Saturday, February 28, 2009

Smoke and Mirrors

Behold. The prodigal son has returned. I apologize for the prolonged absence; during my stay in Jamaica I mysteriously contracted some hybrid disease that involved symptoms of pneumonia, bronchitis, and the Avian flu. But with the assistance of medical expertise, I have reclaimed my traditional position behind the keyboard. I've also spent the last couple weeks meticulously preparing for the upcoming fantasy baseball season; just another résumé-builder for the Coolest Man Alive.

It's true what they say: We learn a lot about ourselves while traveling. It makes me wonder if anyone can ever really learn anything by remaining in one place their entire lives, subconsciously protecting themselves from potentially uncomfortable realities. Or maybe those people are actually happier. Who the fuck knows?

In any case, I went all the way to Negril to discover that I'm the absolute worst person at distancing myself from prostitutes, save for maybe Ben Affleck. This crippling inability to issue the verbal b-slap belies my affinity for elitism (as well as my not-so-subtle desire to capably exude pimp-like qualities). I guess that I'm too nice. For this reason, I could never become a lawyer. Pimpin' ain't easy, and neither is law.

My education in prostitute psychology happened at an extravagant night spot called The Jungle, which is Negril's closest imitation to Las Vegas. The sign outside the entrance outlawed (among other things) pimps, prostitutes, gigolos, solicitors, hoodlums, drugs, weapons, skull caps, and bandanas. Despite being guilty of several infractions, I somehow managed to advance through all three security checkpoints. That's why they call me Sly.



Once inside, I was immediately accosted by a young Jamaican woman who was of virtue untrue. Perhaps something about my general attitude suggested that I was a player in the money-for-sex marketplace. Without any pleansantries, she grabbed my arm and coldly said "Buy me a drink." Privy to her nefarious intentions, I said "No thanks," which was admittedly an overly polite response. "Get the fuck away from me" probably would have worked better.

Like all ambitious go-getters, she refused to take 'no' for an answer. Since social graces were insufficient, I resorted to Plan B: economics. I had no Jamaican money except for $180 JMD in coins, which is the equivalent of about two American dollars. Of course, the bar would not accept coins, which makes perfect sense considering that coins are part of the currency. Alas, I did not have the means to buy this eager whore the drink she so assiduously craved. Certainly, she would understand. Problem solved.

Not quite. The prostitute still insisted that I buy her a drank (she must have taken me seriously when I told her my name was T-Pain). In fairness, I have to respect her impressive display of relentlessness. She would not be denied. She was like Tyler Hansbrough, except that she was short, black, and talented.

Her tenacity led me to Plan C: full-fledged lying. I claimed to be accompanied by my girlfriend, a classic beauty who would surely disapprove of my associating with unsavory streetwalkers. Unfazed, the prostitute shockingly demanded, "I want to meet her." Sure thing. Hey honey, allow me to introduce you to this vivacious skillful practitioner of the prostitutional arts. You two have so much in common!

By this time, I was perfectly aware of a strange social dynamic:

Problem - The prostitute wanted money.
Problem - I had no money.
Problem - The prostitute would not leave me alone until there was a satisfactory exchange of goods and services.
Problem - I did not want to be near the prostitute.
Solution - ?

In a last-ditch effort to resolve this confusing interpersonal situation, I offered her the $180 JMD in coins that the bar had previously turned down. Stated differently, I was paying a prostitute two American dollars to not have sex with me (reminiscent of the famous Charlie Sheen joke, "I pay them to leave.") Well done. She reluctantly took my pile of change and went on her way, without so much as a courtesy ZJ (if you have to ask, you can't afford it). In retrospect, this probably would have been enough reason to arrest me on solicitation charges.

The lesson: You get what you pay for.

------

Earlier on the trip, I also learned that it's unwise to accidentally smoke cocaine (it's a wonderful experience if done purposefully). While enjoying a good-but-not-great reggae concert, a random Jamaican guy nodded at me, as if to say, "Do you like drugs?" I grinned and nodded back, as if to say, "I'm white and stupid." He politely offered me his blunt and -- despite every piece of advice I received prior to the trip -- I smoked it and passed it back to him. Like a gentleman.

Thirty seconds later, my new friend tapped me on the shoulder and started demanding money. Evidentally I had mistakenly believed him to be a Good Samaritan; he was actually an aggressive enterpriser. After some debate, he told me flatly, "That [blunt] had ganj, opium, cocaine. $50." Upon learning this interesting tidbit, I made some hilarious quip about not being able to read the nutritional facts on the tiny rolling paper.

Maybe my quip wasn't so hilarious - the angry drug-dealer (?) insinuated that if I didn't pay him, then he and his mercenaries would kill me. I felt this was an extreme counteroffer. With my livelihood hanging in the balance, we settled at an agreement that involved $20 U.S. and $1,000 JMD (about $31 U.S. altogether). Honestly, the guy should have held out for more money; I probably would have payed upwards of $65-70 to save my own life.

Shortly after our delightful transaction, I began to feel energetic, charismatic, and danceable (well, moreso). I might have requested that the reggae band perform "Summer of '69" (they might have declined). I may or may not have returned to my hotel room, completely rearranged the furniture, decided that the original arrangment was better, and restored the room to its original appearance. It's also possible that I did 100 push-ups as penalty for my poor decorating instincts. Use your imagination.

Like all geniuses, I rarely admit to being wrong; however, in hindsight, it was a mistake smoke marijuana laced with cocaine and opium.

The lesson: Cocaine is a hell of a drug.

One love.

-

Wednesday, February 25, 2009

Clip of the Day (02/25/09)

FACT: Tiger did this in 1 take.

FACT: Tiger is the best athlete since Jordan.

FACT: Tiger's back.

Monday, February 23, 2009

Clip Of The Day (02/23/09)

It was all part of the masterplan...

Friday, February 20, 2009

Feel the Rythm

At 7:15 am this morning, I'll be leaving on a jet plane to Jamaica. Well, that's not completely true. I'll technically be flying to Atlanta, and then boarding a new plane that will (hopefully) arrive in Montego Bay. Experienced travelers like myself generally refer to this process as a "connection" or "layover."

But enough with the esoteric terminology. I know what you're thinking. You're thinking, "Hey Will, isn't it kinda pathetic that you're going on Spring Break even though you are no longer a college student? Might you be desperately grasping for the comforts of a bygone period in your life? And what the hell are you 'breaking' from anyway?"

