Sunday, June 17, 2007

Into the Cauldron: Don Orsillo


Meet Don Orsillo, play-by-play announcer for the Boston Red Sox on New England Sports Network. Has an annoying habit of giggling like a nine-year-old girl at analyst Jerry Remy's in-game "jokes." Nickname: The Thumb.

Despite the fact that he's a well-paid professional broadcaster with a dream job, Orsillo loves joking about how some of the opposing players' names are difficult to pronounce. This first happened a couple of weeks ago during a game against the Atlanta Braves. He basically refused to make any effort to correctly pronounce the name of the Braves catcher, Jerrod Saltalamacchia. Usually he would just say "Saltamacchia" and then titter with Jerry about how hard that name was to pronounce. At one point he said "It has like five or six words in there." Presumably he meant syllables.

But is it really that hard? Sal-ta-la-mac-chi-a. It's Italian, just like "Orsillo." Come on, Thumb! A paisan!

Then, this past week, the Colorado Rockies come to town. The Rockies catcher: Yorvit Torrealba. At shortstop: Troy Tulowitzki. And in center field: Ryan Spilborghs. You would have thought Orsillo had never operated his larynx before, to hear him stumble over and complain about these names. Are they really that hard, Don? Sound it out. Torrealba = Torre-alba = Joe Torre + Jessica Alba. Easy peasy! Plus, the media guide provides a handy pronunciation guide for each name. Use it.

The half-assed effort to pronounce these names, coupled with the incessant jokey complaining about it, had me mentally dunking Orsillo in a cauldron of molten lead. Is it too much to ask that a broadcaster do his job, practice the tougher names beforehand, and just say the name without any extraneous comment? It's your effing job, Orsillo, to call the game accurately and informatively, period. Leave your effervescent "personality" and "quirky goofiness" and "crypto-xenophobic mispronunciations" out of it.

Into the cauldron with you!

Wednesday, June 13, 2007

In the Cauldron



This is a new segment that I'd like to do on a regular basis. As some of you know, I get easily aggravated by small, often inconsequential things, and usually vent my frustration in unhealthy or annoying manners. This will be a way for me to do this without driving the people around me completely crazy. The degree of my discontent will be measured on a semantics scale, from "headbutt" to "up against the wall", with other ratings in between to be announced later, as I make them up.

My target today (no pun intended) is...the Beatles! Their catlaog is co-owned by Michael Jackson and Sony/ATV Music Publishing, but my understanding is that the surviving Beatles, along with the Lennon and Harrison widows still have full creative control of the music. So, I will blame them for letting Target use the McCartney tune "Hello Goodbye" in its most recent ad campaign, and I will blame Paul in particular for allowing this to happen since he wrote the song.

So, Paul, step on up and come get your headbutt! You deserve it, lad!

Monday, June 11, 2007

LA Celebrity Sighting #16



Keith Morris (seen here on the right) was the original singer for Black Flag until 1979 when he left and formed the hardcore skate/surf-punk outfit the Circle Jerks out of Hermosa Beach. Any self-respecting SoCal punk fan should have the Circle Jerks' debut album Group Sex on their shelf. I ran into Keith at Amoeba Records in Hollywood, buying a shitload of vinyl, and anxiously examining them at the counter for scratches. Sure, he looks like a goofball these days - a mix between Leon Trotsky and a Jah dance-hall DJ - but if you doubt the significance of this man's recording career, go home and download Black Flag's Nervous Breakdown EP. Don't argue - just do it.

LA Celebrity Sighting #15



I ran into Mary-Louise Parker at Whole Foods in West Hollywood, in aisle 2, by the chips, salsa and cookies section; she was there with some nondescript guy and a toddler, and all I really remember is that she looked right at me and smiled, and I thought she was the most attractive dope dealer I've ever seen! Snoop was right: she is quite the MILF!

Wednesday, June 06, 2007

HELP!


