Friday, September 21, 2012
Sometimes a photo is worth a thousand words
This is Space Shuttle Endeavour, flying over the Griffith Park Observatory with Downtown Los Angeles in the background. Happy retirement, Endeavour.
Tuesday, September 18, 2012
Putting the cork in baseball champagne baths
While reading a story this morning about Dodgers pitcher Jamey Wright, who expressed how much he wants the opportunity to get champagne sprayed in his eyes and feel that burn for the first time in his career, it got me thinking about the champagne protocol in
light of baseball’s new postseason.
Under the new
rules this year, a second wild card team was added. The two wild cards will
meet in a one-game, winner-take-all showdown to advance to the best-of-5
division series.
Will the teams
that “win” a wild card berth spray each other with champagne to celebrate
reaching a one-game playoff? Will the teams that win the one-game playoff pop
the bubbly to celebrate winning a single game?
I’m in favor of
neither. If I had to pick one, I originally thought that clinching the wild
card berth would be better, since it’s a reward for a 162-game season. My
friend and colleague Jeff Fletcher point out on Twitter that the one-game
playoff is essentially game 163 in the season, and the celebration should take
place after winning that game. I still want neither, but I agree with Fletch.
Overall, this
year is the perfect time for baseball to overhaul its champagne celebration
tradition.
Tuesday, September 11, 2012
“40 Before 40” checklist -- No.4 -- Watch a movie in the Hollywood Cemetery
On my 39th birthday, I made a list of "40 things to do before turning 40." Each time I check an item off the list, I'll write about it here. This is item No. 4, watching a movie at the Hollywood Cemetery.
--by Josh Suchon
Watching a movie
in the Hollywood Cemetery is similar to attending a football game. It’s
more than a game (or movie). The movie is almost an after-thought. This is an (almost)
all-night event, similar to tailgating. Except you’re not in a car and there’s
definitely no BBQing. This is picnicking around the dead.
I felt right at
home.
Thanks to my
friends Emilie and Tyler, I was invited to join them last Saturday to see the
Woody Allen movie “Manhattan” projected against a big white wall, surrounded by
a bunch of really expensive tombstones and caskets.
Emilie and Tyler
made sure we got there early. Very early. The movie started at 8 pm. The gates
opened at 6:30 pm. Emilie and Tyler were there about 4:30 pm, making sure we
were near the front of the line. I got there around 5:30 pm.
What do you do
for an hour? Duhh. You drink. And eat. And play games. We had no shortage of
any of these items. I did learn that certain games are better than others. The
hosts made it clear they prefer games that involve “yelling out the answers.”
Monday, September 10, 2012
Top 10 most famous Foothill High alums
-- by @Josh_Suchon
A recent brief Twitter
exchange between myself and former classmate Gabrielle Union got me thinking
about the most famous alums at my high school. A quick check of Wikipedia
showed that either my school is either really pathetic in developing famous
people, or Wikipedia needs some help. Either way, I decided it was time to
research my school further, and compile a list.
My school is
Foothill High in Pleasanton, Calif., a middle-class suburb in the East Bay.
It’s a fairly new school. It was founded in 1973 with a freshman-only class.
Each year, a new freshman class was added, and the first graduating class was
1977.
The list will
probably be a work-in-progress, as more names are brought to my attention.
But
for now, here goes:
1. Actress Gabrielle Union (Class of 1991)
Union was in my
graduating class. It was easy to remember Nicky, as she was called back then,
primarily because she was one of two black females in our graduating class. She was an all-league point guard on the girls basketball team, was involved in student government and leadership, and ran on the track team.
In college, Union
started at Nebraska and played soccer briefly, then went to Cuesta College,
then to UCLA, where she planned on attending law school and becoming a lawyer.
Union did an internship at a modeling agency that changed her life. The agency
realized she should be getting photographed, not making coffee and copies, and
her modeling career was launched. That led to some acting roles.
Her
break-through role was in 2000’s “Bring it On” as the cheerleader from the
rival black school, opposite Kirsten Dunst. Union was in the blockbuster hit “Bad
Boys II” and also “Deliver Us from Eva.” She appeared on a memorable 2001 episode
of “Friends” when Joey and Ross were both into her. It was memorable because
she was the first black character ever on the New York-based show. Her IMDB page lists all her credits.
Union is currently
dating Miami Heat superstar Dwyane Wade, she was ranked 52nd in
Maxim’s “100 Sexiest Women” in 2002, and she has a couple new projects that
should be in theaters in 2013.
Most impressive
to her former classmates, she attended the 10- and 20-year reunions, and
graciously posed for photos – even with people who didn’t know her then, but
wanted to show off to their friends and kids by getting a photo with her.
Same old Nicky. Just goes by Gabrielle now.
Same old Nicky. Just goes by Gabrielle now.
Saturday, September 8, 2012
Sharpie Scribbles Chapter XII: The Pre-Fame Scribble
-- by Matt Hurst
As I've said before, I'm not a big autograph chaser. But if someone offers and I genuinely get excited at the prospect of getting someone's signature, then hell yes, count me in.
This happened in my final weeks working at UC Santa Barbara.
We had two bona fide student-athletes who were stars. Not on the Matt Barkley or Anthony Davis level, but pretty big time athletes in their respective fields.
One is basketball player Orlando Johnson, now a member of the Indiana Pacers. UCSB is a good mid-major basketball school ... not great, but pretty good. To have a player come from our school and get into the NBA, well that doesn't happen often.
I was very fortunate to work with Orlando in a variety of ways during his three years at UCSB and you might hear this a lot, but trust me on this - you won't find a better human being. Especially considering what he has gone through in his life (read about it here). Our last creative video shoot together was one of my absolute favorites.
Tuesday, September 4, 2012
UPDATED: How to win your Survivor Football Pool
--by Josh Suchon
My favorite
football pool goes by many names. Some call it an Eliminator Pool. Others say “Last
man standing” Pool. I’ve always known it as a Survivor Pool.
The basic rules:
you pick one NFL game each week, point spreads don’t matter. If you win, you
advance to the next week. If you lose, you’re done. In most of these pools,
once you pick a team once, you can’t pick them again. I’m in a pool where you
can pick the same team three times. I don’t like that rule, but I’m not the
Commissioner. But in most pools, you can only pick a team once.
I’ve won two
Survivor Pools in the last decade. I went 17-for-17 two years ago and split the
pot with four others. I made it to Week 11 last year before losing, and week 9
three years ago. In 2003, I was one of two finalists and we split the first-
and second-place money (a nice Christmas bonus for each of us).
These are my
rules for how to win your Survivor Pool.