All fair points, smart guy. In response, allow me to present a comparative anecdote about someone you possibly know. This person was tall, dark, handsome, and beloved -- just as I was in college. After ascending to the top of his profession, he felt he had nothing left to prove; he had accomplished everything he ever wanted to. Having lost his competitive desire, he kindly decided to retire at the tender age of 30. Under remarkably similar circumstances, I elected to graduate from higher education; however, I was much younger than the man in question -- I happened to conquer life's obstacles by the time I was 21.

After a few years, our humble protagonist redeveloped his passion and boldly stepped out of the shadow of retirement. There was a brief adjustmental period, but the man quickly regained his unparalleled ability and once again reached the zenith of his world. He recaptured the respect of his peers as well as his adversaries. His legions of fans were euphoric, as their icon would forever live in their dreams and memories. Alas, he was not a man; he was larger than life.

That man's name was Michael Jeffrey Jordan. And he parlayed all of his success into a lucrative advertising campaign for Hanes. Today he shares the national spotlight with luminaries such as Kevin Bacon, Charlie Sheen, and Cuba Gooding Jr. (look for him in the upcoming feature, It Comes in Handy!)

Your honor, ladies and gentlemen of the j-j-j-j-jury, if His Airness can retire from basketball and later return to win another three championships, then I can rekindle my collegiate lifestyle and go to Jamaica for Spring fucking Break. The defense rests. I'll be joining Zen Master, Scottie, Kukoc, Dennis the Menace, Luc Longley, and all the rest. Peace!

[Editor's Note: For the next week, direct all complaints, criticisms, and hate mail to Chuck. Thank you.]

_

Thursday, February 19, 2009

Clip of the Day (2/19/09)

In the spirit of theatrical absurdism...

Working Title

The state of Hollywood troubles me. Aside from the tireless assembly line of shameless remakes, the caliber of film seemingly declines each year. It's not that surprising; movies are a reflection of the society that watches them. There's a positive relationship between cinematic quality and public standards.

For example, the top movie at the box office is He's Just Not That Into You (scroll down to read Chuck's impassioned review), which has grossed something like $60 million and counting. I haven't seen it and probably won't see it in the near future, but I'd be willing to bet Chuck's authentic Wayne Chrebet jersey that it's beyond terrible.

Nonetheless, I'm equally certain that a sizable contingent -- quite possibly larger than the group of detractors -- absolutely loved it. Loved it so much that they activated their mobile phones and enthusiastically added it to 'Favorite Movies' on Facebook before the credits rolled. I can understand why: never has a movie been so intently aware of its target demographic and the surrounding technological culture. As a result, He's Just Not That Into You is less of a film and more of a carefully crafted post-modern marketing vehicle. The filmmakers might as well have named the characters after the actors who played them.

I'm not the first person to suggest that Hollywood's artistic integrity has been compromised by commercial endeavors; however, a negative trend exists and He's Just Not That Into You has authoritatively raised the bar (or lowered the bar, depending on your perspective). Enough, I say. Hey, you wouldn't let a clown fix a leak in the john. So why do you let these hooligans tear down the biz?! Yeeeeaaaah.

With the future of American cinema hanging in the balance, I'm here to rescue Hollywood from its own self-inflicted demise by injecting fresh blood into the creative collective. Listed below are award-winning movie concepts that will undoubtedly fill the seats with eager audiences and line the studios' pockets with money...


Movies that should be being made


Jackie Offerman is a masseuse who hates misogynists; she's a neo-feminist who loves Drew Barrymore, despises Drew Carey, and merely tolerates Nancy Drew. Her abusive alcoholic father demands that she become a cheerleader. "Pretty girls become cheerleaders and date football stars," he snarls while "Jack and Diane" plays in the background. Jackie has other plans. She aspires to become the finest massuese in the world, touching people's souls when she touches their bodies.

She moves to New York to chase her dreams, but there's one BIG raging mega-huge problem: she refuses to finish the proverbial job, much to the dissatisfaction of her male clients. That's right, men (BOOOOOOOOO!) -- the same species that borishly marginalized her ambitions and thoughtlessly tried to force her into antiquated social roles. Jackie quickly learns that in a male-dominated world, you cannot get ahead if you won't do the flirty work and the dirty work.

Just when the world seems totally unforgiving, Jackie meets Nicki, a disgraced celebrity masseuse who insists on taking Jackie under her wing. Around the same time, Jackie begins dating Duracell, a charming and intellectual black man. He possesses a controlled sensitivity that makes her reconsider her previous disdain of men (BOOOOOOOOOOOO!).

Over in the massage parlor, Nicki reveals a plethora of effective techniques, notably the fabled but elusive Rock, Paper, Scissors. Yet an embarrassing secret -- the same secret that inspired Nicki's premature ejection from the industry -- threatens their friendship. Can Jackie swallow her pride, conquer her fear, and rise to the top of the masseuse profession? Will she and Nicki resolve their differences? Will Duracell be anything more than a forgettable token character?

It's a coming-of-age tale that teaches us to overcome the hardest challenges, especially when they're staring straight at us. After all, even the saddest of beginnings deserve the happiest of endings.

(Coyote Ugly x 10 Things I Hate About You x Karate Kid) / (The Next Karate Kid + Sex and Lucia)


Working title: It Comes in Handy


Alternative title: Handle with Care

Tagline: Grab life by the horn(s).

Starring
Katherine Heigl as Jackie Offerman
Carmen Electra as Nicki Cummings
Cuba Gooding Jr. as Duracell the sensitive boyfriend

and co-starring Nic Cage as Sal the abusive father

__________


This next premise was engineered by our old friend/co-worker/confidant Ted, who once upon a time teamed up with Chuck and myself to form a champion Jeopardy trio at The Academy. I apologize if I mixed up the particulars and over-dramatized the rest.

God grant me the serenity to accept the things I cannot change...

Former CIA Agent Joltin' John Kilpatrick turned in his badge and his gun for a white collar and a backstage pass to Heaven. He no longer wants to dedicate his life to the criminal underworld. Father John would rather be an agent of God.

...the courage to change the things I can...

Shortly after joining the priesthood, Father John gets assigned to a small church in Canon, Louisianna. Everything seems normal. A little tooooooo normal. Deep beneath the surface of the church lies a dark, disturbing reality: the order of nuns are not sweet daughters of divinity, but rather heartless evildoers who use their clergy status to pollute the masses. Assassins that kill for money (and for sport). Drug-dealers that sling rocks for money (but not for sport). Kidnappers that abduct schoolchildren (for neither money nor sport but for staffing purposes). And, worst of all, anyone who enters the church has too options: (1) drink the Kool-Aid and join the operation, or (2) refuse to conform and ...die.

