Bag of Randomness for Tuesday, January 17, 2017

  • From the comments yesterday, I’m going to have to get an HDTV antenna for backup sports purposes and should see if my television has the ability to automatically display closed captioning when put on mute. Thanks.
  • The last human to walk on the moon, Eugene Cernan, died yesterday. Two things I’ll like to note.
    • His daughter was nine-years-old when he was on the moon and he wrote her initials on the surface. There’s an interview of her I saw many moons ago (see what I did there?) that I can’t track down, but she stated she didn’t think much of it at the time, but as she got older, she understood just how cool that fatherly gesture was.
    •  He had a few regrets about how he left the moon.
      • But 44 years ago, when his space boots pressed down into moon dust for the final time, and he lifted them on to the rungs of his lunar module’s ladder, he looked back at the prints he had left – but didn’t think to take a photo. Nor did it cross his mind when he scratched his daughter Tracy’s initials into the greyish dust. “I wish I’d had a camera,” says Gene. “And for the most nostalgic moment; the moment when I was going up the ladder and turned round and saw the Earth still there, still beautiful.
        • OK. One additional item I want to note which comes from that old article. I love his description of sight and sound.
          • “The moon, unfortunately, is magnificently beautiful but a bland colour,” he says. “When we landed, we had mountains surrounding us higher than the Grand Canyon is deep. But they weren’t snow covered and there were no trees, no water running down the hills. They were grey and bland… but still overwhelming in terms of beauty.” He adds: “And though we were in spacesuits, you could feel the silence. It was stark silence, nothing, zero.”
  • If you are a fan of NPR’s “Wait Wait… Don’t Tell Me!” you have to check out the latest episode in which Tom Hanks is the guest host.
  • A lot of U2 fans in Dublin were camping outside waiting to buy tickets for their upcoming concert so Bono decided to order pizza for them.
    • Speaking of pizza, here’s a random bit of pizza trivia I recently ran across:
      • Despite its name, Hawaiian pizza is not a Hawaiian invention but Canadian.
        • And I bet it’s crap like that is why you keep coming back to this here blog.
  • Rolling Stone – The Edge Breaks Down U2’s Upcoming ‘Joshua Tree’ Tour
    Guitarist also reveals status of band’s upcoming ‘Songs of Experience’ LP and discusses rare songs fans might get to hear live

    • I was wondering about this, but it sounds contradictory:
      • Are you going to play the album in sequence at the shows?
        I believe we will, and I say “believe we will” because that is certainly the working assumption right now. The show might not necessarily start with Track One, Side One, “Where the Streets Have No Name,” because we feel like maybe we need to build up to that moment, so we’re still in the middle of figuring out exactly how the running order will go, so yes. We will be playing the album in sequence.
  • Not a lot of tweets make me literally laugh out loud, but this one did – @MsTexas1967: The Bruce Springsteen cover band have pulled out of Trump’s inauguration but their slot will be filled by Huey Lewis and the Fake News
  • I keep thinking about how President-Elect Trump is the P.T. Barnum of our time, and how in many ways, he’s so much better at self-promoting than Barnum ever was, and he’s considered the epitome. But it’s a bit strange I’ve been thinking of that for a while and now Ringling Bros. and Barnum & Bailey Circus will be no more before summer hits.
  • This New York Times article is about President Obama and his love of books. But the author’s claim that Obama, like Lincoln, taught himself how to write is ludicrous or a metaphor just zoomed right passed me going mach five.
  • New York Times – The Lost Footage of Marilyn MonroeThat film image of Ms. Monroe’s skirt rising high in a gust of air? It’s a reshoot of a discarded and more risqué scene seldom seen until now.
    • I never knew that Joe DiMaggio was a wife beater. The lyrics to “Mrs. Robinson” will never be the same:
      • Where have you gone, Joe DiMaggio
        Our nation turns its lonely eyes to you
      • A bit of trivia on the song from Wikipedia:
        • Paul Simon met Joe DiMaggio accidentally in a New York restaurant, and the two immediately discussed the song. DiMaggio said “What I don’t understand, is why you ask where I’ve gone. I just did a Mr. Coffee commercial, I’m a spokesman for the Bowery Savings Bank and I haven’t gone anywhere!” Simon replied “that I didn’t mean the lines literally, that I thought of him as an American hero and that genuine heroes were in short supply. He accepted the explanation and thanked me. We shook hands and said good night.” In a New York Times op-ed in March 1999, shortly after DiMaggio’s death, Simon discussed this meeting and explained that the line was meant as a sincere tribute to DiMaggio’s unpretentious heroic stature, in a time when popular culture magnifies and distorts how we perceive our heroes. He further reflected: “In these days of Presidential transgressions and apologies and prime-time interviews about private sexual matters, we grieve for Joe DiMaggio and mourn the loss of his grace and dignity, his fierce sense of privacy, his fidelity to the memory of his wife and the power of his silence.”