For the longest time, I treated the Beatles' collection of recordings as a two-tier catalog: there was Revolver in 1966, with everything that came after it, and then there was the stuff before that, the Beatlemania stuff. When I discovered the Beatles, I immediately gravitated to the later-period recordings, and I pretty much ignored the pre-Revolver releases. Years later, I got into the other albums, like Rubber Soul and Help!, and while listening to the title track of Help! tonight, I was reminded how absolutely brilliant these guys had gotten by early 1965! In particular, I think that Paul and George's background singing on the verses for that track is proof that the Lennon/McCartney song-writing team was pure genius. For that little bit alone, they are forever gods in my mind.

Monday, June 04, 2007

LA Celebrity Sightings #12-14



It's been a while since I've posted my last entry, but I certainly made up for the wait with a nice cluster-sighting at the Arclight Theater in Hollywood. R and I were there to see Zodiac, when we ran into these three folks in the lobby, talking in a group. For those of you who are fans of the show The Shield, you will recognize them as "Danny", "Corrine" and "Dutch", aka Catherine Dent, Cathy Cahlin and Jay Karnes, repectively. This multiple sighting was exciting for me because I am a fan of the show, and it was a bit like running into 3/5 of a band you like, so I kept looking around to see if the others were there....where are you Michael Chiklis?

Thursday, May 17, 2007

Cinema Update


Circle June 1 on the calendar: a new Judd Apatow movie starring Seth Rogen: Knocked Up. Plot looks a bit lame totally awesome* but and the presence of Rogen demands that Attention Must be Paid.

* The local commissar demanded this edit.

Tuesday, April 03, 2007

LA Celebrity Sighting #11 - Santa Monica Edition



We spotted Robert picking food up at the Santa Monica vegan restaurant Real Food Daily while we were eating there last weekend. For those of you who may not know, Robert Trujillo is the current thud staff man in Metallica. I highly recommend the movie Some Kind of Monster which documented the recording of the album St. Anger and the coming of Robert into the band; it's a great rockumentary, even if you are not a fan of the band's music. Robert is an amazing player who favors using his fingers rather than a pick, but who is nevertheless one of the fastest guys around, in the vain of Geezer Butler, Steve Harris, or Geddy Lee. Gotta respect the bassman!

Sunday, April 01, 2007

LA Celebrity Sighting #10


I went down to this place called the Farmers Market down on Fairfax and 3rd a few weekends ago; it's not really a farmers market, but more like a tourist attraction, with dozens of souvenir shops and restaurants, very much like Faneuil Hall in Boston. It's adjacent to The Grove, a fancy-schmancy pedestrian outdoor mall, complete with a trolley and all the upscale stores and restaurants one would expect. Anyway, here I am, reading Rolling Stone magazine at this newsstand, silently lamenting the terrible state of the American rock scene (the heinous poseur band Fall Out Boy was on the cover!), when I looked up and found myself right next to Kanye West! I of course pretended to not recognize him (you gotta stay cool!) and proceeded to grab all sorts of different mags to look at as a transparent excuse to stay close to him. He was there with a woman and a kid, and spent some time talking to someone on his cell phone about some photo shoot. I have to say, he looked quite classy and handsome, and I probably would have said something to him if he had been alone.

LA Celebrity Sighting #9


R. and I went to see a show at UCLA called Flesh and Blood. I sat down next to this woman who told me she was holding the seat for her friend. I moved to another seat, and a few minutes later found out that the friend was actress Maura Tierney when she walked in late and quickly sat down behind me.

I was never a big fan of her work on ER, but I quite enjoyed her acting when she was on Newsradio, a great comedy sitcom that aired in the second half of the nineties, which was canceled after the tragic murder of one of its main actors, Phil Hartman.

Friday, March 23, 2007

Mood Enhancer

What is it about the Swedes that improves my mood so reliably? This new song by I'm from Barcelona has been playing recently at my local coffee shop and the video just makes me want to move to Malmo or Huskvarna on the double.

America Before the Estate Tax


Back in early 2001, at my last job, I had kind of a loopy advertising concept to defend the estate tax against abolition: images of sooty, child-labor-y America around the turn of the 20th century arrayed beneath the headline "What Was America Like Before the Estate Tax?" (The estate tax was first enacted in 1916). It was too over-the-top for the people in charge of the pro-estate-tax campaign, and became kind of a running joke at my expense, but now there is a website full of these images.

