Friday, July 30, 2010

Girlfriend of the Week

This week's GOTW is the hot chick from Destination Truth and SyFy's new show Fact or Faked:  Paranormal Files.  Her name is Jael de Pardo and apparently she is also on Current TV, which I do not believe is a real channel or show, or whatever it is. 

I first saw her on DT with old Josh Gates.  As most of you know, I am not a believer of paranormal crap, yet I love watching DT.  She was one of the many reasons the show was enjoyable.  She is hot, funny, and seemingly intelligent.  That is a huge turn-on.





Thursday, July 29, 2010

Back From California

I have something heartbreaking and shocking to reveal to all of you. Are you ready? Ok. Here it goes.

Sometimes, once in a while, I will take a trip that does not include a sporting event. Of course, I should note, it is not for lack of trying. This past weekend I made a swing out to San Diego for my brother's bachelor party weekend, where we celebrated bachelordom like all men do: at a Comic Book Convention.

This was a pretty interesting experience with more wild costumes and crazy comic book obssessees than you can shake a stick at. I enjoyed myself even if there were no baseball games to go around, but the lesson should be taught that sometimes you're going to have to accept that not every plan will come to fruition. For this weekend in San Diego and Los Angeles, that was certainly the case. I had accepted the fact that the Padres would not be in town the weekend I was there -- and after arriving it became painfully obvious that Comic-Con so takes over the city that hosting baseball games is a ridiculous idea -- but I had not yet given up hope that I might catch my Amazins, who were going to be in Los Angeles over the weekend.

But, of course, it didn't work out that way, nor did I get to catch the Angels in Anaheim the next night due to a number of mixed signals and confused schedules. Not that this is the worst thing in the world. As I have explained, Los Angeles isn't a city I don't expect to go through again, like, say, Oklahoma City. I will be in Los Angeles again, though after the 45 hours I spent there, I'm not sure how many times I can be there.

That isn't a slight against my hosts, who were phenomenally generous and fun, but L.A. just isn't my kind of city. And in many regards, it's a total fantasy land.

At least I did get to take more than my fair share of looks at Petco Park in San Diego, which was literally next to our hotel, and came within walking distance of Angel Stadium in Anaheim. Whether or not you can view these things as cool sightseeing or cruel teases is up to you.

In the meantime, a valuable lesson was learned about how sometimes things just won't work out. And I'm probably just going to have to cope with that. And unlike when some best laid plans fall through, I won't always have a Russian oligarch to bail me out.

And so, with that, I have come to accept that I will have to knock the Dodgers, Angels and Padres off the list some other time, but considering the Mets were in L.A. to polish off a season-torpedoing 2-9 road trip, it may be best for my health that I avoided the situation all together.

Plus I got a totally awesome production drawing of Wolverine from the X-Men animated series that I'm going to frame and hang up. And once I arrived home, I found my tickets to September's Giants-Colts game in Indianapolis had arrived.

Until the next stadium some cardboard and a drawing of adamantium will have to keep me satisfied. I think my brother would be proud.

Wherever He Puts Us. . . Whatever It Takes. . .


I saw something amazing while we were on vacation a couple of weeks ago. Lisa and I took an afternoon to explore Swallow Falls State Park near Deep Creek Lake in western Maryland with our friends Ray and Terry. The short trail that led to the falls wound through some woods populated by huge Hemlock trees, rolling terrain, and some very, very large rocks. Our little hike was filled with one awe-inspiring sight, sound, and smell after another.

Then, I came upon something I had never seen before, or even thought possible. And it wasn't just one thing. . . but many. Scattered throughout forest were these trees that had somehow grown on top of some huge rocks. I thought about Jesus and the parable of the sower. Aren't seeds that fall on rocky soil unable to grow? Still, somehow, someway, seeds had fallen on rocks and landed in very, very small, thin, and no longer visible layer of soil. Just enough to sprout. But in order to thrive and grow, the trees had to adapt to their surroundings by sending out their roots in multiple directions over the rocks and then down into the surrounding soil.

Life, I think, is like that. Our sovereign God is in control of every minute and aspect of our lives. We are planted where He wants us planted. And, no matter where we find ourselves, whether it be times of plenty or want, we are to wholeheartedly seek to immerse ourselves in the fertile and life-giving soil of His word so that we might be nourished to grow and thrive. Somehow, this tree tapped into living water against great odds. Wherever He puts us, we must -with His help and by His grace - do the same. Whatever it takes, we must do the same.

This tree reminded me of my need to fill my well with the water of God's Word. It reminded me of my need to remind the kids I know and love to do the same. The abundant life will always be filled with great challenges. While we may be tempted to curse God, we must still seek Him. . . . delighting in and meditating on His word so that we might be like trees planted by streams of water (Psalm 1).

What an amazing tree. What an amazing picture. What an amazing life!

Wednesday, July 28, 2010

3 Questions With Cory Giger

As I have said before, I enjoy Cory Giger's radio show and his new thing of asking three questions is pretty cool.  Yesterday he asked these questions and I wanted to answer them for the rest of you.

1.  What do you think of Cowboys rookie Dez Bryant refusing to take part in the typical rookie hazing of carrying another player's pads?

When I first tuned in, I did not know what Bryant refused to do aside from being hazed.  My initial thought was that it was something weird, like wearing a pink thong in the locker room.  Then, I realized they meant carrying pads.  

I do not think it really matters though, if he does not want to take part, that is his problem.  Granted, he better not cry when one of his teammates forgets to block for him and he gets crushed by some free safety.  He should have carried the pads and made jokes while doing it.  Mock them for being old.  Or if carrying Roy Williams pads, make a joke about not wanting Williams to drop them...Roy Williams is still a receiver on the Cowboys, right?


Maybe Bryant wants to turn things around for the Cowboys.  He is standing up against the old ways, which have not been so successful the last few years.  This is something that should have been handled inside the locker room or out on the practice field.  Unfortunately, these non-stories always end up becoming such a big deal.

2. How many games will Big Ben actually be suspended this season -- 4 or the full 6?

Ben will serve four games.  Unless he does something stupid in the next few weeks (always possible), he should be in the clear.

3.  Better actor/actress: Tom Hanks or Meryl Streep?

Cory decided to go with Meryl Streep, mainly because of her Oscar nominations and the fact that she has been in dramatic/comedic/whatever roles.  But, seriously, Tom Hanks all the way.  Have you seen Joe Versus the Volcano?  Greatest movie of all time.

I do agree with Cory that Hanks' performance in Cast Away was one of the greatest of all time, and from that I just cannot see what Streep has done that is better.  Plus, and this is going to piss off the feminists again, how many really good actresses are out there?  I mean, Streep gets nominated because they could not find anyone else...I know, it is sad, but true.

Anyways, Oscar nominations are like Gold Gloves.  They look great on a resume, but do they really prove how good you are?  As Robert Wuhl says:  "Ben Affleck has an Oscar, I shit you not!"

Tuesday, July 27, 2010

The Neutronium Alchemist

The second book in The Night's Dawn Trilogy, The Neutronium Alchemist picks up right where The Reality Dysfunction left off.  Fortunately, it does not have the slow beginning of having to explain who the characters are and where they came from.

Without getting into too much of a synopsis of the book, allow me to explain one of the best parts of the book.  The knowledge of the possessed has caused people to rethink their belief in the afterlife.  Religious folks (the Adamists) are starting to panic.  The afterlife means going to the beyond and suffering in purgatory.  The atheists (Edenists) see the possessed and wonder if they made the right decision.  They transfer their memories into their habitats, but now they have to wonder if that is the right choice, since they also have a soul.

As I read this I realized that this is how it would be here if somehow a god was proven to exist.  Atheists would look at the data and go "oh, I guess we were wrong."  Religious people though, would probably go to war with each other trying to prove which denomination was correct.  Just something I enjoyed.

Anyways, I am excited to see what this Sleeping God will end up being.  Also, I loved Syrinx's visit with the Kiint.  They are this super brilliant race, who have already survived their own Reality Dysfunction, yet they explain to us that they cannot help because every species must face this crisis on their own.