  • Mark Zuckerberg kicks off year of travel with charity work in Dallas
  • I used to give Steve Harvey the benefit of the doubt on most things, but his comments about Asian men is hurtful and in bad taste. It was hard, even as a half-Asian, being turned down by girls because of my ethnicity. But, maybe I’m the victor in the end since I ended up with a white girl.
    • During a Jan. 6 episode of his talk show, Harvey ran through some dating books, including 2002’s How to Date a White Woman: A Practical Guide for Asian Men. “That’s one page,” he said. “‘Excuse me, do you like Asian men?’ ‘No.’ ‘Thank you.’” He then asked an imaginary black woman if she liked Asian men, and acted out her response: “I don’t even like Chinese food, boy. It don’t stay with you no time. I don’t eat what I can’t pronounce.”
    • I do appreciate Eddie Huang’s thoughts on the matter, he expresses a lot of things that have gone through my head:
      • … every Asian-American man knows what the dominant culture has to say about us. We count good, we bow well, we are technologically proficient, we’re naturally subordinate, our male anatomy is the size of a thumb drive and we could never in a thousand millenniums be a threat to steal your girl.
      • Attractiveness is a very haphazard dish that can’t be boiled down to height or skin color, but Asian men are told that regardless of what the idyllic mirepoix is or isn’t, we just don’t have the ingredients.
      • But no matter how successful I was, how much self-improvement was made, or how aware I was that stereotypes are not facts, there were times I thoroughly believed that no one wanted anything to do with me. I told myself that it was all a lie, but the structural emasculation of Asian men in all forms of media became a self-fulfilling prophecy that produced an actual abhorrence to Asian men in the real world. That’s why this Steve Harvey episode is so upsetting. He speaks openly about issues facing the black community, he is a man of God, and he has a huge platform to speak from.
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Bag of Randomness for Monday, January 16, 2017

  • WifeGeeding and I watched La La Land for a second time, but this time we brought the kids around. After the movie, DaughterGeeding told me she wished we would have watched Star Wars instead. That girl can melt my heart sometimes.
  • During the game yesterday I got up to use the restroom during a commercial break but didn’t make it back in time before it resumed. Without and sort of prompting, four-year-old BoyGeeding paused the game and told me he didn’t want me to miss any of it. That boy can melt my heart sometimes.
  • The Cowboys can break my heart sometimes, but despite their slow start, I’m proud of them overall and was highly entertained this season. It was great seeing the community come together again and rally behind this team, and unlike other years, we’ve got hope going into the next season. I’ve got the utmost respect for Aaron Rogers and his team.
  • The weather was so bad in Lewisville we lost our DirecTV signal and missed the game-winning field goal. But then again, I wasn’t at the game, witnessed the devasting loss, and had to go out in a thunderstorm and walk to my car parked seven miles away.
  • I don’t care what anyone says, Tony Romo should have played, he would have blocked that field goal.
  • Resale market for Super Bowl tickets slips after Cowboys ousted
  • I was just a little peeved, okay, maybe more than just a little, at PBS last night when I was watching the season and possibly the series finale of ‘Sherlock’. During a pivotal scene, for about two minutes, they scrolled a severe warning message at the top of the screen but stopped all audio from the show and replaced it with an announcement. Hey, I get their commitment to public service and safety, but seriously, the red banner scroll at the top of the screen with maybe a few warning beeps would have been enough. Taking out two minutes of audio to hear a verbal warning along with the message at the top of the screen was overkill.
  • I missed the first forty minutes of SNL but watched it NBC.com. To my surprise, I didn’t have to sit through one commercial.
  • WifeGeeding and I did an escape room challenge. It was my third and her first. We got out with eleven minutes to spare. But it was the first time I did one without my closest friends, who I all believe are vastly more intelligent than me. So it was great being able to do it with a room full of strangers and being able to vastly contribute by being the first to solve many of the puzzles and locks and find some hidden clues. I dunno, I felt validated for some reason, and it was great being to do it in front of WifeGeeding, who contributed greatly herself.
  • Armchair Sports Psychologist – For any major football game in which you can tell nerves are getting the best of your team, always start with rushing the ball. Players start to settle down after that first play and rushing the ball is less likely to cause a turnover or loss of yardage.
