Tuesday, April 24, 2007

Turn out the lights

Alma and I traveled to Maryland over the weekend to play with Colby and Tyler in what was, barring something unexpected, our final quiz bowl tournament, 2007 TRASHionals. There have been ten TRASHionals tournament and I've played in seven of them - if that's not reason enough to hang it up, I don't know what is. (Of course, if that required you to retire, there would be a pretty wide open race for the title next year.)

We went out on a pretty high note. For the fourth time in seven years, we reached the top playoff bracket, placing second in our Saturday round-robin group with a 7-2 record. We went 3-3 in the playoff rounds, 3-4 total in the playoff bracket (as our loss in group play to the eventual winners, Craig, Mike, Joe and Anne, carried over), to finish in what was announced as seventh place but I think there's some debate over that, as the team that was announced as sixth evidently had a worse record than we did and we beat them head-to-head. We were initially announced as fifth in 2005 before it was revised up to fourth, so TRASH doesn't exactly have a history of nailing our placement. I'm sticking with sixth unless someone can show me otherwise.

I had one of my better TRASHionals on a personal note as well, so that was a good enough way to end things. I believe I was fourth in scoring, which is a personal best, and I snatched goods off both Craig and Greg in the yankee swap prize ceremony, so that was fun. I was fourth in scoring mostly on the strength of my playoff rounds, which were driven by an 11-tossup round against the Michigan alum B-squad (the Matt-Rob-Geoff-Steve group). My previous TRASHionals high was 8 (accomplished twice, but not since 2002); in this game I had seven in the second half alone. It would have been even cooler if that had been our final game; we had one more, against recurrent foes Tia and the TRASHmen (our first meeting with them was at 2001 Regionals, where we lost twice in the round robin before the miracle 10-30-10-30 finish in the championship match to beat them; including this year we've played them six times since, which is a pretty high amount, and won five of those), which we won handily in a balanced game for the whole team. It wasn't quite Ted Williams hitting a home run, but it was a good finish to my career, and I think Alma would agree.

And with that, the curtain draws closed. As I said to Alma over the weekend, I think we've pretty much hit our ceiling; until teams like the Keenans, O'Reillys, and that ilk break down or retire, we weren't going to go any higher than sneaking into the top five (as teams of mine did in 2003 and 2005), and it hardly seems worth waiting around for when none of the players on those teams shows any inclination to quit. My personal scoring isn't liable to get much better, especially since I refuse to bother with anything as lame as "studying," and anyway fourth place is pretty good. I'm undoubtedly as good as I've ever been, but that will probably be the case for ten or fifteen more years, and how long do I really need to do this?

What it boils down to is that I no longer get much satisfaction from drilling less experienced teams, and aside from doing that over and over I don't see what more there is for me to achieve. Any team I was a part of would probably need to really hit its packet to get past a hump like the Keenans, and while I think that's doable - even if we haven't beaten them since 2001 - we'd need to hit several of our packets in a row to beat several teams of that type in a playoff, and that doesn't seem likely. (Although I wonder now, idly, how my 11-tossup game would have been affected by the Keenans or O'Reillys, not that we weren't playing a pretty good team in that round.)

Even if I did enjoy playing exactly as much as I once did, the value of trips has gone way, way down. For one thing, I have to pay for this stuff out of pocket now, so thank God for small miracles like this year's tournament being in College Park so I could stay with my parents instead of having to pony up 90 bucks a night or whatever to stay in a hotel on top of 200 bucks for an airplane ticket. For another, I love Alma like crazy, but I'd much rather go on a vacation-style trip with her if I'm going to be shelling out, rather than something that feels like nothing so much as work. The only extracurricular thing we had any time to do while not playing TRASH was a trip to the mini golf course in Laurel, and that's only because I insisted on playing it; I'm sure the other three would just as happily have gone without. I think Colby found a little time to sightsee before his flight on Sunday, but Alma and I were so tired by that point that we couldn't have wandered around DC if we'd wanted to. The point is, you're expending an entire weekend on travel and playing TRASH and you really get very little chance to do anything else. Playing TRASH is fun, but it's not so fun for me that this feels justified.