I think that after I finish the third book, I will do a casting call for some of the main characters...that is always fun.

Monday, July 26, 2010

Fantasy Baseball Week Sixteen

I lost to Gideon 7-4-1, which was not so bad, except that it dropped me to fifth place and I am very close to dropping to sixth place.  I just need to destroy Ryan this week and make myself feel much better.  Hopefully, my team decides to actually play well this week.

My pitchers finally decided to suck.  Only two freakin' wins, and one of them was from a closer.  Lincecum pitched well the other day, but did not pick up a win.  Same with R.A. Dickey.  It is actually extremely irritating watching your pitchers do well, but not get a win.

The bright is that Troy Tulowitzki will be back this week.  I do not expect huge things from him, but he has to be an upgrade over Mike Aviles.  Joey Votto had a huge week for me, 3 HRs and a .375 average.  That was about it though, everyone else sucked.  Okay not really, but Braun and Vlad will not have such crappy weeks, so I am okay with it.

Ministering In The Midst of Pain. . . .


At a time when we should be ministering to her and her family, she is ministering to us. I have been so encouraged by the posts Alisa Parrett is regularly writing for the Caring Bridge site she's using to keep us all updated on her Dad's condition. You might remember from my July 6 posting that my friend and seminary mentor, Gary Parrett, was in a horrific bus accident in South Korea that claimed 12 lives. Gary is still hospitalized in Korea, will be hospitalized most likely for an exteneded period of time, and has still not woken up.

I mention the nature and tone of Alisa's posts because they are testimony to the sustaining grace of God, the hope that is ours in Christ, the power of the Great Physician, the importance of nurturing our children in the faith, and the power of our spiritual legacy. If I remember correctly, Alisa is in her early twenties. She is her mom and dad's only child. I've only met her on a couple of visits to her family's home, but her postings over the course of the last few weeks have allowed us all to see into the heart of young woman whose deep faith is sustaining her during these difficult days. This is significant as Gary has long been a humble yet outspoken advocate of the need for the church and family to educate children, particularly through the process of catechesis. He has recently written two books on the subject, the latest - Grounded In The Gospel - with J.I. Packer.

Gary's investment in the spiritual nurture and education of his own daughter is very evident in her postings. If you read back over what Alisa has written, you will find that some of the hymns written by her father have served to sustain and encourage Alisa and her mom. Gary's is ministering to his family even while not conscious. In turn, they are ministering to us.

Please continue to keep Gary Parrett and his family in your prayers.

This Week in TV

Mad Men
The season premiere started off a few months where we left last season.  SCDP (Sterling Cooper Draper Price) now has an office (they joke about the second floor to clients) and apparently Don has had some huge success with a new television ad.  He is kind of falling apart, he blows up at some clients.  He gives a crappy interview to an ad magazine and they lose another client.

His personal life is also looking pretty bad since he is sleeping with a hooker and wants her to smack him.  Roger sets him up on a date, which goes pretty well and the girl is definitely hot.  Roger had a great line about if the date goes well, maybe Don can stuff her Thanksgiving turkey.  Actually, Roger was hilarious all episode.  Don's interview was with a one-legged reporter, which Roger comments that they could not even send a whole reporter.

That moves us to Betty.  Ugh.  She is still a terrible mother.  At Thanksgiving dinner, she acts like a bitch because Sally is doing what small children normally do:  make a scene and act like monsters.  Granted, she is still smokin' hot and I cannot believe her new husband did not just jump her in bed.

Anyways, Sundays are a great night for TV, especially if you leave work and come home to a full DVR.

True Blood
There were so many great moments during this episode.  My favorite had to be Eric attacking the Queen and threatening to rip her head off.  In fact, Eric was awesome the entire episode.  I am excited to see how he deals with Russell.

It became pretty apparent that Sam's brother was being used in a dog fighting ring, which is an interesting story.  I guess.  Why do I get the sense that Sam will get there and feel the only choice he has is to go into the ring.  I think this will bring Sam and Tommy closer together though, which is good.

Tara smashing Franklin's head with a mace was pretty damn awesome.  I bet that turns him on.  He is such a crazy bastard, I love him and I really hope they do not get rid of him.  Seriously, a show about him traveling the country and being psychotic would be great.

Jason's storyline is pretty dumb.  It was creepy watching him threaten the high school QB.  Is the girl some kind of shifter or just a hillbilly sex toy?  I could do without the Lafayette/Jesus make-out session, Tara ripping out Franklin's throat or the whole Bill being tortured scene.

Hung
I have no idea why I watch this show.  There are usually some funny moments, but nothing hilarous.  Tonight's episode featured Mageina Tovah, who played Ursala from the Spider-Man movies.  She played some rich girl, who Ray got to bang for her birthday.  She made him sing happy birthday while they had sex. 

And yes ladies, I decided to be nice and post some pictures for you.  It will not happen very often.  So enjoy.

Friday, July 23, 2010

Girlfriend of the Week

This Sunday is the premiere of Mad Men season four, which I am pretty excited for.  If you are not a fan of the show, then you have no clue how many hot girls are in it.  This week's GOTW is Alison Brie.  She plays Pete Campbell's wife:  Trudy.  It is actually hard to tell how hot she is until you see some of these pictures.

Enjoy the show this weekend and enjoy the pictures.  Also there is a video of her, I have no clue what the video is for, but I like it.


Wednesday, July 21, 2010

Batman News

Last night while I was lying (or is it laying, I can never remember that rule) in bed, I started thinking about Batman 3 and who would be the villain.  When I wrote about it back then, the big rumor was Johnny Depp as the Riddler, which I just could not see.  Anyways, my thought last night was that Nolan would probably use someone from Inception.  Joseph Gordon-Levitt could work as the Riddler, but I could also see Nolan somehow using Tom Hardy as a villain.

I am not saying Hardy should be the Riddler, but after his performance in Inception, he should definitely be a villain.  He had the cool, charming, and also witty lines that would make him a fun bad guy. 

What kind of villain could he play though?  How about Deadshot?  I do not believe Floyd Lawton to be British, but whatever, that is a detail that could be overlooked.  It would definitely work if they did it where Deadshot is hired by someone, maybe the Riddler, to kill Batman.

Anyways, it is just a thought, but I can almost guarantee we see Hardy or Gordon-Levitt (or both) in the next Batman movie.

Tuesday, July 20, 2010

Some Brief Updates

It's been a crazy couple of days here and so while I'm distracted by the Mets absolutely killing it out of the All-Star Break -- and by "killing it" I mean "killing their season" -- I'm still going to get you a few piece of valuable information. Once you're done reading about the Devils re-signing massive free agent Ilya Kovalchuk, a move that very well might define the franchise for 20 years -- and save all of us from a long process of LeBron-like proportions -- after they shocked most of the hockey world by acquiring him via trade in February.

No matter. I have more important information afoot.

First of all, when I first started writing a book about my adventures where I went from one place to the next seeing ports arenas, I began scribbling about them in April of 2009. At the time I had seen some 24 teams and set the rather auspicious goal of having all of them written about by the time I went on my massive vacation out west last June. This did not happen. Instead, I was lazy, bumbling, and actually wound up spending some four months suffering through writer's block on my chapter about the Philadelphia Phillies. A rough combination of being daunted by the job and just being outstandingly lazy.

More the latter.

Well, my dear readers, get excited because now, at long last, I have finally reached the unreachable star. Sort of. I still have some 89 teams left to see and write about, but after finally polishing off a story about my trip to see the Mets visit the Orioles in Baltimore last month this Sunday I am now entirely caught up the present in penning my adventures. Don't get me wrong, there are many more to come, but at the very least I am no longer behind the eight ball.

I'm sure you're all breathing a little sigh of relief now.

The other big news is that my brother's impending wedding is warranting a transcontinental bachelor party. The big day is only six weeks or so off, and in the meantime, Elliott, myself and some friends will be heading to San Diego on Thursday for the purposes of celebrating his last days as a free man in a typical and totally not outrageously nerdy way at all. I'll bet all of you wish you could spend this Friday listening to a bunch of Hasbro designers talk about fashioning Star Wars action figures.

