O.K., um, I like Megan and everything, but this has gender issues attached…

Take the
Which
Screen Saver are you? quiz.
It’s the quiz with oomph!
O.K., um, I like Megan and everything, but this has gender issues attached…

Take the
Which
Screen Saver are you? quiz.
It’s the quiz with oomph!
My brother-in-law sent me an e-mail about Ted Williams and how ESPN had come up with some “bogus” number to prove that he wasn’t as good as Ruth. I love Ted Williams. How could I not? He played for my favorite team. He was the guy my idol “Yaz” replaced in left field. And he was one of the greatest baseball players ever!
But there is some feeling that Williams is the greatest hitter ever–especially in the wake of his passing. “Ruth didn’t face the same competition.” “Williams missed his five best years for the war.” “Williams hit .400 and Ruth didn’t.” The list goes on.
Of course, that got me started, and I had to compare numbers on Baseball-Reference.com and Baseball-Almanac.com.
I’ve been toying with player ranking stats for years. I’ve read all the books by Bill James, and I can almost calculate all the permutations of his Runs Created formula. For a complete discussion on the RC formula…and some insight into how insane I am (because I like this stuff)…see Deciphering the New Runs Created. You’ll run away screaming in no time.
Anyway, I looked at several of the different offensive stats to remind me of how the Ruth vs. Williams debate stacks up.
Now you can read the selections from the Groovy Grove Writing Society on your Palm Pilot….at least, that’s the plan. I don’t own one, so it’s up to you to tell me if the format worked!
Well, I took the plunge and moved the blog to Movable Type. Of course, instead of using the templates that come with the thing, I just had to make it look exactly like the old blog….and promptly messed everything up! I deleted the MT templates, screwed up the database, all kinds of badness.
But, after several hours of percusive maintenance to my head, I got it.
The biggest changes are all behind the scenes. MT gives you all kinds of control over what things look like, when you’ll post, where you’ll post, how many different blogs you’ll post to…ad infinitum. However, now you can leave comments on my rants (I’m scared now). Don’t bother with TrackBack, though…still working on that. **Update: forget about TrackBack for now.**
Ted Williams died Friday.
That phrase just doesn’t sound right–even though we knew it was coming. I suspected it would be soon when I heard that his son, John Henry Williams, who had been taking care of Ted, got a job with a Red Sox minor league club. Just a feeling.
Baseball-Reference.com has all his stats in minute detail. Beyond his interviews, hitting instructional videos, and TV ads for Nissen bread (with Bud Leavitt, for you old Mainers), that is the way we get our picture of The Splendid Splinter.
His accomplishments are amazing: .406 in 1941, two Triple Crowns, two MVP’s (and robbed of at least three more), six AL batting titles, 521 homers (12th all-time), lifetime average of .344 and that does not even count his record as a pilot (he was John Glenn’s wingman in Korea) or his work for The Jimmy Fund.
He hit freakin’ .388 in 1957–when he was 39! For that matter, he led the league with a .328 average in his last season. He’s number 2, behind Babe Ruth, in career Slugging Pct and OPS. Number 1, with .482, in career On-Base Pct. And he missed five of his best years during WWII and Korea!
Goodbye, Teddy Ballgame. In Memoriam
Took in the afternoon showing of MIB2, yesterday. Pretty decent…nothing too exciting. I think it would have been better, if I hadn’t seen the best lines in the previews (same old story). Also, as others have said, it just doesn’t surprise like the first one did. You expect to see everything you see (at least I did).
The trailers were pretty uninspiring for the rest of the summer…”Save us Austin Powers! You’re our only hope!” Although, ya can’t beat seeing the Two Towers trailer in all its glory, and the Terminator 3 tease generated a small buzz.
The most intriguing trailer, though, was for Star Trek Nemesis. Talk about men in black…it looks like the whole movie is dressed in black–crew, villains, Romulans, the whole lot. The trailer makes it look like they are really trying to jazz up the franchise. The villains look mean, and the special effects are more Star Wars than Star Trek. I’ve watched ’em all, good and bad, since 1979, so I won’t stop now. Here’s hoping it sticks with the “odd ones are bad, even ones are good” trend (it is number 10, after all).