...and the wisdom to know the difference ... [COCKS SHOTGUN] ... Amen.

Father John just chose option number 2, but he has intelligent designs on living. He has to stop the Twisted Sisters. He's not gonna take it. No - he ain't gonna take it. He's not gonna take it ... anymore. In the name of the Father, the Son, and Holy Spirit.

The story culminates in an epic showdown between Father John and the sinister nuns. One man against an empire. Prepare for a deliriously violent battle sequence that makes Shoot 'Em Up look like Bring It On Again. Father John must gun down all of his enemies in order to achieve salvation and restore the eternal virtue of the church. Pray for us all.

Sister Act [Hot Fuzz (Sister Act 2 / Doubt)] + (Scarface x Kill Bill / The Da Vinci Code + Boondock Saints)



Working title: Bad Habits


Tagline: Nun the wiser.

Starring
Nic Cage as Father John Kilpatrick
Sharon Stone as Sister Hellen (Evil Nun #1)
Madonna as Sister Christian (Evil Nun #2)
Danity Kane as Twisted Sisters (Evil Nuns #3-7)

with Whoopi Goldberg as Herself

and Morgan Freeman as God

__________


The years of solitude and immortality have taken their toll on Dracula; he's demoralized, bitter, and alone. Blood has never tasted so ...isolating.

Struggling with the mid-life crisis, Dracula decides he wants to become cool and hip and fetch. He travels from Transylvania to Southern California and attempts to undertake the hippest, coolest, and fetchest activity there is: surfing. Cowabunga!

The quirky local crowd makes fun, laughing at Dracula's pale complexion, one-piece bathing suit, and SPF-40,000 sun tan lotion. The ocean hasn't seen teeth like that since Jaws. But Dracula masters the art of surfing, rides giants, wins over his naysayers, gets the girl, and reconnects with his long-lost daughter ... only to find out that she's in love with his dreamy surf instructor. Uh oh!

It's a slapstick romantic comedy that shows that adventurousness can wipe out centuries-old sadness. With the right mindset, the enchanting Pacific waters can revitalize anyone, including history's most controversial outcast.

(Interview with a Vampire + American Beauty) / Blue Crush.


Working title: Fang 10


Alternative title: Pretty Fly for a Bite Guy

Tagline: Surf's up!

Starring
Nic Cage as Dracula
Paul Walker as Stroker the surf instructor
Hayden Panettierre as Long-Lost Dracula Offspring

with Vin Diesel as Frankenstein

and Nic Cage as Abraham Van Helsing



[Editor's Note: This post was submitted via Drew Barrymore's iPhone.]
_

Tuesday, February 17, 2009

Boom! Roasted!: The Cast of "He's Just Not That Into You" Edition

For the most part, I've kept pretty quiet about my disdain for "He's Just Not that into You" in the past two weeks. All the while, it has been performing extremely well at the box office including a debut at #1 in its opening weekend. Lately, though, I've heard about more people seeing the movie, and quite frankly, I can't take it anymore. It probably boils down to me just not fully understanding the opposite sex, I mean, after all, I saw "Rocky Balboa" on opening night. What bothers me is that there are five best picture nominees currently playing, and that doesn't even include films like "Gran Torino" and "The Wrestler." So, why would anyone choose to pay $10.50 to see this piece of garbage? I just don't know...

So, the question remains, what can I do about it? There is only one answer, and that answer is to welcome the cast of He's just not that into you to the premiere edition of a new recurring feature here at SYCBS called "Boom! Roasted!" It is only right that I steal an idea from The Office and apply it to the cast of a movie that was actually directed by one of The Office's best directors, Ken Kwapis. Furthermore, Boom! Roasted! will allow me to say mean things about people I don't actually know in a playful way because really, that's what blogging is all about right? So without further ado, I welcome you to Boom! Roasted!: The Cast of "He's Just Not That Into You" Edition.

Ginnifer Goodwin: I had to look up your IMDB page just to find out who you were. Everyone hated you in Walk the Line, and nobody watches Big Love. Boom. Roasted.

Bradley Cooper: I like crab cakes and football, but not you. Michael Jordan was funnier hosting SNL than you were. Boom. Roasted.

Jennifer Connelly: You followed up Blood Diamond with The Day The Earth Stood Still and this piece of crap. Also, Celebrity Sleuth named you the #14 Sexiest Woman..... 0f 1993. Boom. Roasted.

Justin Long: You're not the next Vince Vaughn, I wouldn't date Drew Barrymore, and everyone thinks you're gay (not that there's anything wrong with that). Boom. Roasted.

Scarlett Johansson: You were in Home Alone 3. Boom. Roasted.

Kevin Connolly: Nobody would watch Entourage without Jeremy Piven. I thought you were dying and the Make-A-Wish foundation intervened when I heard about your Golden Globe nomination. TGI Friday's no longer has booster seats. Nicky Hilton. Boom. Roasted.

Drew Barrymore: Your last 3 movies: Music and Lyrics. Beverly Hills Chihuahua, He's just not that into you. You should know that Adam Sandler has taken you off his buddy list. Also, you deserved Glenn Gulia. Boom. Roasted.

Ben Affleck: The two most precious things in your life, Matt Damon and the city of Boston, both pretend not to know you anymore. Boom. Roasted.

Jennifer Aniston: Angelin... I can't. You're awesome. What are you doing with these losers?

Clip of the Day (02/17/09)

From this weekend's new episode of Family Guy. This was great. It reminded me of the old "Fun with Real Audio" on SNL. Peter's last line is exceptional, and I agree with him.

Quote of the Day (02/17/09)


"And if I ever see you or him again, it will be unpleasant for the both of you" -- Sayid Jarrah to Ben and Jack. LOST: This Place is Death.

Yes, this is a blatant excuse for me to talk about LOST, but I promise to limit it to just this quote. If I was face-to-face with Sayid, the first question that I would ask and yes, I am quoting Michael Scott, would be "What gives you the right?" While we don't know exactly why Sayid is no longer working for Ben, it's not a stretch to believe that Ben screwed him over royally. Ben has a tendency to do that. Popular opinion seems to be that Ben was actually the one behind Sayid's wife, Nadia's death. I'm not ruling this out, but I'm not so sure about that. While Ben is obviously not above playing puppet master with the emotions of the Oceanic 6 (see: His paternity suit against Kate), I don't think he would've had Nadia killed simply because if Sayid knew such a thing, Ben would've been killed a long time ago. There's no evidence that Sayid's thirst for blood has diminished (see: Dishwasher with knives facing up). I tend to think that Sayid's hatred for Ben stems from Sayid finding out that Ben falsely blamed Widmore's crew for Nadia's death in an effort to get Sayid to kill a bunch of people OR because Sayid knows that Ben killed Locke. HOWEVER, I'm not getting into that now.