Who needs strippers?

The reason this has warranted mention here on my sports-centric blog is because after my time at the San Diego Comic-Con I will be heading up to Los Angeles where, if all the planning goes well, I will make the Los Angeles Dodgers the 34th team I cross off the list when they host my hot-as-pistols New York Mets Sunday at Dodger Stadium. There are still details to be hammered out, like seeing if the Amazins can find their heads and stop being an embarrassment, but I'm hopeful it all gets taken care of and yet another stop is taken care of.

Of course, at that point, the only problem is I'll be back behind schedule.... But don't worry, I have a long plane flight to occupy myself with after the game. And unlike a certain New Jersey Devils left winger, it won't take me three weeks to make up my mind on how to write it.

Monday, July 19, 2010

Inception

Aside from Iron Man 2, there has not been a movie that I was excited for this summer except for Inception.  I am sure that some of you have heard about this latest movie from Christopher Nolan, the guy who directed The Dark Knight.  The movie lived up to most of the hype.  As many people have said, it needed to do well so that studios would see summer blockbusters can have a story and make you think.

The plot is fairly straightforward:  Leonardo DiCaprio and his team go into people's dreams and usually steal secrets.  This time though, they are going inside a man's dream to plant a thought.  This is what they call inception.  The further into the dreamworld they travel, the harder it becomes to figure out what is real and what is a dream.  This is all interlaced with the mysterious past of Leo's wife.

The movie has that nice twist ending, like Memento or the Prestige.  As the movie ends, we see the top spinning that Leo uses to test reality, as it starts to wobble the movie ends leaving us wondering if it actually stopped spinning or if the entire thing was just some kind of dream.

I would imagine that people will debate whether or not this was a dream.  I can see message boards debating it for hours.  Did Leo actually win and make it home to his family or is he still stuck in the limbo of the dream?  I believe the top stopped spinning and that this world is the real one. 

I would also like to mention how much I like Ellen Page.  I first saw her in Hard Candy and was amazed by how good she was.  She was good in this movie as well.  Actually everyone was very good in this movie.  Anyways, let me know what you thought of the film.

Fantasy Baseball Week Fifteen

Even though it was a shortened week, it was great to actually get a win.  I beat Big Jacker 7-3, which keeps me in fourth place.  I will probably remain there the rest of the season, unless something drastic happens. 

Big Jacker is one of the people that likes to add and drop whatever pitchers are starting for the day.  As I have said before, this can be useful for gaining wins and strikeouts, but not good for WHIP/ERA.  Mainly because you are always picking up fourth and fifth starters.  We tied in wins with five, and my team pumped out 53 Ks to his 46, which is pretty damn awesome. 

My hitting was pretty unspectacular, but it was enough to win, so that is all that matters.  I am still in the market to trade a pitcher for a grade-A hitter.  I actually picked up Edinson Volquez and dropped Ricky Romero.  Romero was one of my nice pickups, but I think I may have gotten the majority of his quality starts.  Fangraphs predicts him to go 5-5 with 73 Ks for the rest of the year.  I did notice that Offord picked him up, so good luck to him I suppose.

Anyways, Volquez had a great first start.  Picked up a win, 9 Ks, and a 1.50 ERA/0.83 WHIP.  I doubt he pitches like this the rest of the year (although he does pitch in the NL Central, so he should face the Pirates a few times).

This Week in TV

I figured instead of writing about each television show I watch, it would be easier to just have a weekly write-up of some of the different shows that I enjoyed.

True Blood
We get to see the reason behind Eric's werewolf hatred.  Apparently they killed his family and most likely they were working on orders from Russell (Mississippi vampire king).  The reason it seems that way:  we learn that Russell has been working with werewolves wherever he lives and he also has Eric's father's crown.

I almost always hate Tara's storyline, but this season has been interesting.  Franklin cracks me up, he is the definition of batshit crazy.  His line about girls wanting to have that talk and then him seeing black and waking up next to a bunch of body parts was hilarious.

The Glades
I normally do not watch police shows, mainly because they are always the same.  Fortunately, this show is not so bad.  The main character is funny.  He is just a jerk and extremely annoying to everyone he encounters.  I love it.

Also, the show has my girl Kiele Sanchez.  She plays a nurse, studying to be a doctor.  She has a son and a husband who is in jail.  Jim is trying hard to bang her, as he should be, because she is hot...

Eureka
The fourth season has started off with a little time-traveling.  Carter, Allison, Henry, Jo, and Fargo all head back to the 1940s.  They find a way back, but some things have changed.  For instance, Allison's son no longer has autism or Fargo is in charge of Global Dynamic...

As this week's episode comes to an end, the five realize that they cannot fix the time-line and must adapt to these changes.  I just hope they continue with this and do not fix this problem anytime soon.  Like they did with the whole alternate future where Henry and Carter came back from...



And this is the preview for something I am super excited for...

Saturday, July 17, 2010

Harper Seven Beckham makes internet debut (Photos)

Harper Seven Beckham, the fourth child and the first daughter of celebrity couple Victoria and David Beckham, has made her public debut via Twitter and Facebook on Sunday (July 17, 2011), a week after her birth.

Proud parents Victoria and David took turns in posting the first photos of Harper Seven on the social media sites.

On his Facebook fan page, David posted a picture of their first baby girl being cuddled by Victoria along with the message, "I took this picture of my two girls sleeping."

Photo of Harper Seven Beckham and her mom Victoria revealed by her dad David on Facebook

And over on her Twitter account, Victoria tweeted a photo of David holding their newborn, writing, "Daddy's little girl!"

Picture of baby Harper Seven Beckham and dad David shared by her mom Victoria on Twitter

Harper Seven was born on July 10, 2011 at 7:55 a.m. at Cedars-Sinai Hospital in Los Angeles. She joins older brothers Brooklyn, 12, Romeo, 8, and Cruz, 6.

According to a US Weekly article, the little girl was named after an old English name and the number seven.

"Harper is an old english name that [Victoria] has always liked," a source close to Victoria told US Weekly.

"Seven is a very spiritual lucky number. She was born in the seventh month, in the seventh hour."the source added.

Friday, July 16, 2010

Girlfriend of the Week

Since last week's GOTW went over so well, I almost decided not to do one this week.  Then I realized that it is my blog and I will do whatever the hell I want.  Actually, this week's GOTW is someone my feminist fan-base can get behind:  Sephie of Meridian.  I realize that a comic book character from a failed publisher is probably not the best example, but allow me to explain.

Sephie is very attractive, but not really the ideal comic book girl.  She does not have huge boobs or a revealing costume.  In fact, she wears normal clothes, usually pants and a work shirt.  Of the Crossgen books, Meridian was one of my favorite, mainly because it was different.

So there ladies, if you want a nice positive role model, look at Sephie.  She helped save the universe (well maybe, no one really knows how things ended for the Crossgen Universe) and did it by using her wits and weird super powers granted to her by a god-like being...oh and just so you know, Crossgen had plenty of books with big breasted girls wearing very little clothing.

Hell, if you look at the cover over on the right, she is sitting there reading a book.  Do you realize how sexy I find that to be?  I do believe by this issue she was of the legal age (I think on Meridian the consent law is 16, not that I checked or anything).

See, I can be a sensitive person when it comes to gender equality...

Lifeboats, Arks, and How We Spend Our Time. . . .

"Okay, our work is done here." That's more or less what they said, and then they packed up and left. "They" were the two traveling presenters who had come to the university where I was doing campus ministry in 1980. They worked for a large ministry organization that had developed some evangelistic multi-media presentations, one of which they had just shown to a large group of students that had come as a result of our on-campus publicity blitz.

When the mutli-media presention on the afterlife was over, an invitation to come to faith was made by the pair, and then they passed out and collected "comment cards" from all the attendees. Their job was "complete" when they had packed their van, counted up the number of "commitments on the cards," and said "goodbye" to us.

