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Morning Seditionists

Saturday Open Thread

Posted by pjsauter on May 31, 2008
Posted in Uncategorized  | 18 Comments

I managed to catch a couple minutes of Marc on yesterday, but haven’t listened to the whole thing yet. He sounded (sounded? is that a word?) great, though, and I look forward to listening. I didn’t get Wednesday’s show, unfortunately. Tried to edit the goddamn commercials out, but didn’t have the patience for it (goddamn software issues, among other things).

I sure do hope he gets a regular gig. AAR needs him (and Sam, too), ‘cuz they sure got nothing else.

Friday Open Thread

Posted by pjsauter on May 30, 2008
Posted in Uncategorized  | 35 Comments

Last day of Maron on AAR. For now, anyway. How can they possibly not give him the regular gig. Whether he’d want it or not, is another question. But he seems to be very happy to be back in NYC, and I think the change would do him good, with all that he’s gone through. The fact that I don’t actually know him in no way precludes me from pontificating on what would be best for him, of course.

Anyhow, if he can get an ironclad (in writing with money up front) agreement that they’ll give him the resources to do the kind of show he’s capable of doing and the time and promotion to build an audience that’s required, I say he should go for it.

Sam Seder should get the same kind of deal, and there’s plenty of room in AAR’s godawful lineup of shows for both of them.

Now, let’s get this week over with already.

Thursday Open Thread

Posted by pjsauter on May 29, 2008
Posted in Uncategorized  | 47 Comments

Lotsa feigning going on yesterday over Snotty Scotty’s new book. The White House feigned shock and outrage. The media feigned shock that McClellan intimated that – get this – Bush used a propaganda campaign to shove the Iraq invasion down our throats and that the media – if you can believe it – didn’t do the job hey were supposed to do. Shocking.

Happy Birthday to JFK, who’d have been 91 today.

Wednesday Open Thread

Posted by pjsauter on May 28, 2008
Posted in Uncategorized  | 42 Comments

About the only thing I have to say this morning is that Maron is on AAR at 3:00 Eastern. Be there, or be square.

And Happy Birthday, Roxie. I hope things are better where you’re at.

Tuesday Open Thread

Posted by pjsauter on May 27, 2008
Posted in Uncategorized  | 44 Comments

Nothing like a weekend of pick and shovel work, and hauling around sand, gravel, and 100 pound slabs of slate to make you glad to get back to work and get some rest. Unfortunately, four day weeks seem to last forever. I should’ve taken today off, I think.

Memorial Day Open Thread

Posted by pjsauter on May 26, 2008
Posted in Uncategorized  | 39 Comments

Be forewarned, the following post is something you will probably be totally uninterested in. Not that that’s unusual, but it’s also sports related, so it’ll be doubly dull to all you non-sports people, and even the sports people will probably not give a crap. Anyhow…

Today, the SU Lacrosse team returns to its rightful place in the NCAA National Championship game, bouncing back from a 5-8 record and missing the lacrosse playoffs for the first time in 25 years last season. The year before, that, they missed the final four for the first time in 22 years (during those 22 years, they played in the championship game 14 times, winning 9).

They made the finals with a double overtime win against Virginia on Saturday, and they’ll play Johns Hopkins at 1:00 today (on ESPN HD). It’s kind of fitting that they’re playing Hopkins, because 25 years ago SU won its first national championship against them. The team that wins today will be the first to win 10 national championships.

Back in 1983, lacrosse was considered a sport for the rich kids (despite the fact that it originated right here with the Hau de no sau nee, who consider the game – which they call iDeyhontsigwa’ehs – a sacred gift from the Creator).

The Onondaga Nation (one of the “Iroquois” nations, and the seat of the confederation that the United States was based on and the world’s oldest living democracy) were playing “field Lacrosse” with the local colleges and universities in the area, commonly playing Syracuse University, Colgate University and Army in the early 1900’s.

In 1932, the Olympics wanted to showcase lacrosse in Los Angeles. The Onondaga Nation team (undefeated against collegiate competition) was chosen to play – you guessed it – Johns Hopkins to represent the sport. Sadly, Hopkins won, but the USA Lacrosse association was intimidated enough by the Onondagas that they banned all native teams from playing field lacrosse (considering them “professional” players). That’s when they started playing box lacrosse, which is basically lacrosse in a hockey rink (without the ice, and with about a tenth the padding; not for the feint hearted).

Despite a lot of good teams and players over the years (including possibly the best lacrosse player of all time – not to mention perhaps the best running back and track star ever – Jim Brown; in 1957, SU was undefeated behind Brown and their All-American goalie Oren Lyons, Faithkeeper of the Turtle Clan of the Onondagas, international environmental activist, and friend of Stevie Van Zandt), SU lacrosse went more or less unnoticed as the USILA awarded national titles in lieu of a playoff system to the more ‘elite’ schools (quite often to – you guessed it – Johns Hopkins).

In 1983, SU was coached by Roy Simmons Jr, who’d succeeded his father (Roy Simmons Sr, who had coached Jim Brown and Oren Lyons) in 1971. Roy Jr is an artist, and he coached that way, allowing his players the freedom to express themselves in the way they played. They also had a tendency to knock people on their asses when they got in the way (more akin to the Hau de no sau nee style than what the rich frat boys were used to). So the lacrosse ‘elite’ dismissed (sneered at, even) Syracuse. But they went 13-1, and made it to the championship game for the first time ever.

At a banquet attended by both teams on the night before the game, Simmons was asked to say a few words. He took the opportunity to deliberately mispronounce the school name (he repeatedly referred to them as ‘John Hopkins,’ which is apparently the equivalent of saying the ‘Democrat Party’) and guarantee an SU win (at this point, Hopkins had been to seven straight championship games and hadn’t lost to SU since 1922). I think he pissed them off a bit.