My problem with the aforementioned quote is Sayid has no business talking to Jack like that. NONE. Now, I'm sure people who know me well will simply dismiss this as my love for Jack blinding me to reality and making me more bias than I've been since someone asked me who I thought was the better quarterback, Chad or Eli? That is not the case, and to all of you who are thinking that, check out the picture and remember that Sayid tortured your loverboy Sawyer back in season one.

That's exactly my problem with Sayid saying that to Jack. Sayid has tortured many men and women whether it be in his days in the Iraqi National Guard or on the Island, and he's killed his fair share of them too. He's even killed because Ben has told him to. So knowing he's done all of that, he really has the audacity to threaten Jack because he is working with Ben to get back to the Island. Sayid, you've already worked for Ben, and you killed in his name. All Jack is doing is trying to get people together by doing smaller things like you know, helping to save you from those comma-inducing arrows. Get a grip Sayid! Just because you have an accent doesn't mean you are intelligent. Why don't you get off your high horse and warn Jack or do anything besides stand there with that stupid look on your face while spouting vague information like "they want you to believe it was a suicide" or "the only side that man is on is his own"? I'm starting to think Shannon was the brains of that relationship.

Saturday, February 14, 2009

Valentine's Clip of the Day (2/14/09)




Consider this a Valentine's Day gift from me to you. Although the clip stands on its own and has been ridiculed in every imagineable form of media, I'd still like to provide some background information.

Last year, part-time reality star and full-time romantic Corey Feldman set the world aflame by serenading his wife with the most heartfelt ballad since 'N Sync's "God Must Have Spent a Little More Time on You." Thankfully, A&E's cameras were rolling.

As the video illustrates, Mrs. Feldman carefully wanders poolside along a trail of pink and red balloons to find Corey and a mini-orchestra waiting for her. He's wearing a tuxedo that he must have borrowed from mid-period MC Hammer (coincidentally, Hammer is now an ordained minister and presided over their wedding during the filming of The Surreal Life). Corey locks eyes with his wife and nervous energy permeates throughout his 5'3 frame.

After a brief piano intro, the strings kick in and Corey delivers the vocals with a level of passion rivaled only by Steve Perry. The song itself features a triumph in lyrical craftsmenship, particularly the line, "You bring the stars up to the moon / When you leave you're gone too soon." There's no question -- Corey has the unlikely combination of Chris Carrabba's sensitivity and Andrew Ridgely's soulfulness.

The air thickens with love, and -- like all great performers -- Corey senses the moment. What happens next is what we in the biz like to call TV Magic: at the 1:25 mark, Corey turns up the intensity, gets face-to-face with his girl, and aggressively belts out "Dip dip da-do-da I LOVE YOU!" The sentiment can only be described as (a) euphoric, (b) cringe-inducing, and (c) groin-grabbingly poignant.

God bless Corey Feldman. The man is an artist, and he has no problem doing Cupid's work. His wife is a lucky woman.

The couple separated on January 18, 2009.

_

Friday, February 13, 2009

Garry Buckman-Lampkin: The Adult Years


During a brief visit to Queens that included access to a glorious myriad of movie channels, I stumbled across one of my favorites, Parenthood. In terms of comedy-dramas that explore domestic challenges with an optimistic but honest perspective, this film was ahead of its time. Before 1989, you probably didn't witness many scenes that culminated with a middle-aged woman's vibrator being accidentally revealed in a room full of children. Oh Ron Howard, you visionary comic genius!

The ensemble cast was headlined by Steve Martin, Dianne Wiest, Mary Steenburgen, Rick Moranis, and Jason Robards (who, beginning with this role, embarked upon the Reflective Curmudgeon phase of his career). But the most fascinating character might have been Garry, Wiest's distant and secretive 13-year old son.

Throughout the opening act, we see Garry quietly retreating to his room, ignoring overtures that inquire about his personal well-being, padlocking his door, and protectively carrying around a paper bag of tenebrous association. Basically, he's pretty fucked up -- in no small part because his father abandoned the family for a new woman.

As the plot unfolds, we learn that the mysterious paper bag contains a healthy collection of porno tapes (not drugs, to his mother's relief), and Garry has been jerking off as if there's no tomorrow. Fortunately, he finds a positive male influence in his older sister's dimwitted boyfriend Todd (appropriately played by Keanu Reeves, who was still in the Ted Theodore Logan phase of his career). Garry receives much-needed assurance that his behavior is perfectly normal: "That's what little...dudes...do," explains Keanu, before going to band practice with the Wild Stallions.

Garry was portrayed by a precocious young actor named Leaf Phoenix, who had changed his name to "Leaf" perhaps to align himself with his older brother, River Phoenix. Of course, shortly after filming Parenthood he reverted back to his birth name -- the name you're more likely to recognize -- Joaquin Phoenix. That's two-time Academy Award Nominee Joaquin Phoenix.

Anyway, I've often wondered how Garry would have turned out if his character arc didn't require him to overcome his pubescent confusion with the improbable help of Keanu. Would he have been aloof and disinterested as an adult? Defensive, creepy, and generally unkempt? Inexplicably BFF's with Casey Affleck?? It was a compelling hypothetical. And with Joaquin Phoenix's surreal retirement announcement, burgeoning hip-hop career, and bizarre appearance on David Letterman, I finally have my answer.

[Editor's Note: Joaquin Phoenix retired from acting to pursue a career in music, NOT to masturbate incessantly in his bedroom. Keanu Reeves could not be reached (around) for comment.]




Wednesday, February 11, 2009

Unassorted Thoughts

Welcome, what is up? Here's what I'M burning on...


On Wednesday, Roberto Alomar's ex-girlfriend filed a lawsuit alleging that Alomar conveniently forgot to wear his Gold Glove: during their relationship, he apparently insisted on having unprotected sex despite his being HIV positive. Yes, I know -- it's hard to believe that the same philanthropist who once spit in the face of an umpire would demonstrate such flagrant indiscretion in the bedroom. On the bright side, at least Robbie receives a temporary reprieve from the clubhouse whispers that once accused him of, you know, hitting to the opposite field.