I can still remember the dark spot where me and my ministry partner were standing on that quiet campus late at night as the van pulled away. We looked at each other, both feeling an uneasy sense that what we had just provided for students was a happening, and not something that was really going to have a lasting impact on anyone's life. Granted, I still have no clue how God used that evening and what we did to impact His Kingdom. But from our human vantage point, something was amiss.

The way things were done that night along with seeing countless similar evangelistic methods and understandings both before and since, have combined with a growing understanding of Scripture and God's will to affirm that our feelings of unease were justified. The world is going to Hell in a handbasket, the prevalent thinking goes. Our greatest responsibility as followers of Jesus is to "save" (and we erroneously believe that we play a bigger role in this process than we actually do, all the while diminishing God's role) as many people as possible. Every raised hand, walk forward, or "yes" box checked on a comment card is not only a victory, but an opportunity to utter the words "Okay, our work is done here." But the way in which we understand and live out our mission not only downplays or even dismisses discipleship and sanctification, but somehow misinforms our understanding of what it means to live as God's people in God's world.

These thoughts were spurred this morning as I've continued my trek through Randy Alcorn's wonderful book, Heaven. Just like our misunderstanding of what it means to follow Jesus beyond the initial "yes," most Christians have deep misunderstandings and false notions about the nature of Heaven. Alcorn sets out to describe what Heaven - biblically - is really like. And in similar ways that our understanding of salvation will shape how we our lives, so does our understanding of Heaven. Many times, the two intersect.


For example, this morning I read a short section in Alcorn's book where he speaks about "Lifeboat or Ark Theology?" He cites Paul Marshall's mention of the misguided notion among many Christians that the world is not only wrecked, but beyond salvage. Like the sinking Titanic, nothing can be done about a sinking ship. It's time to jump overboard and sit in the lifeboat, something often referred to as "Lifeboat Theology." You get saved, sit back, and wait. But God has not given up and God is not concerned just with the survival of His people. God doesn't just want us to reach over the edge of our lifeboats to pluck out and "save" other victims, only to float until Heaven when all will be well. Rather, Marshall says that what we need is an "Ark Theology." The ark wasn't about flight. The ark was about returning to God's earth and beginning again. After the flood dissipated, Marshall says, everyone and everything was intended to return again to restore the earth. . . . a restoration that extends to every nook and cranny of fallen creation, because every nook and cranny of fallen creation groans for restoration and redemption. . . and Jesus came to restore every nook and cranny. . . not just people.

"Fill the earth and rule it." That was God's command to Adam and Eve at creation. That was God's command to Noah and his family after the flood. And that's God's command to us. No, our work isn't done here. The good work of making and redeeming culture through our faithful presence in God's world is what we need to be trumpeting through how we live our lives and what we're teaching the kids we know and love. Not only that, it's work that will continue once we inhabit the New Earth. And we must begin in earnest after we say "yes."

Thursday, July 15, 2010

The Last Airbender

I went to see The Last Airbender tonight and must say that it was umm, very interesting.  Actually it was pretty terrible.  The plot of the movie is pretty simple:  boy does not want to fulfill his destiny, but then realizes he needs to since everyone is dead because of him, so now he must master his powers to save the world.

It is a pretty stupid movie.  The acting is terrible, the CGI is lackluster, the story makes no sense.  This whole bender thing is just ridiculous.  Why do they have to use hardcore karate movies to make the elements do anything?  Naturally everyone has to wear the colors of their respective element tribe.  Also, no one uses their power to kill anyone simply.  Like an airbender should just suck the air out of someone's lungs or if a waterbender can form ice around people, why not just shoot an ice dart into their chest?  Just idiotic.

The entire time someone would mention a bender, it made me think of the greatest robot of all time:

Wednesday, July 14, 2010

Some Birthday Irony

I, some of you may have noticed, rather like sports. Like a lot. You probably should notice that since that's more or less the entire point of this blog.

Regardless, one might imagine that there is little I would enjoy more on a day I can make entirely about me than watching sports. Makes sense, right? Well, today, as it is my 25th birthday, is that day. In past years I've spent my birthday watching the Home Run Derby, the All-Star Game or attending a Mets game if they happen to be home.

In the world of amateur and professional sports I follow, in no particular order, the following teams:
New York Mets
New York Giants
New Jersey Devils
Chicago Blackhawks
New York Knicks
Northwestern Wildcats
Florida State Seminoles
Southampton FC
Geelong FC

So knowing that I pay so much attention to so many organizations, it seems more than a wee bit odd that this year my birthday happens to fall on the one completely dark day of the North American sports calendar. That's right everyone, the day after the MLB All-Star Game, every year is the only day on the entire calendar in which no regular or postseason games are played in the MLB, NFL, NHL or NBA.

Not a one.

It seems bizarre to me that on my birthday I won't get to watch any sporting events -- though the picturesque vistas of this year's Tour de France will have to do for now, but perhaps that's a good thing. Now nothing will be able to distract me when I'm having my celebratory dinner here tonight.

That's right. The joke's on them.

Books Page

As some of you have noticed, I made some changes around here.  There was a problem with the template I was using, it made it way too difficult to actually add the new features that blogger keeps implementing.  You can now share my awesome posts on facebook, twitter, etc...

This also allowed me to move the pages bar to the top and add a page about books.  This page will be updated periodically.  It will just be a list of all the books I have ever read.  Or at least as many as I can remember reading.  At the moment it contains just the books here on my bookshelf.  I have also linked the books that I have written about.

I plan on including books that I have read for college courses.  I will only include the textbooks that I have read at least 75%, many of those books were read over and over for different classes, so I figure they should count.  If it is something I did not read completely, I will put an asterisk by it.

That brings me to the Bible.  I have definitely read more of it than most people.  In fact, if you can read Numbers and Leviticus you can pretty much sit through anything.  I took enough courses where we read a bunch of different books of the Bible, depending on the course focus.

Finally, if you want me to write about any book on the list, feel free to ask me.

Tuesday, July 13, 2010

Worshipping Lebron. . . .


I'm not a fan of the NBA. I never really have been. Over the years, I've fulfilled my duty as a Philly sports fan by attending a handful of Sixers games, but it never really stuck. After last week, I'm not sure the NBA will ever catch my attention or allegiance. Following all the hype over Lebron James' big announcement on an ESPN special, Lebron and the other two members of South Florida's new holy trinity were introduced amidst loud music, smoke, over-the-top hype, and a heavy dose of ego to 13,000 fans who had gathered in the Heat's home arena. They'd better deliver. Did you see it? All I could think of as I watched is that professional basketball has somehow morphed into professional wrestling.

The history of sport is not something that I've spent any time studying as an academic pursuit. But with 45-plus years of being a fan under my belt, there are some changes that have taken place that when seen in light of where we've come from, should cause concern about where we're going. Flipping through the channels over the last 24-hours confirms it.

First, there's the money. Did you hear that George Steinbrenner died today? Steinbrenner is perhaps the earliest and most notorious practioner of building a winning team by buying good players. He was flying solo back then. He was the only one who had the money and deisre to do so. Today, there are many following in his footsteps.

Second, there are the big egos that the big money creates and buys. The old saying, "There's no 'I' in team" is just that. . . old. Athletes who live out the saying are an endangered species. Oh, there were always big egos. There's nothing new under the sun and the human heart was just as dark back then as it is now. But there was a sense of decency and decorum that kept it all in check. But the swagger that fans once cursed is now celebrated. Just watch what happens every time Lebron James throws that powder in the air in Miami.

Third, there's the marketing. . . which is all a part of making the big money. Last night Major League Baseball attempted to fill Angel Stadium, not for a game, but for a Home Run Derby. Hey, as a baseball fan I think it's a great idea. But when you sit back and watch you soon realize that it's all a marketing thing. Ironically, boredom finally got to me and I started flipping around. I ran across a replay of a 1980 Stanley Cup hockey game between the Flyers and Islanders, along with a replay of a 1987 NBA playoff game between the Sixers and some other team that I can't remember. Do you know what struck me? As I've blogged before, the hockey ice was void of ads. Nothing in the ice. Nothing on the boards. But there was something else I noticed that I had never noticed before. I didn't see any Islanders fan in the stands wearing team jerseys, t-shirts, or hats. . . and the Islanders were the home team. The fans were dressed. . . normal! I noticed the same thing in the stands at the Sixers game. But when I attended major league baseball games in two cities over the course of the last week, team merchandise (hats, shirts, jerseys) was being worn by just about everybody. . . and the lines were long at the team stores!