So, like I wrote in my senior quote, every new beginning comes from some other beginning's end. I'll be forever grateful to TRASH, and quiz bowl in general, for helping to introduce me to the love of my life, but it's time for Alma and me to sever that tie. Not completely, of course, because there are people we know through quiz bowl whom we want to continue to know, but I think we're all past the age where quiz bowl has to provide our primary excuse to be social. It's time for me to grow up just that little bit more.

Alma, Tyler, Colby, Charlie and Ryan, all my other teammates from college and high school, everyone from other teams who was ever fun to interact with, and anyone else whose presence mattered - thanks for eleven years, guys, and good night. Be sure to tip your waitress.

Monday, April 16, 2007

Bush urges public not to turn against guns

WASHINGTON (AP) - In the wake of the deadliest act of gun-related violence in American history, President Bush has gone to the airwaves, urging the American people not to let the incident prejudice them against people of the gun-carrying persuasion.

"What happened today at Virginia Tech University was a terrible tragedy," Bush said. "Almost as terrible as if we let it color our feelings towards guns and the people who are, by the Constitution of this great country, legally allowed to own them."

Thirty people, plus the gunman, have been reported killed so far following the shootings in Blacksburg this morning. So far, zero incidents of violence against gun owners have been reported, and no one has come forward with anti-gun messages in response to the massacre. Nonetheless, the president stressed the importance of remaining vigilant.

"It is all too easy to blame this tragedy on guns and people who own guns," Bush said. "But ask yourself: can all gun owners be held responsible for the actions of a few individuals? No, they cannot." Donning a baseball cap with the NRA logo emblazoned on it, Bush continued: "Guns don't kill people, people do."

Asked if it was not in somewhat poor taste to defend the right to gun ownership in his first response to the tragedy, Bush shook his head. "I dearly hope that this incident does not lead to bigotry and hatred, and condemnation of gun owners simply for their superficial resemblance to the perpetrator of this horrible crime. We must not turn against each other in the wake of this tragedy, but we must also not turn against guns. Sweet, sweet guns."

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Lest you think this is merely a parody news item, check out Bush's actual response:

"He was horrified and his immediate reaction was one of deep concern for the families of the victims, the victims themselves, the students, the professors and all the people of Virginia who have dealt with this shocking incident," White House deputy press secretary Dana Perino said. "His thoughts and prayers are with them."

"The president believes that there is a right for people to bear arms, but that all laws must be followed," Perino said, noting that Bush and Education Secretary Margaret Spellings held a conference on school gun violence last October. "Certainly, bringing a gun into a school domitory and shooting … is against the law and something someone should be held accountable for," Perino said.
Even for this administration, this has to be a new low. Can you imagine if, immediately after 9/11, Bush said that it was important to remember how it was the right of every American to own a boxcutter? Because that's about the equivalent message. "Hey, I know this was a terrible tragedy, but let's head off all the potential gun backlash at the pass: owning guns is TOTALLY LEGAL, people, and if bad things happen with them it's not the fault of guns." The only thing missing was Bush actually reciting the NRA's "Guns don't kill people" line (as he does in the fake story), or maybe him saying it while holding a rifle in one hand and Charlton Heston's crank in the other.

To be fair, it's entirely possible that Bush himself never had any such thought and that this was just an administration talking point, but that's not really much better, is it? We all know that most politicians are slaves to special interest groups, especially Republicans, but do they have to make it so damn obvious?

Thursday, April 12, 2007

Attack of the 50 Foot Lack of Proportion

Full disclosure: for nearly a decade, between ages 9 and 18, I woke up every morning to WFAN, 660 AM in New York. And on every weekday, what was on WFAN at 7 am was Imus in the Morning. As a pre-teen and teenager, I liked the show, even though in my early days of listening to it some of the language went over my head (once leading to an embarrassing encounter at the dinner table involving my use, despite not knowing what it meant, of the word "boner"). They did parody songs about the OJ trial, Bill Clinton impressions, and so on. By the time I was 14 or so I probably appreciated the humor of Imus' show as much as anyone in the country. But, perhaps tellingly, that's about where it peaked.