The lesson: Roberto Alomar is a selfish lover.



In other baseball news, I find no pleasure in piling on the A-Roid bandwagon. If anything, the latest chapter in the steroid saga proves that all fans live in glass houses. After all, if the highest-profile player of his generation was guilty of using performance enhancers, then chances are some of the best players on your favorite team were involved as well.

Let's take Mike Piazza, for example. The hero of my youth, Piazza was a 62nd round draft pick who was only selected because Tommy LaSorda was doing a favor for his father. Five years later, Mr. Hetereosexual improbably burst onto the national scene with a sensational Rookie of the Year campaign and an even more sensational fu manchu.

Over the next decade, Piazza cemented himself as the best offensive catcher in the history of baseball. Somewhat suspicious, right? PED usage might also explain why he had mysterious muscle injuries later in his career while his performance in the field declined to the point where he resembled Robert De Niro at the end of Bang the Drum Slowly. Just sayin'.

The lesson: "Loosey Goosey" will be the most overused fantasy baseball team name of 2009.



"When they discover the center of the universe, a lot of people will be disappointed to discover they are not it." Among those disappointed parties will be Mike Francesa, who reportedly had quite the humbling Super Bowl experience. According to Howard Stern and corroborated by Chris Russo, Francesa felt he was the biggest broadcaster (in terms of personality, not girth) at the event and therefore too important to attend Radio Row, a pre-arranged meeting area for players and media members. Instead, Francesa rented out a nearby hotel lobby, expecting the players to walk eight blocks just to interview with him. Not surprisingly (or perhaps predictably), nobody showed up.

The lesson: The smaller the mind the greater the conceit.



Newest addition to the ever-expanding list of Worst Ideas Ever: ranked slightly ahead of 'Prohibition' and right behind 'Blazers draft Sam Bowie,' we now have the DOA remake of Bonnie & Clyde. Your stars? None other than Hilary Duff and Kevin Zegers (of Air Bud fame ... no, seriously), an onscreen couple that shall henceforth be known as Box Office Poison.

Although the escalating feud between Faye Dunaway and Lizzy Maguire offers it's own self-perpetuating amusement, the oversaturation of remakes is just so utterly disheartening. Hollywood has it all wrong. The studios would have you believe that remaking a film serves as an homage original. In truth, it's no different than making an "homage" to Heath Ledger by digging up his lifeless body and reenacting scenes from Brokeback Mountain.

Sure, it makes perfect sense financially to repackage old classics and generate millions of dollars; people are stupid, so it's basically free money. From an artistic standpoint, however, it's completely backwards. Instead of bastardizing beloved material, remake the bad movies that had potential to be excellent. I'd rather see Universal take another shot at Waterworld (or something comparably awful) than bear witness to the atrocity of Godfather Remastered, starring Nic Cage as Don Corleone, Jerry Ferrara as Michael, Jon Bon Jovi as Sonny, Ralph Macchio as Fredo, Hayden Christensen as Tom Hagen, Horatio Sanz as Clemenza, Zac Efron as Jonny Fontane, and John Cena as Luca Brasi.

And yes, I engineered that Godfather hypothetical with the sole purpose of causing Chuck's head to explode.

The lesson: Nothing is sacred.

_

Clip Of The Day (02/11/09)

An oldie, but a goodie....

This commercial was the most overly-quoted thing our senior year of high school (obviously, outside of "I'm Rick James bitch!" and "I'm rich biotch!" Ugh.). Usually when something like this becomes way too popular and over-quoted, I slowly start to hate it. I'm not gonna lie, it happened with this commercial.

However, after being told to YouTube Tracy Morgan's outtakes from some movie called Totally Awesome, I came across it and figured I'd give it a go. Turns out, this commercial is still funny, and no, not because Tracy Morgan is black and mispronounces unorthodox at the end. It's hilarious for 3 specific reasons.

First, the back-to-back lines of "I've lived the 24/7 mode, and I achieved the iso motion." Tracy sounds like he has no idea what he's talking about (I love unintentional comedy). He's achieved the iso motion? That's the equivalent of saying "I've achieved the half-back draw!" or "I've achieved the intentional walk!" Good stuff.

Secondly, and I'm really hoping someone could shed some light on this for me. After his more specific trash talk, I believe Tracy tells Ben Wallace "Ain't nobody better than...REG" WTF? Who the hell is Reg? My best guess is that Reg is supposed to be short for Reggie, but who exactly is Reggie? Reggie Miller? He was on his last legs in the league, and no matter what the time or the place is, you can't really get much whacker than trash-talking someone and ending it with "Ain't nobody better than Reggie Miller!" Comedy gold.

Finally, the main reason I found this so amusing last night is the difference in Ben Wallace's career at the time the commercial was released until now. Originally, the commercial played out like "Oh, this makes me laugh because Tracy Morgan is like 5'4 and Ben Wallace is huge and the best defensive player in the NBA!" Watching this commercial now, I'm thinking Ben Wallace was legitimately afraid to play Tracy one-on-one. I'll take it a step further, I'm willing to bet that Tracy Morgan would beat "Big Ben Wallace" one-on-one if it was winner's ball and Tracy got the rock first. Ben Wallace air-balls free throws! Free Throws! I would bet the house on my mother at least hitting some part of the backboard or rim, and Ben Wallace shoots more free throws everyday then my mom has in her life! It's just a historic fall from grace, and there's a pretty good chance Ben will play a part in LeBron and co. not making the finals this year.

P.S. YouTube Tracy Morgan and watch any of his appearances on talk shows. Need more convincing? Every clip I watched had the word "wasted" in the title.

P.S.S. Ben Wallace is one of the starting centers on my fantasy basketball team.

Quote of the Day (2/11/09)



"I used to do drugs. I still do. But I used to, too."

- Mitch Hedberg

Tuesday, February 10, 2009

Clip of the Day (2/10/09)

This one's for all you lovers out there...

Unscripted

Sometimes I wonder if Facebook controls our lives. Since evolving from an exclusive network of college students to an all-inclusive internet party, it has seemingly established itself as the one-stop shop for social capitol.

This might explain the enthusiastic fascination with Facebook's newest craze: listing 25 random facts about yourself, and then forwarding your list to 25 friends. Each of your 25 friends are required to advance their own 25 random facts to 25 different people, lest they be tarred and feathered by the Facebook Police.