This is a trend to monitor and address. Idolatry takes many forms, and the world of sport offers our kids many idols. If they learn from us, they'll most likely grow up worshipping something or someone other than the One who made them.

A Last Call For The Boss

As a teenager, I hated George Steinbrenner. Growing up a Mets fan made that awfully easy -- in fact almost necessary. Watching your team constantly in the shadow of the pinstripes as they won four World Series in the late 1990s was an irritating and frustrating thing, and Steinbrenner, who had the gall to actually reinvest his profits into the team so they could continue winning, was the prime enemy.

Of course now that I'm 24 (well 25 tomorrow) instead of 13, I have a better understanding both of human nature and of baseball as a historical entity and a business. Given that added perspective it is simply impossible not to understand -- and appreciate -- the absolutely massively important, influential and, yes, great figure George Steinbrenner was in baseball, New York and American culture. When I awoke this morning from a text message that George Steinbrenner had passed away at 80 from a massive heart attack, it was hard not to be affected in some sense. The impact he had was so far ranging and history-changing that you cannot ignore what he did for baseball.

I personally feel something of a connection with "The Boss" -- not just because he happened to be an assistant coach on Northwestern's football team in 1955. But to understand his influence is to understand how sports business has grown and changed today. Many will quote the statistic that Steinbrenner bought the Yankees in 1973 for $8.7 million and grew them into a property worth more than $1 billion, but that is not simply the tale of a man fostering a fledgling enterprise into success. Steinbrenner fundamentally changed professional sports from a pleasant pastime to a business.

The Yankees do not grow into the massively valuable entity they have become without Steinbrenner's ingenuity and business acumen.While some may question his capabilities as a baseball man -- many have noted that the 1990s Yankees dynasty was not built until Steinbrenner was suspended from baseball for two years in the early part of the decade -- there is no questioning what he did on the business side. By forming the YES Network, the Yankees' regional cable channel that is estimated to be worth roughly $1 billion, as well as allowing the Yankees to become a part of MLB.com's web umbrella in a bit of Wellington Mara-esque altruism, Steinbrenner played a crucial role turning Major League Baseball into a multi-billion dollar enterprise, which in turn has dramatically altered the landscape of how each sports league and sports media outlet does business.

If, indeed, without Steinbrenner those entities would exist at all. I think it is hardly far-fetched to think that without Steinbrenner, and the changes he helped bring about in this industry, I wouldn't even have a job right now -- or at least not this one. Because of his influence, professional sports in America changed from men on a field and a television camera to a multifaceted segment of culture with media implications ranging far and wide.

And beyond all of that, perhaps, indeed, most importantly in the grand scheme: George Steinbrenner was a winner.

He loved to win. And he wanted to do it frequently. Now given his meddling ways, the Yankees did run an almost unfathomable 15-year stretch between World Series appearances under his watch, but the true sign of just how much he loved to win comes not from the seven titles the Yankees won in his 37-year tenure as owner, but from how much money he invested into the franchise once business truly started to boom in the 1990s and 2000s. The Yankees payroll has totaled well over a billion dollars over the last decade, with untold more millions going into the pockets of other owners as a result of baseball's luxury tax and revenue sharing policies.

I remember in high school complaining to a football coach of mine that old fallback commentary that the Yankees "buy" championships. My coach's response: "Where does it say that's against the rules?" Right he was. Not only is it not against the rules to spend such obscene amounts on your players, but when the other option is to put the money into your own pocket rather than the product on the field, it is in many senses both refreshing and noble to see that Steinbrenner put so much into developing a product that would bring satisfaction to so many fans. Other dramatically wealthy owners of the past, such as Minnesota's late Carl Pohlad did not do the same for the people spending money on tickets -- and while those tickets are, indeed, not cheap, they do come with the promise that you will be seeing the best possible team the Yankees could offer.

Much is made of Steinbrenner's gruff and irascible temperament -- he is famous for having fired numerous managers, namely Billy Martin, who was hired and fired five times -- but what set him apart from other similarly disdained and at times irrational owners like Robert Irsay or Walter O'Malley is how much of himself was put into the organization, personally and monetarily. It was of the utmost importance that the Yankees be among the championship contenders every year. That can't be said for every man that heads a sports franchise.

Of course, in the end, what will probably be the greatest reminder for people of my generation of Steinbrenner as a part of American culture is in his caricature as voiced by Larry David on Seinfeld during the 1990s. And with the glory of YouTube and DVD, those moments will be forever remembered in perpetuity. While people of my generation, sports fan and nonsports fan alike will probably remember Steinbrenner as the goofy, nonsensical boss of the Yankees from those Seinfeld episodes, this was clearly not a bother to the Boss, who took the caricature in stride and even played himself in a scene that was left on the cutting room floor.



While that may be his lasting impression for many, it will hardly be his lasting influence. He is responsible for so many changes to how we know sports today that his mark will continue to be felt as long as professional sports are played in this country. Perhaps most remarkably of all, that may even be an understatement.

This Should Go Over Well

Since I have pissed off the feminists, I figured a few funny videos would be appropriate...



Unfortunately I cannot find a video of George Carlin making his funny comments during his Feminist Blowjob joke.
It does not take a lot of imagination to piss off a feminist. All you gotta do is run into NOW headquarters or Ms. magazine and say, "hey, which one of you cute little cupcakes wants to come home and cook me a nice meal and give me a blowjob!"  Oh, that pisses them off. You want to piss off a feminist, call her a cum-catcher.

Monday, July 12, 2010

Fantasy Baseball Week Fourteen

Nothing like beating a guy 6-5, especially when that guy does not even check his team.  I almost lost to the last place guy because his pitchers decided to post up four wins, 3.21 ERA, and a .98 WHIP.  He almost beat me in saves as well.  His one closer almost had as many as my four...ridiculous.

Not much changes with the standings, Offord is still in first place, especially after Jason and Ryan tied 6-6.  At the moment I am in shortstop hell.  Mike Aviles had a .111 average this week and a .190 OBP.  I did pick up Troy Tulowitzki who is still on the DL, so I just need someone as a stopgap until he gets healthy. 

I am willing to trade some of my pitching, either a starter or a closer for a solid bat.  Someone with a high average would be nice.  I am willing to part with Lincecum or any of the closers.  Hopefully someone will jump on this for me...

Congratulations to David Dejesus, the only player to hit over .300 for the week.  This picture cracked me up and made me quite happy that DeJesus could hit well this week so I could use it...

Vacation Results Part 2

Remember last month when I was on vacation and I then told you all about it?  No??  Well here is a refresher.  I was on vacation again this week and you are all dying to know what I did for ten days.

Friday
Adam, Lora, and Lora's friend met me at work around 3:00 so we could leave and get down to the Pirates game.  We were in a hurry and wanted to get down there with enough time to tailgate for a bit.  That led me to not eat anything.  Bad move.

We got there around 5:30 and immediately found everyone.  We started drinking immediately and playing ladder ball.  Adam and I pretty much sucked at it, we lost four games in a row.  Oh well though, we won the final game which we had bet on.  The losers had to buy our beers inside the stadium.

We head inside and get to our seats.  I am already starting to get a nice buzz.  Adam grabs me nachos and a beer.  The game is awesome, the Pirates beat the Phillies 2-0.  I wish I had known it was WHYGAVS night at the park, I would have stopped over.  After a few too many beers though, I really do not remember much of the game. 

Except for the one girl's boyfriend getting a bloody nose when we first went in.  No one seemed to even care.  Adam actually jumped up and grabbed some sani-wipe from a food vendor.  He responds well to an emergency.

