Archive

Posts Tagged ‘phillies’

The Foot: 2010 Week 5 NFL Picks

October 7th, 2010

WEEK FOUR NFL PICKS!

Credit: Associated Press

I watch countless amounts of games yearly. Everything from the usual NBA, NFL, NHL, MLB games to random soccer games from Colombia and Australia. As simply a sports fan, it’s very cool when I see a transcendent and amazing performance from an individual player–like Roy Halladay’s pitching performance last night. I thought the best pitching performance of the season, besides the perfect game Halladay threw in may, belonged to Brandon Morrow of the Blue Jays. He tossed a CG SO 17 strikeout, 1 hit game against the Rays during the summer. He owned his stuff that day. But Halladay blew right by Morrow last night. At the end of the 4th inning, I had a good feeling that Halladay would throw a no-hitter because of the way the Reds were getting out–weak dribblers, weak grounders. Plus, the bite on his pitches was something I haven’t seen. I’ve watched Halladay pitch many times but never as dominant and in control as he was last night, and I haven’t seen a more dominating regular season from a pitcher than Halladay this season.

As a Phillies fan, it’s just cool. This current era in the franchise is something I dreamed about for many years when the Phillies were losing or winning but couldn’t get a win when the games really counted. They would always lose to the Marlins or the Mets down the stretch, or the Expos/Nats would take 2 of 3 in a critical series. But, now, it’s so different. Last night was sort of the exclamation point. It took years for the Phillies to find one damn ace. Right now, there’s three. And one of them just pitched the 2nd no-hitter in post-season history after throwing a perfect game on May 29.

It is very, very fun being a Phillies fan and experiencing this insane run of success.

Now, it is time to switch gears and write about football. Week 4 was definitely the first great week of the 2010 NFL season. The early games were great. The Patriots Monday night performance was awesome. I even began the day 6-1. Before the Titans choked, I had thoughts of prognostication perfection. Alas, prognostication perfection must wait. I went 9-5 last week. My overall record is 37-25. I will now steal words from Boy Meets World’s Shawn Hunter, when he addressed his classmates, and the parents at graduation, about his own evaluation of his education: “I can do better.” Yes, readers, I can do better with my picks. YES.

LET IT BEGIN!

Buffalo over Jacksonville

-That whole ‘the Jags will quit on their coach’ argument I made blew up in my face. 28 points on the Colts and a 59 yard game winning field goal. I feel like the Jags can only let down their small fanbase with an ugly loss to Buffalo. Chan Gailey’s offensive innovation has yet to show in four weeks of the season. I wonder, with Lynch gone, if he’ll actually settle on a starting running back. And has Gailey even looked at tapes from last year or stats? Fred Jackson can handle the starting job. Of course, Gailey only got the job because no one else wanted it. I expect an ugly game.

Cincinnati over Tampa Bay

-Tampa is a tempting pick especially coming out of the bye week. The Bucs are a mediocre team and the Bengals are merely average so the upset is very possible. I think the Bengals will rebound from the loss in Cleveland. Don’t know why. Maybe their defense will finally wake up after napping for four weeks. I won’t be surprised if Freeman outplays Palmer. The Bucs don’t have enough weapons to win though.

Atlanta over Cleveland

-I respect the Browns this season. Most of the respect is for Peyton Hillis. who has helped prevent my one fantasy team from falling off a cliff. Poor Seneca Wallace has no one to throw to besides Evan Moore and Hillis. As for the Falcons, I like the team a lot. They play good defense and offense. And their win last week was big after falling behind early by 14.

Detroit over St. Louis

-Probably a dumb pick because the Rams have played great football the last two weeks. The Lions gave the Rams their only win last season. Detroit played a good game against Green Bay, and their effort needs to translate into a win sometime soon. If not, we’ll know someone put a curse on the Lions franchise. As predicted last week, Ron Pitts and John Lynch returned to the Rams for their broadcast assignment. I would expect no other voices this week other than the usual two.

Indianapolis over Kansas City

-If Kansas City wins, the NFL experts will go into a frenzy. The Colts just need to get healthy. Even Austin Collie was questionable going into last week. Manning, Addai and Wayne did all they could but the defense wasn’t helpful. I don’t think the Chiefs have improved to the point where they can come into a tough environment, against a pissed off team and win.