Today Imus was fired from CBS Radio, one day after MSNBC pulled the plug on its TV simulcast of his show. I can't say I'm surprised; so many sponsors had pulled out that CBS probably couldn't have afforded to pay Imus even if they'd kept him on the air. I don't know what, if anything, he'll do next - at age 67 he's old enough to retire, and it's hard to imagine anyone being able to put him back on the air for several years anyway.

It would be ludicrous to attempt to defend Imus at this point, and I have no intention of doing so. His comment about the Rutgers team was utterly tasteless, and it certainly wasn't funny; while it's arguable whether or not it was a dismissable offense, the outcry and sponsor pullout made that inevitable. All that said, I find it more than a little strange that this is the straw that broke the camel's back. Imus has a history of saying things on the air that rub people the wrong way; the most widely-reported almost all happened after I ceased to be a regular listener, and I typically only heard a small portion of his show anyway, so I can't speak to what it was like hearing them live. But it seems to me, first of all, that he has said much worse things on the air, as have members of his staff. His sports guy once likened the Williams sisters to wild animals (and not in some sort of "misguided flattery" way), and he himself said of Gwen Ifill that it was nice of the New York Times to "let the cleaning lady cover the White House." Note, however, that while these were widely reported in the wake of his recent comments, I don't have any recollection of hearing them before.

I think two things really doomed Imus here, and neither of those was his history of similar comments:

1. The people Imus attacked were amateur athletes.
There seems to be some sort of perception in the mainstream media that virtually any public figure is fair game for ridicule or disdain because, as people effectively paid to be in the public eye, they are capable of handling it. Heckling athletes is considered an art form in some circles, and many fans boo their own players with relish if said player does not succeed at a particular task, as though they were automatons that were built to work every time. (Remember, even a .400 hitter makes an out six times out of ten.) So when Imus' show attacks Ifill, or William Rhoden, or runs jokes about Chappaquiddick three decades after it happened, that's all well and good. After all, these people are professionals.

But listen to some of the comments by and about the Rutgers women. "A slap in the face?" Really? Again, this isn't to defend what Imus said, but the idea that their whole season was "ruined" by what one guy on the radio said strikes me as over the top. I'm sure none of them listened to, cared about, or probably had even heard of Imus until someone mentioned it to them; the women weren't gathered around the radio for their morning Imus powwow when, to their shock and dismay, he attacked them. However bad it was, the level to which the comment has been skewed seems terribly outlandish. True, I'm neither a woman nor black, and I'm not accusing anyone of falsifying their feelings on the incident. But I am saying that the vehemence with which the nation has turned on Imus would be better directed at real racial issues, not a more or less offhand comment by a shock radio icon who gets paid to be controversial. If not for all the sponsors pulling out, Imus probably could have gotten a raise from CBS, simply for drawing so much attention to himself and the show, more than he's had in his entire career.

The key quote comes from Linzell Vaughn, father of one of the players, as quoted in the CNN piece: "Do not disrespect our children." These women are legally adults, but as college students and amateurs there seems to be this sense of overprotection that Imus unwittingly stumbled up against. His comments were wrong, but the PC coddling of the youth in this country gets worse every year.

2. Imus actually had some credibility.
Far worse comments about a diverse range of people emanate from the mouths of radio and television mainstays like Ann Coulter, Rush Limbaugh, Bill O'Reilly, and Sean Hannity on a daily basis. If five comments in ten years seems like a lot, try five comments in ten minutes. The difference? These are all right-wing nutballs who no one takes seriously to begin with. Even when the story occasionally makes it into the mainstream media - like Coulter recently calling John Edwards a "faggot" - there is some quick condemnation and then everyone goes back to their business. Was there any call for Coulter's firing from anything, by, say, Edwards? Of course not. Because (a) Edwards is a public figure who has dealt with attacks before, if not of the same kind and (b) everyone knows Coulter is a space cadet. Firing Ann Coulter for saying something nasty about a Democrat is like firing John Moschitta for talking too fast.