We leave the game and go to this one girl's place that we are spending the night.  We find out that we do not have enough time to get showered or anything.  While the girls get ready, Adam and I head across the street to a shitty bar (we are staying in McKees Rocks...enough said) and decide to play darts.  We head to some club in Station Square and I proceed to get really drunk.

Back at the girl's apartment, I decided to take my contacts out, but I never made it that far.  Instead I passed out on the bathroom floor.  Way to go moron.

Saturday
We get up and go for breakfast.  Then on the way home, I get a speeding ticket.  Actually the nice officer only gave me a failure to obey traffic signs.   That reminds me though, I need to pay the fine tomorrow.  Once I got home, I relaxed on the couch all night.  I had to meet Imler in the morning because we were going to the Pirates game.

Sunday
I must have been extremely tired because I slept through three alarms and Jason calling me.  Yeah, that takes some talent.  I wake up and get to Altoona about an hour late.  We make great time and should get there about thirty minutes early.  Should being the operative word.  Traffic getting into the stadium was insane (I never drive down to games, since we always take the bus from Steve's place).

It takes way too long to get inside, where Offord is waiting for us.  This game ended up being amazing.  Probably one of the best games I have been to in years.  They were down 5-2 in the 7th inning.  Pedro Alvarez led off with a monster home run.  The Buccos then scored five more runs and won the game 8-5.  I cannot remember the last time I was at a game where they came back and batted around in an inning. 

We head back and I give Adam a call.  Turns out he has to work Monday morning (he must have been one of like ten people who had to work).  He says that Lora is going up to Osceola.  She then gets a hold of me and says they will pick me up soon.

Once at the Hotel, the beer begins to flow like honey (is that the saying? and what does that even mean, have you ever seen honey, it does not really flow all that fast...).  It ends up being a pretty fun night, and sadly nothing of importance happened.  Aside from great conversation and seeing a bunch of good people.

Monday Through Friday
The entire week was pretty uneventful.  I basically relaxed and watched a ton of television.  I watched the entire third season of Mad Men and the first season of Sons of Anarchy.  I also watched a few movies.  It was actually a great time.  Last vacation was spent going places, this time was spent just doing nothing.  And going out drinking. 

Saturday
I woke up and went over to Adam's place to watch the Philipsburg Heritage Days Parade.  Yeah, it was as lame as it sounds.  Fortunately there was beer, which it is always a good idea to start drinking around one.  Adam was actually not around, so I drank with his roommate Jarrod.  He and I went to this party, which could have been cool, but we did not stick around.  Instead we headed to State College with some hot girls.

We started out at Sharkies, where Jarrod and I lost at pool to a couple of guys who were irritating.  They were playing ball-in-hand, yet they just kept on shooting after the one guy hit made a shot that he did not call.  That makes me angry.  At the bar, there was some dude with an annoying laugh hitting on one of the girls.  So I started doing what I do best:  lie.  I said that we were twins.  We look nothing alike.  I also just kept making shit up and this dude was buying it.  He was pissed when he found out I was lying.  In fact, he was so pissed that he left the bar.

Sunday
I woke up with a hangover and have to listen to some kind of closing ceremony for Heritage Days.  Definitely not what I wanted to listen to in the condition I was in.  I decided to just go back to sleep.  I spent the rest of the day doing nothing (and loving it) and then I watched True Blood and Hung on HBO.  I caught the premiere of the new cop show on A&E The Glades.  I am not usually a cop show fan, but this one could be pretty good.  The main character is pretty funny.  It also stars my girlfriend:  Kiele Sanchez
It was nice being off for ten days, but now I am ready to go back to work. 

Sunday, July 11, 2010

Football, Barbecue and Real America

It's been a while since I've posted one of these so I figure I'm long past due. This won't tell you everything you need to know about Kansas City, but if you ever spend a weekend there and get to have anything close to this much fun, consider yourself lucky.

Originally written May 26, 2010.

It’s a testament to Susie’s kindness that she allowed me to invite myself for a second go-round in Kansas City. Knowing that given the NFL’s current schedule rotation, 2009 would be the last time the Giants visited the Chiefs until 2017, and knowing Susie may not be there in eight years, I told her in early 2009, “The Giants are visiting the Chiefs this fall and won’t be back for eight years. As soon as the NFL releases its schedule, I am buying a plane ticket and you are going with me.”

“Sure.”

While Susie pulls for the Chiefs her fandom doesn’t quite reach the obsessive levels of mine –certainly to her benefit – but knowing my mission and that we don’t see each other often, she was willing to play along. There was, however, some anxiety leading up to the trip mostly because without any real plans in place beyond my flight, Susie and I were unable to get in touch. A massive game of phone tag lasted nearly six weeks before we finally connected. To her credit, Susie, who was in the midst of grad school for her MSW, was obscenely busy and not overly concerned with a football game months off in the future.

I, however, wanted to make sure she would actually be picking up at the airport, which, given that she got caught in a different time zone the night before I visited her in Sacramento four years earlier, might have been a legitimate concern. At last we finally got together, everything was set in stone, and all was well. Susie would be at Kansas City International Airport when I flew in on October 2 and fun, friends and food would ensue.

Direct flights to the City of Fountains being as pricey as they are, I would be taking my route through Atlanta, Georgia, my first time ever in the Peach State. I hoped to nap away, but instead the woman next to me decided to strike up a conversation. She was attractive, in her early 30s and able to carry an intellectual chat, which was fine, but her intensity was a bit stunning considering she didn’t yet know my name. During the course of the flight she let me know she was moving to D.C. with her husband and desperately needed a sub-letter for their one-bedroom apartment on the upper west side. It was $1,400 per month, not outrageous by New York standards, but being that I was only four months into my current lease with two roommates on the hook and thought this was a peculiar time to be propositioned for a major life decision, I passed.

I would find this wasn’t nearly as peculiar as what would happen 20 minutes later when she attempted to set my brother up with one of her friends. I mentioned at one point during the conversation that two weeks earlier Elliott had won an Emmy for comedy writing, and she noted that she had a few single friends who love intelligent humor. Unfortunately for her and her friend El had gotten engaged three months earlier, and he was quite happy about it. They’d have to look elsewhere.

In Atlanta, I would get to see one of my buddies in the brief two-hour layover I had. My college roommate, Sam, a life-long Atlantan had moved back to the city after college and managed to meet me for lunch at the airport Houlihan’s. Amidst a discussion of life catchup, the peculiarities of being adults and the rotation of which attractive celebrity Sam put as the background on his iPhone, it was a nice break in the day – a refreshing break from those layovers that usually find me ambling around the airport by myself to see what regional fast food chain I can make my lunch for the day. The only tension came at the end of the meal when Sam insisted he pay for the check, telling me, “You’re in my town.”

I told Sam that he would have to let me pick up the tab when he came to New York, and he reluctantly agreed, though as I write this eight months later he is yet to actually arrive in the Big Apple, while I have made a second, longer trip to Atlanta.

No matter.

After lunch I went back into the heart of Hartsfield-Jackson Atlanta International Airport, which just might be the most massive transit hub I’ve ever had to deal with. Living in New York and going to school in Chicago, you’d think I’d be prepared, but Atlanta’s airport makes just like its city, spreading out massively and requiring long automated walkways and rail transit to get anywhere. Those in and of themselves are not unusual for an international airport, but in Atlanta they are larger than anywhere else, and given that Atlanta has for some time been the busiest airport in the world by measure of passenger traffic and take offs and landings, it probably needs to be.

The good thing about its size is that it was built with this kind of traffic in mind meaning they actually get you in and out fairly smoothly and with little issue. Despite some travel horror stories, with nearly no stress at all, I was on my way to Kansas City, and Susie was ready and waiting as soon as we touched down.

Susie is one of those friends that will always be there. Given how long we’ve known each other and the fact that we’ve almost never lived in the same time zone, I’m astonished by how often we see each other. It has been nearly once or twice a year that one of us has found the other on either coast or middle America, and each time, we’re seemingly able to pick up where we left off before as if the time passed since our last rendez-vous was only a couple of minutes. It isn’t often, however, that I see Susie with a car, and each time I do I’m amazed at how much she just loves to drive around. She adores long spins through aesthetically pleasing Kansas City neighborhoods and could spend hours behind the wheel at 25 miles per hour.