  • Portable toilet names covered for inauguration
    • Workers preparing for the inauguration Jan. 20 have taped over the name of the company — “Don’s Johns” — that has long supplied portable restrooms for major outdoor events in the nation’s capital. Virginia-based Don’s Johns calls itself the Washington area’s top provider of portable toilet rentals. But the name apparently strikes too close to home for organizers of the inauguration of Donald John Trump.
  • I think the Bush twins are exceptional women, and they taking the time to write a letter to the Obama girls about life after the White House is a nice touch of grace and civility we lacking in society. However, the cynic in me would have appreciated the gesture more if Jenna Bush didn’t work for the ‘Today’ show and make it into a segment with them reading the letter in front of the American flag. The sincerity was lost.
  • A man in Greenwich, Connecticut got in a political argument with a female coworker, grabbed her by the *um-hum*, and allegedly said, “I love this new world, I no longer have to be politically correct.”
    • As he walked out, he warned her that it would be “his word against hers” but apparently didn’t realize there was surveillance footage police would later use to confirm the whole event.
  • On Saturday, SpaceX launched a Falcon 9 rocket and took 10 satellites into space for voice and data company Iridium. I thought I knew a decent amount of space, but had no idea more than one satellite could be taken into space at a time.
  • If I were to write a script or put on a play regarding Noah and the Ark, as the animals start arriving, I’d want some to say to him, “You’re gonna need a bigger boat.” Most folks incorrectly state that famous line as “We’re gonna need a bigger boat.”
  • I’m guessing this Buzzfeed article on the “growth mindset” was written by a British author. He kept using the word “math” in the plural form, “maths”, and it was throwing me off because I’ve never seen it in the plural form.
  • Sports trivia tidbit:
    • There are 22 states that have at least one NFL team.
    • There are 21 states (plus D.C.) that have at least one NFL team.
    • There are 17 states (plus D.C.) that have at least one MLB team.
    • There are 16 states (plus D.C.) that have at least one MLB team.
  • Some folks will spend money and think differently about appearances and fandom than me.
  • Random somewhat recent Roger Staubach story:
    • Just last week, Staubach had a meeting at his commercial real estate company, JLL, and one of his employees said that to land a New York real estate deal would “probably take a Hail Mary to pull off.” Staubach just looked at him thinking, dude???
  • A very good Sports Illustrated article on Stephen Jones, here are a few pieces which stood out:
    • Stephen, too, had been a standout prep quarterback, in Little Rock, good enough to be recruited by Princeton, where he would have competed for the QB job with a ginger-haired freshman named Jason Garrett.
      • Here’s another article on Stephen which adds a bit more to that story.
        • By senior year, he was recruited by Lou Holtz to play at Arkansas. But Princeton wanted him, too, and Jerry was thrilled with the idea of an Ivy League son. “I don’t want to go to Princeton,” Stephen said. “Let me sleep on it,” Jerry said. The next day, Jerry gave his familiar refrain: “I’ve got a deal for you.” Stephen could attend Arkansas if he took the most difficult academic program offered. “I think I still might be the only scholarship football athlete at Arkansas who majored in chemical engineering,” he said.
    • Some days, if Stephen was going to be in the building, connecting with coaches and watching tape, he’d wear a polo shirt. On others, when he was selling suites or sponsorships, he’d don a suit, complete with a pocket square. Parcells would see the suit and sigh. “I’d walk into his office, and he’d go, ’Stadium Steve today.’” Pointing at the pocket square, Parcells would say, in an accusing tone, “See that hankie? That means you’re gonna be out there selling Dr. Pepper and Pepsi and Ford trucks today, working on things that aren’t important to Bill.” Then they’d both laugh.
    • The story also mentions how the city of Frisco was outbid by The Colony to land Nebraska Furniture Mart – “After losing that bid, says Jones, “[Frisco] used that property to do their deal with us.” The city kicked in $90 million toward a parking lot and 12,000-seat indoor stadium.”
  • A 1985 LA Times article about Texas Stadium getting its first luxury suites.
    • This summer, 118 Crown Suites have been added to the 178 Circle Suites. This cost the stadium about 1,500 seats. But this will cost suite patrons $26.50 per game ticket. That’s right, J.R., tickets are not included in the $1.5 million cash you paid for your 20-seat Crown Suite. What do you think this is, Arlington Stadium?
    • Unlike the Circle Suites, the Crowns come pre-decorated. You may choose from three color schemes–gray, maroon or blue on gray. Each suite comes with reclining chairs, wet bar, VCR hookup, two TVs (one computerized) and electric windows, just like your limo’s.
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