Green Bay over Washington

-Washington is not a good team. They just faced a team that didn’t bother to prepare for the game. I don’t think the Redskins can sit on a lead this week and expect to win. The Packers will either win in a blowout or in a shootout. McNabb can put points up. You know what’s awful about being in a 14 team fantasy league? Ryan Torain was on the waiver wire and it became a scramble to get Ryan Torain. I didn’t even get the claim. I had to settle for Max Hall because the league has TWO qb spots. But no one really cares about my fantasy teams. On a hockey note, Bruce Boudreu actually argued that the Capitals should’ve been 10th in defense last season and said they finished 16th because they let goals up with a huge lead. That is still poor coaching. Expect failure again, Caps fans.

Carolina over Chicago

-Todd Collins vs. Jimmy Clausen is what every Carolina fan wanted to see when they paid for their tickets, I assume. The Bears might only allowed 7 sacks this week instead of 10. Clausen showed poise last week against the Saints. They almost won the game. Clausen has no one to throw to this week; however, he’s terribe hitting receivers anyway and managed to nearly upset the Panthers. A heavy dose of Williams and Stewart for this game. Collins has more talent surrounding him but I think Fox outcoaches Lovie Smith. Maybe Clausen will go a week without any of his teammates yelling at him.

Baltimore over Denver

-Kyle Orton has transformed into a lethal passer, so much so that I will write he can exploit the Ravens weak secondary. The Ravens will probably shut the Bronco offense down. I don’t think Flacco gets the credit he deserves. He doesn’t get flustered. He had so much poise against the Steelers defense. It is time to take Flacco seriously.

New York Giants over Houston

-I have no idea what to make of the Giants these days. The defense was outstanding Sunday night. The offense needs to be more cohesive. Houston continues to show cracks. I feel like the Texans will finish 9-7 once again. The win over Oakland didn’t inspire confidence.

New Orleans over Arizona

-The Saints should blow out the Cardinals easily. Max Hall will make a few mistakes as well most likely. Now, brief hockey tangent: I’m rooting for the Coyotes to be re-located to Winnipeg. Does anyone in Phoenix or Arizona really care about the Coyotes? I don’t think so. Re-location would be better for hockey and the Coyotes–actual fans and support would exist. The league should have more Canadian teams. Yes, I’m stoked for hockey season.

Dallas over Tennessee

-The Titans look like first round playoff fodder now. Bad, bad loss last week. Teams might be figuring out how to stop Chris Johnson too. Also, the Titans’ receiving corp remains underwhelming. But I would gladly take a Cowboys loss. I would laugh and revel in their 1-3 record.

San Diego over Oakland

-The Chargers should be in the driver’s seat in no time for the AFC West championship. The Raiders play with heart and effort so one would think they’ll get a victory soon, that the hard work pays off. But they are the Raiders.

Philadelphia over San Francisco

-Ever notice how Andy Reid looks like a miserable walrus at the podium? No idea why the team doesn’t add another receiver, running back, or quarterback. Andy’s stubbornness and arrogance only grows. Kolb was in a lose-lose situation last week with fans. If he tested the deep coverage, he might’ve turned a few balls over that would’ve incited the fans’ rage. He kept checking down which enraged fans. The blame for loss goes to the coaching staff. The Eagles weren’t prepared for the game. And the media should quit using stats four weeks into the season like they will never change. The Redskins had two bad games that hurt their stats but adjustments are common in the NFL (in case the majority of Philadelphia forgot). Reid spoke about the Cover 2 like the offense never faced a Cover 2 defense. ADJUSTMENTS, Andy. Tra Thomas said Reid was out-coached in the final quarter of the Super Bowl. Out-coached again on Sunday.

New York Jets over Minnesota

-Randy Moss returns to the place where sex boat happened. Favre certainly needs a reliable receiver. Unfortunately, Revis probably plays this game. I’m impressed with the Jets after the Week 1 loss. Sanchez proved himself with these three wins. Santonio Holmes returns. It doesn’t hurt to add another weapon. As of right now, the Jets are backing up what they said in the offseason and pre-season about the Super Bowl.

Last Week: 9-5

Overall: 37-25

THE YOUTUBE CLIP OF THE WEEK

The Foot: What’s Worth Watching Tonight

September 27th, 2010

Usually, I’d write about Beyond Survival with Les Stroud since the day is Monday; however, I am no longer going to write about Beyond Survival on a weekly basis. Instead, I am going to write about what’s on television each and every night. Who knows how long this idea lasts before I pull the plug on it without warning and return to solely writing reviews for various episodic television shows.

I’ll give this the name WHAT’S WORTH WATCHING TONIGHT. And since I am including sports, I’ll begin at the 7PM hour.