On this drive we were headed to Susie’s house, but took the scenic route to gather in some of the KC charm. While she and her friends might assume I mean that facetiously – and given my northeast arrogance there’s no reason for them not to – I rather like Kansas City. I can’t say I’d choose to live there, but it’s a very pleasant place when you have a local cadre of friends to take you in. On my first visit 15 months earlier, I had become very quickly absorbed into Susie’s social web, and the overt friendliness makes adapting much easier.

It was because of this typical congeniality that I was so surprised by what we saw as we passed a Reform Jewish Temple. I have little familiarity with Kansas City’s Jewish community, but I can’t imagine it being insignificant. And they certainly couldn’t have been pleased with the anti-Semitic protesters disrupting Friday night Sabbath services in the parking lot across the street. I have developed patience for a number of things in this world, but bigotry isn’t one of them. I can’t get past racism and prejudice as being both mentally lazy and astoundingly stupid. Nearly all things, diet, sex and global populations among them, require variety to make them palatable, and it is the differences between sub-groups of humanity that makes life that much more interesting. As I would detail during a group discussion on anti-Semitism in Israel months later, this wasn’t the first time I had experienced anti-Semitism, nor will it be the last, either overtly or subtly, but each time it is no less jarring.

In this case, the brilliant minds in the parking lot assumed our refusal to accept Jesus was hindering our ability to reach heaven. It was nice of them to let us know, as well as to reassure us God was charitable to understand and accept our naivete. Each protester, which included boys who looked no older than 15, had giant red paper hearts with the word “Love” written across them taped to their chests, and they toted signs declaring, “God loves everyone. Even these people.”

Perhaps the only thing more pigheaded than racism is my reaction to it. I waved to a few of the protestors behind the safety of a passenger seat window. When they smiled at me and I knew I had attracted their attention. As they looked on I pressed a middle finger against the window and yelled, “Fuck off”, which dramatically changed the expression on their faces, but fortunately for Susie and I, the red light turned green and off we were to Susie’s home.

On my previous visit to Kansas City I made it very clear that I intended to indulge in as much of the city’s famed BBQ as possible, and while the years lost on my life and the damage to my cholesterol were entirely worth it, I left Missouri feeling more vinegar and tomato paste than man. While I would want some BBQ this time around, it was hardly going to be the same nonstop barrage of smoke pits, but I had neglected to mention this to Susie. This didn’t result in her force feeding baby back ribs, but she did worry that every meal needed a BBQ aspect, and she, along with her roommate Stefanie, constantly asked me if I was ok not having heavily slathered pulled pork every time we ate.

I probably should have made it clear I wasn’t on the same tangy kick this time around, but I would have my needs more than met the first night as Susie, her boyfriend Kevin and I strolled into the American Royal BBQ Fest. Until a few weeks earlier, I had been unaware that the American Royal BBQ Fest would be that weekend or that it even existed, but I would soon be educated that it was the largest BBQ festival in the world, in what might have been the most appropriate city for it. It was a massive gathering, featuring a contest with hundreds of competitors and some attendance estimates as high as 100,000 people. It was held, appropriately for my experience, in the parking lot of Kemper Arena, which has been host to the 1976 Republican National Convention, NCAA Tournament games and several professional sports teams both major and minor, including the NBA’s Kansas City Kings and, most dearest to my heart, the NHL’s Kansas City Scouts, who would eventually wind up in New Jersey in 1982 as my beloved Devils.

Matt, a friend of the Sharkey family whom I had met a year earlier in New York, was hosting a party in one of the many BBQ tents. Included was an unlimited supply of pulled pork, chicken wings, ribs, cheesy potatoes (courtesy of Susie’s mother), baked beans and a full bar being tended by Susie’s brother Steve, who made sure to operate with a heavy hand. In addition to the delicious food, I was surrounded by an atmosphere I was in so many ways unfamiliar with. I was in the middle of a huge collection of handlebar mustaches, denim and leather jackets, black and brown Stetsons, live country bands playing every 20 feet, and hundreds of men wearing chaps without any hint of irony. I was wholly out of place and felt as if I was in the most quintessentially non-elitist, real American moment I would ever experience.

And while I had no particular love for Garth Brooks and those chaps looked astonishingly uncomfortable, I loved every minute of it.

After being thrust into the enormity of Susie’s family at her bowling league a year earlier, this time I would gain familiarity with its intimacy, as Susie’s mother and father, both of whom I had never met, were in attendance. I didn’t spend much time chatting with Mrs. Sharkey, but I soon found that in the case of Mr. Sharkey it was impossible not to. While we first talked about the Chiefs, since I was obviously in town for the game, which no one seemed to think the Chiefs could win, we soon moved onto Raiders owner , whom Susie’s dad made a point to note numerous times had been passed by by the increasing complexity of the evolving NFL.

These were topics on which I could hold my own, but soon I found myself cornered as Mr. Sharkey gave me a running history of his son Steve’s little league team, which had three great pitchers, one of whom had an unbelievable breaking pitch and another of whom was Kellen Winslow Jr. Seeking a rescue, I soon incorporated Kevin into the conversation who told me later on that when he first met Susie’s dad, he had been cornered and forced to talk about the Royals for two hours.

In a perfect world I would have stuck around for as long as possible. The drinks were still flowing, the food was still delicious, the company great and the music, well, energizing if not my favorite. Unfortunately, with work to be sent off to New York and a long day of traveling on little sleep behind me, I needed to be getting home and getting to bed. I would be sleeping on Susie’s couch for the weekend, which normally would be fine, but in this case, the living room was in the very front of the house, and apparently a serial rapist had recently been in the neighborhood. (Update: He has since, finally, been caught) Amidst concerns for every resident and heightened police presence, I can’t say I was comfortable being the first line of defense against any potential intruders, particularly considering the lock on their front door did not inspire confidence. On a windy night in an older creaky house, I heard the breeze blowing through the floorboards every few minutes and spent much of the night sleeping with one eye open.

I made it through the weekend unharmed and managed to cure Susie’s worries that I might demand constant attention while she had work to do. In actuality, I told her to take her time doing school work on Saturday while I watched Northwestern knock off Purdue in the living room, relaxed and enjoyed some Culver’s that she and Stefanie had brought back for me during their morning errands. Really, the entire afternoon and night served as a prelude to the main event on Sunday at Arrowhead Stadium, though it became very obvious that absolutely no one in Kansas City thought the Chiefs had a shot in hell of toppling New York that Sunday.

They may have had a point. I’ve always had a soft spot for the Chiefs, mostly due to their rich place in NFL history as a founding AFL franchise, albeit in Dallas, and because of their almost unchanged, classic uniforms. They have always been, in my mind, one of the more underrated outfits in professional spots. There is a beautiful simplicity to them that belongs with the Giants, Steelers, Cowboys, Celtics or Yankees.

To go along with my infatuation with their uniforms, the Chiefs, when I was growing up, were quite good. One of my earlier memories as a football fan is seeing Joe Montana arrive from San Francisco to lead the Chiefs to a near Super Bowl berth in 1993. For much of the 1990s, the Chiefs were one of the most consistently successful teams in the NFL, topping 10 wins six times in eight seasons and establishing a fierce homefield advantage. In 2009, those days were long gone. The Chiefs of Montana, Marcus Allen, Neil Smith and Derrick Thomas had given way to the slightly less impressive Chiefs of Trent Green and Dante Hall before finally arriving in their promising, but unbearably young and inexperienced squad featuring Matt Cassel, Dwayne Bowe, Glen Dorsey and Tamba Hali.

That lack of experience would leave Kansas City with a 4-12 record at the end of the year, which came on the heels of a 2-14 campaign a season before and another 4-12 mark the year before that. The Chiefs had made two playoff appearance in the last 12 seasons, and while the future might be brighter, it wasn’t soon. This was evident from talking to any of the fans in the area, who approached me with such pleasantries as, “I hope they just keep the game close” and “Man, that Eli Manning is awesome.”