Around here, we consider lacrosse to be “our” sport. Simmons was born and raised here, as was his assistant (current head coach, John Desko) and sixteen of the players (including the goalie, Travis Solomon, a member of the Onondaga nation). They weren’t just playing for the University, they were playing for ‘Syracuse.’

By about the halfway point of the third quarter, Hopkins was up 12-5, and their smug fans and coaches were full of smiles. Then SU went on a 9-1 tear, eventually going on to win 17-16, with Syracuse area players scoring 14 of of their 17 goals.

The popularity of the Syracuse style of play – once dismissed, and now copied – has made the lacrosse championship the most attended NCAA championship event (yes, that’s correct, more people attend it than attend even the basketball final four). Some 50,000 people will be at the game this afternoon in Foxboro, and ESPN even has the ‘sky cam’ in effect (more synchronicity. ESPN has SU alum Dave Ryan and former Johns Hopkins goalie Quint Kessenich calling the game). All for people who are regular size human beings who actually have to go to class once in a while and don’t get full-ride scholarships.

So, there’s your Syracuse lacrosse history lesson for the day. Let’s just hope SU can bring home another National Championship. We’ve had a couple tough sports years around here, and a win today would help take the sting out of going back to work tomorrow.

Happy Memorial Day everybody!

UPDATE: Foxboro, Mass — The Syracuse University men’s lacrosse team came all the way back from last season’s 5-8 record, defeating Johns Hopkins 13-10 at Gillette Stadium to win its 10th Division I national championship. The Orange became the second team in NCAA history to go from missing the playoffs one season to winning the title the next. The other team? The 1983 SU team, which was honored at halftime on the 25th anniversary of that special season.

Booblehead Open Thread

Posted by pjsauter on May 25, 2008
Posted in Uncategorized  | 27 Comments

Granny put me to work yesterday, so now I can’t sit and type for long. Therefore (and in honor of the holiday weekend), I’ll just be cutting and pasting today….

Press the Meat:
CBN’s David Brody, Maureen Dowd of the New York Times, presidential historian Doris Kearns Goodwin, PBS’s Gwen Ifill, Ruth Marcus of the Washington Post and Jon Meacham of Newsweek magazine

Plus, a look back at the life and legacy of former Carter White House Chief of Staff Hamilton Jordan, who died Tuesday at the age of 63.

Faze the Nation:
Howard Wolfson, Director of Communications, Clinton Campaign Sen. Lindsey Graham
(R) South Carolina Sen. Dick Durbin, (D) Illinois

Fux News Sunday:
Terry McAuliffe, Clinton campaign chairman
• Rep. Chris Van Hollen, D-Md., chairman of the Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee
• Rep. Tom Cole, R-Okla., chairman of the National Republican Congressional Committee
And the Fuxheads.

This Weak with George Snufalufagus:
David Axelrod, senior advisor to the Obama campaign, Karl Rove, on the “Roundtable,” Vanity Fair’s Dee Dee Myers, The Washington Post’s E.J. Dionne, ABC News political contributor Matthew Dowd, and ABC News’ George :jerk: Will.

CNN Late Emission:
Maj. Gen. Mark Hertling, Rep. Jane Harman: (D) California, Rep. David Dreier: (R) California,
Gene Sperling: Clinton Economic Adviser, Douglas Holtz-Eakin: McCain Economic Adviser, Robert Reich: Obama Supporter, Mary Tillman: Pat Tillman’s mother.

Have a good one.

Saturday Open Thread

Posted by pjsauter on May 24, 2008
Posted in Uncategorized  | 100 Comments

Happy Saturday. I know that’s lame, but it’s all I got.

I watched Fahrenheit 9/11 again last night. We can’t let this happen again. I don’t care if you hate Obama and/or Clinton. McCain will be a disaster. Please, don’t tell me you’re willing to let McCain be preznit just because ‘your’ candidate didn’t get the nomination, or you feel dissed by the other campaign, or people who support the other candidate just plain piss you off.

It’s more important than all of that. It really is. From Net Neutrality to warrantless wiretapping to 100 years in Iraq to Supreme Court justices to torture, to, well, to everything that affects us and our lives, please, don’t hold out for a ‘pure’ candidate, ‘cuz you know what? I aint running.

And anybody else is just settling.

Friday Open Thread

Posted by pjsauter on May 23, 2008
Posted in Uncategorized  | 49 Comments

Good news about Maron being on AAR next week. Will he be on Monday? Maybe I can actually listen live. I’ll get the chat room ready to go, in case anybody wants to live chat during the show (although, based on recent activity, there might not be many people out there).

In other good news, DirecTV 11 should be parked more or less in its final orbit some time today. Another 3 weeks to a month of testing and tweaking, and I’ll hopefully have local HD channels, and some more national HD channels (at least anther HBO, and I think a few more are set to come on board). Got to watch Apollo 13 on HD Net Movies last night, and it was great (it was the most trouble Bill Paxton had, until he got three wives on Big Love). There’s a scene at the beginning where they’re watching Neil Armstrong step out onto the moon. If you weren’t here on Earth when that happened, you can’t truly comprehend what that was like to watch it right there on the teevee. Ah, the good old US of A really used to be something, back in the day.

Been doing a lot of computing at work. Makes the day go fast, but I haven’t had a chance to keep up on all the goings-on that are going on. Back to the shit hole today, though, so maybe I’ll be able to keep you guys on your toes.

Later.

Thursday Open Thread

Posted by pjsauter on May 22, 2008
Posted in Uncategorized  | 23 Comments

It’s not Friday, but it’s close.