You get the idea. It's Six Degrees of Separation (the sociological concept, not the movie) crossed with the Pay It Forward (the movie, not the financial transaction). Malcolm Gladwell could probably write a 300-page dissertation exploring this phenomenon.

Anyway, I recently encountered a different meme that certainly has potential to rapidly propagate throughout the Facebook community. If you have ever attempted to construct the soundtrack to your life, look no further -- Facebook has kindly provided a format that, with the assistance of iTunes and randomness, can effectively answer your cinematic conundrum...


Soundtrack of Your Life

Instructions:

1. Open your library (iTunes, Winamp, Media Player, iPod, etc)
2. Put it on shuffle
3. Press play
4. For every question, type the song that's playing
5. When you go to a new question, press the next button
7. No cheating and doctoring your list to make yourself look cooler than the person you took this from



WILL POWER -- THE UPLIFTING TALE OF A HANDSOME IMPRESARIO THAT OVERCAME A LITTANY OF OBSTACLES TO ASCEND FROM HIS HUMBLE MIDDLE CLASS ORIGINS TO THE SPLENDOR AND AUTHORITY OF AN ONLINE BLOG

by
Facebook, iTunes, and Sly Whitman


Opening Credits: Purple Rain by Prince & The Revolution

When His Purple Majesty was composing this epic ballad in the summer of 1983, I doubt he expected it to resurface in the biopic of an unborn white guy some 26 years later. Nonetheless, Purple Rain offers an emotional introduction to my life; I suppose the film's establishing shot features me purifying myself in the waters of Lake Minnetonka.

Random Fact: Purple Rain won the Oscar for Best Original Song Score at the 57th Academy Awards.


First Day at School: I Knew I Loved You by Savage Garden

In my experience people generally don't encounter their soulmates in kindergarten, yet who am I to disagree with the unassailable doctrine of Facebook (and iTunes)? After all, as The Savage Gardeners tell us, "Maybe it's intuition / But some things you just don't question." On the other hand, if this is my movie, then we have to replace Kirsten Dunst with someone remotely likable.

Random Fact: Savage Garden vocalist Darren Hayes looks so damn cute in the music video. Sorry girls, he's married ...to another man.


Breaking Up: Ramblin' Man by The Allman Brothers

I always thought this song was about a drifter that cannot exist in a static reality. His entire life has been characterized by transience: he was born in the backseat of Greyhound bus rollin' down Highway 41 (presumably in Georgia), he plans to travel from Nashville to New Orleans, his only home is the road, etc. Sounds like a pretty happy guy for someone who's routinely unemployed, functionally homeless, and apparently now single.

Random Fact: Despite it's devilish difficulty, I typically play Ramblin' Man on Rock Band 2 at least twice per day (once again setting the high score on the Cool-o-Meter). Perhaps my fictional girlfriend broke-up with me because I spent too much time playing the game and not enough time devoting attention to her feminine needs. Another case of art imitating life.


Prom: You Get What You Give by New Radicals

A quintessential 90's anthem about the scintillating virtues of (righteously) friendship and (curiously) anti-consumerism. I've never been able to reconcile the back end of the bridge section, but the lyrics "You're in harm's way / I'm right behind / Now say you're mine" might summarize a common prom experience.

Random Fact: If memory serves, unnamed members of our high school class were 13 minutes late to the Senior Prom. As punishment, they had to report to detention at 8:00 AM the following morning, where they were held for exactly 13 minutes. The lesson? You get what you give.


Sex Scene: Renegade by Jay-Z feat. Eminem

This particular sex scene is actually a gang-rape.

Random Fact: Neither Jay-Z nor Eminen are rapists. To my knowledge.


Life's Ok: International Statement by NFL Primetime

Oh baby. Life is most definitely okay. Football enthusiasts might remember International Statement as highlight music on ESPN's estimable "NFL Primetime," which was inexplicably taken off the air and converted into disconnected segments on Sportscenter broadcasts. Chronologically, this happened shortly after Chris Berman became a caricature of himself and right before he lost 41 lbs. on NurtiSystem.

In the movie, the song would accompany my limitless supply of sports highlights. Consolidating the hours of footage into one inspirational montage will be a tremendous challenge for the filmmakers.

Random Fact: International Statement = audio-cocaine.


Mental: Let There Be Love by Oasis

I guess it's appropriate that my favorite band makes an appearance on the soundtrack, but what exactly does "mental" mean? Does the character have a breakdown and wind up in a straitjacket? Sounds like an unpleasant plot twist.

Random Fact: One of the few songs where Liam and Noel Gallagher share the lead vocals. Fitting, because both of them are certifiably crazy by one measure or another.


Flashback: Boogie on Reggae Woman by Stevie Wonder

Trapped in a room with padded walls? Isolated from the world and imprisoned by your thoughts? Cheer up! How about a funky flashback to the smoldering 70's?! Perfect for my life story, especially since I was born in 1986. No worries -- on Facebook, anachronistic errors are encouraged.

Random Fact: You are black. I am white. Life's an Eskimo Pie, let's take a bite!


Getting Back Together: 10 Crack Commandments by Notorious B.I.G.

Awesome song, wrong scene. Maybe if Whitney and Bobby were getting back together.

Random Fact: Experts agree -- money and blood don't mix, like two dicks and no bitch.


Wedding: Invisible Touch by Genesis

I would love to play this at my wedding. Fuck yeah. Although it was a #1 hit in the United States, Invisible Touch has been unfairly overlooked during the 80's revival. I blame Phil Collins, who has sustained cultural relevance through Oscar nominations and ubiquitous Miami Vice reruns. In doing so, he has somewhat overshadowed the seminal work of his original band, Genesis, much to the chagrin of superfan Patrick Bateman.

Random Fact: For more information on Phil Collins and Genesis, please refer to the film American Psycho (2000).


Birth of Child: Ayo Technology by 50 Cent feat. Justin Timberlake

Uh oh. Looks like my child is destined to be a stripper. Just like her mother.

Random Fact: Contrary to Chuck's passionate feelings, J.T. is not the best entertainer in the world. That title belongs to Chris Brown, master of hand-to-hand combat and all-around class act.


Falling in Love: Late Nite Tip by Three 6 Mafia

A classic American love story. Girl loves Boy. Boy prefers late-night unemotional sexual trysts. Girl desires romatic monogamy. Boy flips the proverbial script and goes to his other "freaks." Ripped from the pages of my life.

Random Fact: Similar to Prince, Three 6 Mafia has won the Oscar for Best Original Song. As Jon Stewart pointed out, it just got a little easier out here for a pimp.