Indeed he was, and at this time, it appeared, so were the Giants. Big Blue headed into the game 3-0 to Kansas City’s 0-3 record. New York was aiming to make a fifth consecutive postseason berth and was just two years removed from a stunning victory in Super Bowl XLII. If there were a dramatic mismatch in the first quarter of the 2009 NFL season, this looked to be it. If I had learned nothing in my life of sports-related heartbreak however, it was not to take individual games for granted, and while an easy Giant victory appeared as though it should be in the offing, I was hesitant to assume anything.

I’ve always been amazed by the capricious nature of Midwest weather, but the plains states make it that much wilder. On the morning of the game it was quite chilly, and I, prepared, wore my Giants jersey over a long sleeved shirt anticipating the cold. Susie did likewise with her late-90s Derrick Thomas, but as both of us would find later, this would prove unnecessary. We went to her friend Matt’s house because he apparently had several sets of season tickets that weren’t going to be used. The last-place Chiefs weren’t the draw they once were.

Arrowhead has become legendary for the tailgating prowess of its denizens and this, to me, was more than half the reason for the trip. Granted, given the team’s current mediocrity, the crowd was less excitable, but the parking lots were still full of fans decked out in bright red under their tents grilling ribs and drinking light domestic beer at 10 in the morning. Matt had given us a pass to closer parking areas, and all along the drive to the building groups of tailgaters were set up along the hilly, grassy areas by I-70. More than one vehicle was painted and covered with massive Chiefs logos, including several fan-owned mini school buses. Fans cooked and drank their breakfast while a group of drummers calling themselves the Chiefs Rumble made their way from tent to tent.

Susie and I pulled up next to Matt and set up a spread that included Krispy Kreme donuts, cupcakes, tortilla chips, Busch Light and Matt’s homemade chili. While I was told by several sources that this was a more subdued affair than it used to be, I was still enjoying being reingratiated with the Midwest. Something about drinking that early made me feel like I was back in college.

From the outside Arrowhead looks uniquely 70s, not unlike the Royals home of Kauffman stadium – clearly dated in design, but still tasteful and unique. The two stadiums sit together in the Harry S. Truman Sports Complex and original designs for the buildings included a rolling roof that would move between the stadiums when they were in use. While the idea was eventually scrapped for its extraneous cost, I can think of no idea that comes close to it in the current day. Perhaps the shifting roof of Seattle’s Safeco Field is the most similar, but it only involves one playing field. This would have been a link between two sports and two buildings that made two large structures one massive one.

Instead the buildings stand next to each other with no connection beyond similar architecture. Arrowhead itself has a dramatic dipping curve on either side of it that almost gives the upper decks the appearance of horns rising up when you view it from one end zone. Both sides of the stadium have massive ovular TV screens that sit above the dipping curves and look like they, too, are either distinctly 70s or something out of an episode of the Jetsons. That would make perfect sense given that the stadium opened in 1972, except that I later learned the TVs were actually added to the stadium in 1991, which makes them seem entirely out of place, but the theory goes that they’re ovular not to reflect the style of the times but because they look like footballs. While I’ll accept that explanation, the resemblance is extremely vague.

Despite that structural peculiarity, there’s no denying this is a fun place to watch football, and the fact that they serve Gates BBQ there overwhelms just about any negative aspects the experience might provide. While the Chiefs were playing a lost season, the crowds still provided significant evidence for Arrowhead’s unofficial nickname of “The Red Sea”. The stands are still packed and everyone is wearing their jersey even if they suspect they won’t be headed home happy. On this day, there was still a mix of blue sprinkled in patches with that red, as the Giants brought a surprisingly strong crowd to a city that doesn’t get a large number of Big Apple transplants. It occurred to me once we were inside the stadium that this was the first time I would see the Giants on the road, and suffice it to say, they draw well.

Very well.

The team isn’t half bad either. The clinical dismantling most fans were expecting ran its course for three quarters. Big Blue would jump out to a 17-3 halftime lead, as Eli Manning would finish the day with 292 passing yards and three touchdowns, including a 54-yard toss to promising rookie wide receiver Hakeem Nicks. The only thing marring the day for Manning, who also passed Fran Tarkenton for third place on the Giants all-time passing TD list, was that he bruised his heel while dropping back on one of his passes. Manning would play out the rest of the season, but the wound would nag.

One of my favorite aspects of the experience was that this being the 50th anniversary season of the AFL, tidbits on AFL history were everywhere to be found. Unfortunately, this wasn’t one of the many days that the AFL’s original eight teams decided to wear 1960 throwback unis, but midfield did feature the Chiefs enormous 50th anniversary logo, which, somewhat to my surprise included their old logo from 1960 when they started play as the Dallas Texans. The most prominent feature of the day however was the color pink, which in some ways almost overwhelmed the red and blue that could be found all over. The NFL had set aside that week to promote awareness for breast cancer research and so any and all things that could be colored pink would be. Gloves, cleats, towels, scoreboards and the halftime entertainers were all sporting the hue.

In the case of halftime, however, it was hard not to be distracted by the bizzarity of the performance, a group of at least two hundred women circling the field in pink shirts and putting on a robust jazzercise display.

The day more or less went according to plan except that I didn’t expect the afternoon sun to be quite so powerful. Not only were the long-sleeve undershirts far from necessary in the eventual 70-degree sun, but I wound up coming home with quite the dramatic sun burn. The Giants themselves would feel somewhat wounded by the end of the day, too. While they came away with the expected victory, Kansas City woke up just about the time the Giants were on the sideline making their dinner plans. The Chiefs reeled off 13 points in the fourth quarter to draw the game to a respectable 27-16 final score, and also forced some unwelcome familiarity with the people sitting in front of us.

To this point, the only one of them I saw as noteworthy was the man in front of me encouraging people to ask him about libertarian Ron Paul’s campaign for president, though the Elvis impersonator in our section did raise an eyebrow. This adorable fellow wouldn’t wind up the most memorable fan, however, as the unpleasant looking woman in front of me continued to lean forward and show off her all too classy Chiefs logo tattoo on the small of her back. Some things are not meant to be shown off to the masses, and this was one of them. In addition, there are some things you can’t unsee, and one of those hit me in the fourth quarter, when the Chiefs finally found the end zone on a one-yard touchdown pass from Matt Cassel to Sean Ryan five and a half minutes into the period.

Most of the crowd unleashed typical warm-hearted cheers. She, however, decided a more robust celebration was in order, and lifted up her shirt for all the world to see. I know normally this should have been the highlight of my day, but for the reason that a) this was not an appealing female, and b) I’m no longer 12, seeing those unsightly C-Cups bouncing around is something I would absolutely love to erase from my cortex.

As the clock wound down in the fourth quarter, just about everyone in the stadium had left except for the masses of Giants fans who were now gathering behind the New York bench on the bottom bowl. Just about all the Chiefs fans had left other than Susie, who I’m sure would have been extremely content leaving at halftime, but, trooper that she is, she stuck it out with me for the full 60 minutes. Exiting after the final whistle was a procession of one high-five from a traveling Giants fan after another, as we happily walked back to Susie’s car.

The rest of the night was a big family pizza party at Susie and Stefanie’s where I insisted they let me buy the beer because they wouldn’t let me buy the pizza after housing me for the weekend. From that point on, I ate too much, drank too much and was invited by Kevin to return yet again for a trip to see Allen Fieldhouse and his beloved KU Jayhawks. Perhaps in due time, but as far as this mission is concerned, with the Chiefs and Royals out of the way, I never need to return to Kansas City again.

That’s not to say I don’t want to, and I’m sure I’ll be there at least once more for Susie’s wedding if for no other reason, but as it stands now, in my goal to see all 122 teams of the four major sports leagues, the Paris of the Plains is the first multi-sport city that I’ve completely tapped out – including New York and Chicago, remarkably. It feels good to strike a city from the map, and hopefully they’ll start falling like dominoes as I get closer and closer to the end.

But for that to happen, I’ve got to move own and continue knocking them down. I’ll always have fond memories of Kansas City, but it’s on to the next adventure.