papers: it may be best to wait and post an update tomorrow.

Also among the dead: Victor Marchetti, former CIA agent and author who challenged the agency’s prior approval rule.

Ntozake Shange, noted playwright.

Edited to add: preliminary NYT coverage of Whitey Bulger, which wasn’t up when I posted earlier.

…was found beaten to death on Tuesday in a West Virginia prison. He was 89.
Two Federal Bureau of Prisons employees, who spoke on the condition of anonymity because the information was not yet public, said Mr. Bulger had been beaten unrecognizable by inmates. No other details were immediately available.

Interesting. The anonymous sources are saying he was beaten to death, not stabbed. But…

He was found unresponsive at 8:20 Tuesday morning, according to a statement from the federal Bureau of Prisons. The bureau said that lifesaving measures had been initiated and that he was pronounced dead by the Preston County Medical Examiner. The statement did not indicate a cause of death.

Ah, Cleveland.

October 29th, 2018

Well. Well well well. Well.

The Cleveland Browns just fired head coach Hue Jackson.

(waits for the deafening cries of “What took them so long?” to subside)

Really, what took them so long? The man was 3-36-1 over two and a half seasons.

Also shown the door: offensive coordinator Todd Haley.

Jackson and Haley were both fired after a rift with Haley that began in training camp and was played out on HBO’s Hard Knocks. It continued through Haley defiantly starting Josh Gordon in the opener against Jackson’s wishes, and refusing to play Nick Chubb and Duke Johnson more, which led to the trade of starting running back Carlos Hyde.

(Hattip: Lawrence.)