Final Battle: Backstreets by Bruce Springsteen

This would only be the absolute coolest battle sequence ever.

Random Fact: According to the YouTube clip, Silvio Dante is alive and well.


Death Scene: All or Nothing by O-Town

Who better to follow The Boss than the second-rate Backstreet Boys imitation from Orlando? If my death is complemented by this song, then I must have received the "nothing" part of the ultimatum. Or maybe I deserved to die for having O-Town in my library.

Random Fact: All or Nothing was the group's most successful hit and it emerged as a fixture at school dances; however, the lead single from their eponymous debut album was actually a song called "Liquid Dreams," which was about precisely what you think it's about.


Funeral Scene: If You Want My Love by Cheap Trick

Nice. You can forever access my love from beyond the grave. To live in the hearts of those we leave behind is not to die.

Random Fact: If a Cheap Trick song had to be played for my funeral, I'm glad it was this one and not the 1977 chart-topper "I Want You to Want Me." That would be ominous, and, frankly, I don't need necrophilic fantasies tarnishing my legacy.


End Credits: Between the Sheets by The Isley Brothers

Gettin' sexy!

Random Fact: I love it when you call me Big Poppa.


DELETED SCENE -- For the sake of symmetry, allow me to end this story at the place where it all began: Prince & The Revolution...


_

DVR Alert: Lil' Wayne on ESPN's Around the Horn

Weezy F. Baby is going to be on ESPN's Around the Horn hosted by Tony Reali (He went to THE Christian Brother Academy, in case you weren't already aware) at 5:00 today. Hopefully, future DVR alerts will come sooner than 38 minutes before the show is set to air, but I still had to get it out there.

Update: Vegas has a Wayne/Paige showdown at -400, and Jackie Mac/Plashcke at +1200.

Why I Can't Forgive A-Rod


It's been over 72 hours since I heard the news about A-Rod testing positive for steroids in 2003, and I'm still wrestling with how to cope with it. The moment I think I've reached a conclusion, another one of my friends comes out of the woodwork and starts steering me in another direction. "Bottom line is he's a Yankee", "Dude, everyone was doing it back then", "At least he admitted to it", "We really don't have a choice", etc. So if I start rambling, forgive me. I'm just still not exactly sure how to feel about all this.

Since I heard the news, I've felt like an idiot, a hypocrite, less of a fan, but more than anything else, naive. See, I actually thought Alex was the one who would save us from the asterisk. That's really been one of the worst parts. I pride myself on being a self-proclaimed "all-knowing" sports fan, and I didn't see this coming... and I absolutely should have.
Alex Rodriguez has irked me since day one. It started off simple: "Who is this purple-lipped guy trying to steal Griffey's thunder?" Basically, I hated for the sake of hating. I'm far from above that when it comes to sports. Fact of the matter was, every baseball fan chimed in on the "Who ya got?? A-Rod/Nomar/Jeter" debate, and there really wasn't any statistical evidence to back up Derek Jeter. I stood strong with my "winning is the only statistic that matters" argument, all the while building up animosity towards Alex Rodriguez.

Then came the infamous GQ article where he referred to Derek Jeter as nothing more than "a #2 hitter." Sure, of course this is going to make me completely turn on A-Rod because he attacked my favorite Yankee of all-time, but that's not what really bothered me. Alex and Derek were "good friends", and Jeter never had a bad thing to say about anyone. It was 100% unprovoked and if they really were friends, it's just that much worse. I am a sucker for those who try to do things the right way. Give me Jack Shephard, take Sawyer. Give me Hulk Hogan, take Andre the Giant. Give me Joe Paterno, and take your Bobby Bowden. I want to root for the guys who are honorable, which is why this A-Rod fiasco is such a dilemma (Any time you can use fiasco and dilemma in the same sentence, you just can't pass it up).

Of course, none of this A-Rod stuff really mattered to me because he was winning 65 games a year with the Texas Rangers. He was off my radar. However, there was something about Alex that you just knew he wasn't content with racking up monster, albeit enhanced, numbers in the AL West. The Yankees/Red Sox rivalry was back, and it was all the rage. I don't think A-Rod cared so much that he wasn't winning championships as much as he cared that nobody was talking about him. So, as fate would have it, only after a ridiculous back-and-forth with the Boston Red Sox (Hello, red flag #37), Alex Rodriguez became a New York Yankee.

I still remember when I actually found out about this. It was literally the first day I had been out of bed after having pneumonia my for 3 weeks during my senior year, and I was out to dinner at a place I was very fond of called Briody's. I received a text from Pat Briody, yes of Briody's fame, and my stomach sank. I thought they must have traded Jeter, since A-Rod had always played shortstop. Again, my initial reaction to getting the "Best ballplayer of his generation" was "Oh God, no." (These red flags are just popping out everywhere) Then I heard A-Rod was going to play 3rd base, and this is where the story gets interesting...

I hopped on the A-Rod bandwagon with hopping-speed that hadn't been seen since the guy from Good Charlotte bought Nicole Richie a drink. By this time, Nomar's ship had sailed and it was just Jeter or A-Rod, this ended that argument and now, both men were playing on the same side on the infield for the New York Yankees. He deferred to Jeter, and that's all I needed. In retrospect, my flip-flopping got me what I deserved.

Ever since Alex came to the Yankees, our greatest highlight has been the closing of Yankee Stadium. His first season with the Yankees had the single worst ending to a Yankees season that I could have ever imagined, just short of Jeter and Torre getting caught making out inside the room Gherig went to cry during his last days as a Yankee. It never got much better. Attempting to punch the ball out of a glove. Batting 8th in the playoffs. Sunbathing in Central Park. Canadian she-male strippers. Madonna. It was just relentless, but that's my relationship with A-Rod as a Yankee fan in a microcosm.

To fully understand the relationship, let me take you back to the 2007 World Series. I spent the majority of that World Series on egg shells. My girlfriend is a Boston fan, and she's the right type of fan. Now, I will never root for the RedSox, but suddenly blatantly rooting against them had its downside. It wasn't much fun silently watching the Sox pummel the Rockies each game and giving out half-hearted congratulations to my girlfriend, roommates, and friends, but I'm a better man for it (or at least my girlfriend tells me I am). Point is, the 2007 World Series already wasn't the best of times for me in terms of sports, and then it happened.