With all the stupid projects I start, it’s hard to find a lot of time to devote to any one of them. For example, I promised my first novel would be finished by Thanksgiving. Oh, yeah, of course that was in 1987…
Anyway, as a substitute for my own lack of authorship (and maybe to kick it in the butt), I have launched the Groovy Grove Writing Society. There are no rules for membership. No submission guidelines. No fees. And, best of all, no rejection notices! Just send me something you want people to read, and I will give it a spotlight (ok, maybe a pen light). I do reserve the right to edit submissions, but I won’t hack them to bits without sending them back to the author for review. I think I’m a better editor than writer anyway.
The first two submissions are from Ed Nordfors of Brewer, Maine. Even though Ed is my brother-in-law, there is no nepotism involved. (I work on a cash basis.) Seriously, his short stories are really good. You should take a look at them.
The Chosen is a vampire story with a twist. While, The Keepers gives us a new look into pet care…
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Sorry, I just had to try out the Binary Encode/Decoder I found at Kamel’s Blog. This is ultra geeky coolness.
We went to see Minority Report last night. It’s good to see some serious sci-fi out there. True, it’s not Blade Runner, but it’s really good. The visual effects are stunning (if a little gross at times). Tom Cruise is excellent as John Anderton, the rogue cop who is set up to murder his son’s kidnapper. And I really loved Lois Smith’s scene as the inventor of pre-crime, Dr. Iris Hineman.
As usual, it’s got that Spielberg “must have a happy ending” touch. There are a couple of places where it could have ended with great effect–including just before the wrap-up narrative.
I think I shall have to look for more Philip K. Dick stories to read. Here’s the review by Jason Koornick of www.philipkdick.com.
I really don’t like getting all political and junk in something that’s supposed to be fun, but this whole Pledge of Allegiance thing is getting ridiculous.
For one thing, the Pledge is not mandatory. Nobody’s being forced to recite it. The dweeb, Newdow, that brought this up had no intention of protecting his second grader from being forced to listen to those evil ideas in the pledge. They can’t make her say the pledge, but Newdow claims she’s “injured when she is compelled to ‘watch and listen as her state-employed teacher in her state-run school leads her classmates in a ritual proclaiming that there is a God and that our’s [sic] is one nation under God.'” From Whiny the Elder: “You can’t make a second grader listen to ANYTHING!”
For another, the Pledge is not an endorsement of a state religion. Read the dissenting opinion of Judge Fernandez. He agrees (as do I) with the premise that putting the “under God” phrase in was kind of stupid (my words) and borders on promoting religion. But he says, “…legal world abstractions and ruminations aside, when all is said and done, the danger that ‘under God’ in our Pledge of Allegiance will tend to bring about a theocracy or suppress somebody’s beliefs is so miniscule as to be de minimis. The danger that phrase presents to our First Amendment freedoms is picayune at most.” In other words, “get over it!”
I do take issue with people treating the Pledge as some sort of inviolate mantra. The Pledge was written by a Socialist. Read The Pledge of Allegiance – A Short History by Dr. John W. Baer. “Francis Bellamy (was) a Baptist minister… He was a Christian Socialist. Francis Bellamy in his sermons and lectures…described in detail how the middle class could create a planned economy with political, social and economic equality for all. Francis was pressured into leaving his baptist church in Boston because of his socialist sermons.
He considered placing the word, ‘equality,’ in his Pledge, but knew that the state superintendents of education on his committee were against equality for women and African Americans.
In 1923 and 1924 the National Flag Conference, under the ‘leadership of the American Legion and the Daughters of the American Revolution, changed the Pledge’s words, ‘my Flag,’ to ‘the Flag of the United States of America.’ Bellamy disliked this change, but his protest was ignored.
In 1954, Congress after a campaign by the Knights of Columbus, added the words, ‘under God,’ to the Pledge. Bellamy’s granddaughter said he also would have resented this second change. He had been pressured into leaving his church in 1891 because of his socialist sermons. In his retirement in Florida, he stopped attending church because he disliked the racial bigotry he found there.”
The author of the Pledge is the very kind of person the anti-Communist Congress of the 1950’s was trying to get rid of!
I prefer my Pledge lemony…