It's easy to imagine that life would be just ducky if we just got rid of taxes and regulations and ran a laissez-faire economy, but we tried that already, and I don't think most of us would really like to go back to those days.

(Via BoingBoing)

Wednesday, January 24, 2007

Me and Daniel Johnston



I finally got around to watching "The Devil and Daniel Johnston" last night, the documentary about singer/songwriter Daniel Johnston, who has been a darling of the underground music scene for the last 20 years. Johnston, a gifted songwriter plagued with chronic mental illness, has often been compared to other troubled geniuses like Brian Wilson and Syd Barrett. While I was not familiar with all the details of Johnston's personal story and his music, I had been exposed to some of his songs over the years, mostly through covers by other artists (Boston's own Mary Lou Lord's cover of "Speeding Motorcycle" and fIREHOSE's rendition of "Walking the Cow"). The documentary does a decent job of presenting Johnston's art (mostly music, with some drawings and paintings), but it mostly seemed to focus on the larger issue of Johnston's struggle with mental illness over the years, and the tragic effect it had on him, his family, friends, and artistic peers. It's a depressing movie, but I appreciated its honest portrayal of the debilitating and often terrifying effects of severe manic depression. There seems to be a certain coolness associated with being a mentally ill artist, at least from some fans' point of view, and I've always been annoyed by that attitude. By the end of the movie, I was left with a deep sense of sorrow for Johnston's tragic story, as much as I was intrigued and curious to find out more about his body of work. His music, at its best, is truly brilliant, but it came at such a high personal price! I found myself wishing that he had grown up healthy, even if that would have meant being less successful artistically.

Thursday, December 28, 2006

LA Celebrity Sighting #8


The ex-girlfriend and I took a visiting friend from Boston to Swingers in West Hollywood, and Michael Dorn, AKA, Worf, the bad-ass Klingon of the series Star Trek: The New Generation, was sitting in the booth next to ours. This is a guy who worked with Patrick "Jean-Luc Picard" Stewart for 7 years, so you know he's the real deal! And of course, we had to call our sci-fi geek friend Paula to gloat!

Tuesday, December 19, 2006

Buddhism vs. Molecular Biology



"I believe chanting can change your DNA"

- Courtney Love

Monday, December 11, 2006

LA Celebrity Sighting #7


Walked by Adam Sandler at the Beverly Center shopping mall in West Hollywood, sporting a New York Jets jacket and pushing a kid in a stroller. I'm not a big fan of the man's oeuvre, though The Wedding Singer is a great movie, and some of his characters on SNL were also quite funny.

Sunday, December 10, 2006

PastaBelt Organizer


Having a hard time finding the right pasta, or the right belt for that suit? You need to get organized. The PastaBelt Organizer neatly stores up to 40 varieties of fresh pasta -- from linguine to angel hair -- plus 28 belts on non-slip hooks. Push the toggle switch and they rotate forward or back. The motor is so efficiently designed it's almost completely silent. The convenient non-glare light comes on automatically when the rack begins rotating to help you pick the right noodle and/or belt. Adjustable bracket mounts to most closet rods or kitchen cabinetry. Matte finish with natural wood trim. Uses 4 D batteries (not included). Not recommended for use with gnocci.

$60.00.

Tuesday, November 28, 2006

LA Celebrity Sightings #4-5.5

More sightings from the past couple of weeks as posted on R.'s blog

Dagney Kerr only gets a half point as a pseudo-celebrity; she doesn't even qualify as a D-lister, so that practically makes her a civilian.

Saturday, November 18, 2006

Mayonnaise Sleigh


Inject a little Christmas spirit into every-day condiment consumption with this battery-powered sleigh that also holds your favorite mayonnaise, sauce, or spread. Integrated circuitry plays "The First Noel" and "Jingle Bells" repeatedly as the sleigh tours the dinner table in an 18" diameter circle. Keeps kids pretty well occupied.

13 oz.

$24.99

From the Crastpog Enterprises "Home for the Holidays" Catalog, Christmas 1986.

Wednesday, November 08, 2006

Best Election Story This Year

One of these lovely lads is now a Democrat Congressman from New York:



Read all about it.