Right before the Sox were about to clinch it, Joe Buck reported that Alex Rodriguez was opting out of his contract with the Yankees, a move the Yankees continually said would lead to him in a different uniform. The fact that A-Rod and that snake Scott Boras decided to upstage the biggest moment of the baseball season was bad enough. In fact, if smell-o-vision existed, the TV would've emitted a mixed scent of a rotten egg, Star Jones's feces, and leather dossed in cheap cologne. Still, this wasn't the worst part. The worst part was that by opting out, A-Rod was saying "Fuck You!" to the most prestigious franchise in all of sports, and it wasn't a cool fuck-the-establishment F-U, it was a "I am the fucking franchise" F-U. I was beside myself. (Channeling Seth Meyers) Really, Alex Rodriguez, really? You want to call the Yankees bluff, really? After the worst 4 seasons of the Joe Torre era, you want to opt out of your contract, really? The highest-paid contract in the history of sports, yeah, that contract? Really? You do realize Joe Torre had to move you down to the bottom of the lineup just a few months ago? You do? Really? You do realize that a heaven and hell just might exist? Really?

What did I do? What any rational human being would do. A few days later, I was bored, and my roommate Jamie (who, from this point on, will only be referred to as Hood) and I decided to light my Alex Rodriguez jersey (the same jersey I tried to sell to people in my dorm sophomore year for $10, JoeCaj offered $5) on fire and film the burning on our cell phones, paying no attention to the mass amount of leaves in our driveway. I felt cleansed. From that point on, I started defending the female lead in movies when she dramatically returned all the stuff that reminded her of him to her boyfriend. She needs some closure goddamnit.

Fast forward to a week later, the New York Yankees have signed Alex Rodgriguez to a 10 year, $275 million contract, the largest contract in the history of sports. Guess who was back on the bandwagon? It was a little different this time though. I was more aware of what I was in store for, weary of what lied ahead. I was numb to all the Madonna stuff, and the Canseco stuff as well. I just wanted the Yankees to be winners again. New manager, last year of The Stadium, we could do this! That's the most disturbing thing about looking back at the past few seasons with A-Rod. The best thing about him was completely hypothetical. Imagine A-Rod hits an Aaron Boone-like walk-off! Imagine he gets the monkey off his back like Peyton! Imagine! He never delivered.

That brings us to today. I don't have anything left. I have given all I can. I simply do not want to root for this guy anymore. Everything about his personality I hate, and now, you can definitively add cheater and liar to that list. I actually feel blessed to have been raised a Yankee fan. My parents wasted no time. I witnessed an opening day at Yankee Stadium before I was even a year old. I have no qualms admitting that the waterworks were flowing when I watched the Yankee Stadium DVD that was released this summer at 2 in the morning. It might be silly, but it is a part of who I am. A-Rod has put a permanent blemish on the New York Yankees. No one has treated the franchise like he has. 2004. The opt-out. I've already covered it, and we continued to give him chance after chance. How has he re-paid us? He has given us the pleasure of rooting for the biggest phony in all of sports for the next 9 years.

Thanks to A-Rod's selfish, callous decisions (or according to him, the pressure of a GUARANTEED $250 million contract), I'll be watching Sportscenter when I'm 30, and they will still be talking about asterisks. Except next decade, the villain will be in pinstripes while he treats our nation's past time like one of his Canadian Chyna-dolls. He didn't have to do this. He had all the talent in the world. He did it because quite simply, he is a piece of shit. A piece of shit who looked Katie Couric in the eye and told her a pompous, bold-faced lie. A piece of shit who's penalty for all this is $243 million over the next 9 years. A piece of shit who's never respected the uniform he wears 162 days a year.

I'm done rooting for that piece of shit. He's proved he couldn't care less about anyone else, whether it be his ex-wife Cynthia, the Yankee fans who pay his salary, or the American public. The saddest part is he is not the first and won't be the last to get away with being a piece of shit because of his celebrity and athletic ability. He is going to get cheered in the new Yankee Stadium this year, but he shouldn't, and I will not be one of the thousands to cheer for him. At some point, a stand must be taken to tell such prima-donnas that it is not OK to do whatever you want. You can't show a consistently blatant disregard for everyone else and still be considered a hero. A-Rod is the furthest thing from a hero, but over time, he will be received as one again, and probably because Yankee fans are so dedicated to their team, even though A-Rod has continually given nothing back to that team or its fans. The lesson learned will be it's OK to cheat as long as you can still win. It's OK to lie as long as you're decent at apologizing. So you won't be in the Hall of Fame? Who cares, right? What would you rather have a plaque in Cooperstown, NY or a half a Billion dollars? A-Rod should've been one of the few people who preferred the plaque.
I'm glad that I had the foresight to apologize ahead of time for rambling. It's basically all I did. I'm just disappointed that I was dumb enough to buy into this idiot, time and time again. And please, make no mistake, I'll never stop rooting for the Yanks.But mark my words, I will never root for Alex Rodriguez ever again, and unless you want history to repeat itself, neither should you.

Quote of the Day For February 10, 2009



"I know now, that even if you do win on steroids, you're really not winners. You're just a p-pussy; you're just a big fat p-p-pussy. And if you take steroids, the only decent thing to do is come forward and say, ‘Remove me from the record books, because I am a big, stinky p-pussy, steroid taking jackass. "


-- Jimmy "South Park: Up the Down Steroid"

Aloha...

...and Hello. I don't have any nifty gifties for you, but I would like to thank you for checking out the blog in its early stages. There's a lot of work to be done, but at the same time, I couldn't really wait any longer to open this up. There's a lot going on right now, and Will and I have a lot to say.

Hopefully, you could presume from the title of the blog that this is going to be some light-hearted stuff. That means no How to REALLY Save Our Economy posts. No fluff pieces on Bob Ley. No 4-in-the-morning life confessionals. And certainly, no haiku's. The main reason Will and I think this could be a good idea is because we both have a sense of humor that appeals to seeing someone who takes themselves too serious getting egged in the face. At the same time, I think the both of us are self-aware enough that we are often the ones who end up with eggs on our face (Insert LOST-esque flashback to this past November of me texting friends "I've never enjoyed watching a QB and Head Coach, the way I've enjoyed watching Favre and Mangini this year.")

All that being said, the things that you can expect are long-winded sports posts, movie/music reviews, funny YouTube clips, roasts of acquaintances, exaggerated tales, etc. I think within the first two weeks or so, you'll really get a feel for why we wanted to do this. We are always open to feedback and appreciate all comments.

I think I've pretty much covered everything I want to. I'm sure Will will have some things to add. Again, thanks for checking us out, we understand it's hard not to.