And that was exactly Imus' problem. His show was basically Howard Stern's - except replace Pamela Anderson with Maureen Dowd. Amidst all the relatively low humor (albeit certainly not as low as Stern's), Imus ran charity telethons, discussed politics seriously, interviewed authors - it was like NPR with dick jokes. The problem is, when you do that, people tend not to focus on the dick jokes - until you go too far. And that's exactly what happened. Imus was hoist by his own petard, the petard being his credibility. Put Imus' words in Rush Limbaugh's mouth and he's on the radio right now.

So maybe that's the biggest problem I have with this whole thing. Why should the standard be so much different, just because Imus does some serious interviews? If it's national news and a firing when one person says it, it should be national news and a firing no matter who said it. But I can guarantee you it wouldn't be. The story is being reported as "Imus fired for his comments," but that's bullshit. CBS and MSNBC fired Imus because of money and because of their images, not because they were so bent out of shape over what he said. That doesn't mean it's okay to say, but of all the incidents that have ever gotten radio or TV personalities fired, this has to be among the tamest.

Finally, I liked Jason Whitlock's take on the issue (that's the first time you've ever seen those words in a row), and he's exactly right (and comes at it from a better perspective than I do). Imus' words were distasteful, but were they really that virulent? Were they really so harmful to the black community? It's hard to believe, and I wonder when I think these things if I just don't have the perspective to appreciate them, but Whitlock confirms that at least some members of the black community feel the same way. Imus' remarks should have been frowned upon, and he should have been suspended (as he was prior to being fired), but the end of his career, as this very likely will be, seems a steep price to pay for an insensitive remark that became the cause celebre of a slow news week.

Thursday, April 05, 2007

East Coast bias

Growing up I always felt I had a pull to Chicago, even though I didn't get to spend much time out here. Now that I do live out here, though, I find that in many ways I'm really an East Coast kid at heart. Case in point: the little internal spasms of joy I get listening to all the little references slipped into songs by Fountains of Wayne, the power-pop quartet behind "Stacy's Mom." Anyone who grew up in the New York area in the late 80s/early 90s needs to listen to "Traffic and Weather," the fourth track on FOW's new album of the same name, for a reference to the NBC-4 newscasters that had me cracking up.

Traffic and Weather may not have the hit that Welcome Interstate Managers had in "Stacy's Mom," but it is almost unquestionably a tighter, more consistent album. Where Managers lags for much of its second half, Weather never falters, even if its highest notes aren't quite as high as its predecessor's.

The album opens with what is probably its best overall song, the first single "Someone to Love," which features Adam Schlesinger and Chris Collingwood's typical detailed verses with a rollicking chorus. Like the songs for which they're best known, it's a great slice of power pop, but then so is most of the album - although Schlesinger and Collingwood also love playing with a number of different genres. "Fire in the Canyon" is a better country song than what most country artists are putting out today, for example.

Also on display is the FOW sense of humor - without being as overtly comedic as, say, Weird Al Yankovic, FOW have managed to put together a number of jokes, both straight and wry. For example, "Someone to Love" unfolds by describing the loveless lives of a male and female, and then puts them in the same place for the third verse - but in Beatles-like fashion (think "Drive My Car"), the song twists at the end. "'92 Subaru" and "Strapped for Cash" are both great style parodies - "Subaru," an ode to pointlessly souping up a boring car, sounds like the Doobie Brothers, while "Cash" sounds like a Steely Dan song not told in metaphors. Add in the amusing story of hitting on the woman at the DMV ("Yolanda Hayes") and you've got a pretty funny album.

But as usual, this isn't the whole story. Schlesinger and Collingwood craft pop songs without holes; the words flow all over but they always seem to run together perfectly - consider the line "They tell each other jokes that they both know that they both know" in "New Routine." How many bands could get away with that one? The lyrical craftmanship is on display everywhere from rhyme to meter to wordplay in titles ("Revolving Dora"). The voices change from song to song - a bored business traveler, a jealous boyfriend, a compulsive gambler, various omniscient narrators - but the quality remains pretty constant. There are a couple of lesser songs - "Planet of Weed" is fairly disposable, in particular - but overall the quality is high throughout.

Basically it's another fun album from a band that makes little but. If you liked "Stacy's Mom," there's no reason not to be all over this one.