7PM

Phillies at Nationals on CSN Philadelphia

If the Phillies win, they clinch the NL East for the 4th year in a row. If the Braves lose, they clinch for the 4th year in a row. Some prefer to win the division by winning while others do not care. Roy Halladay goes for his 21st win of the season vs. John Lannan. Lannan falls apart against the Phillies. I wonder, will this game break another Comcast record for ratings? But, really, if you live in Philly, what else will you watch besides this game?

8PM

Green Bay Packers at Chicago Bears, on ESPN

Should the Phillies/Nats game get rained out tonight, this football game is probably going to be awesome. Just think of the plethora of positive Mike Martz columns that will be written if the Bears improve to 3-0. Remember, Jay Cutler was awful last season. He threw one more TD than INT. There’s a good chance that Clay Matthews will destroy Jay Cutler though. This is the damage that Matthews has done in two games: injured Kevin Kolb which led to Kolb losing his job to Michael Vick. Last week, Matthews destroyed Trent Edwards. Edwards is now unemployed.

How I Met Your Mother–”Cleaning House”–on CBS

I’m sure the relative optimism I had for sixth season of the show will be damaged tonight. It’s a Barney episode and Mrs. Stinson returns. Last year’s Stinsons episode was a goofy, sitcommy episode that did generate laughs; however, I have a bad feeling about this one. Who knows though. Expect a review of the episode later tonight.

House–”Selfish”–on FOX

House and Cuddy reveal their coupling to the world. The mystery of the week revolves around a girl who collapses in a skateboarding competition while with her terminally ill brother. Yes.

WALL-E, on Disney XD

The delightful Pixar movie about a robot who falls in love. This is one of the greatest movies of all-time.

9PM

The Event–”To Keep Us Safe”–on NBC

Promos have indicated that The Event will actually be revealed. I don’t really care what The Event is. I hated the Pilot. I’m not sure I’ll watch or write about the show. I’ll watch the second episode to see if an actual story is told in the episode, if actual characterization takes places, etc. But The Event is close to getting cut from the lineup like Hellcats was.

Lone Star–on FOX

The con man show made it another week despite atrocious ratings. The showrunner/creator pleaded with the internet to watch his show. Despite the plea, I’m still not going to watch the show.

10PM

Hawaii Five-O–Episode 2–on CBS

I actually watched the pilot last week after the show generated good reviews from critics. I’ll probably watch it every now and then. If you haven’t seen an episode, check it out. It’s a fun hour of television.

SCREENPLAY OF THE DAY

Maria Full of Grace Written By Joshua Marston

http://www.joblo.com/scripts/maria_full_of_grace.pdf

THE YOUTUBE CLIP OF THE WEEK

Life After Jacob’s Foot: Finding Quality Television This Summer

July 6th, 2010

TRIVIA QUESTION: Which Tampa Bay Ray was on base for the final out in Game 5 of the 2008 World Series?

Trivia questions are fun. Posing such a question removes the need to write a mind-blowing lead that will cause everyone to drop what they are doing and read what I’ve written. I posed the above question on my online radio show last night. This specific show dealt with the semi-finals of the World Cup. The answer is in there. I think I will wait to provide the answer. Post your answers/guesses in the comments.

It’s going to be 100 degrees around most of the East Coast today. No one wants to read 7,000 words on how I’d re-write the fourth season of Dawson’s Creek if I ran the show. Today is a lazy, hazy summer day where one should grab a cold class of lemonade and read or something.

As far as TV watching goes, it’s rough out there with summer programming. Plenty of reality television exists on networks, if that is your cup of tea. A few scripted shows are on the air like the crop of ABC shows; however, all received terrible reviews. ABC Family has new episodes for their series but I’m far from their demographic and would only watch if I ever was mailed screeners to review. The days of re-runs are not as prominent because of reality television. HBO took the 4th of July weekend off so I’m unable to review the first two episodes of Entourage. I managed to miss the Dexter marathon that occured last week, thus destroying all hopes of catching up before season five begins.

But Mad Men looms. Ah, Mad Men. What a show. I thought that it would take some time for a show to hit with me like LOST did. Nope. Mad Men is outstanding. Mad Men is part of the rare ‘I Should Probably Own This Show on DVD” category. Not many shows reach that level for me. To date, these shows are: LOST (obviously), Buffy, ANGEL, Monty Python’s Flying Circus and Arrested Development. I own a season or two of other shows but, for the shows I’ve just listed, I own every season. Mad Men is very close to joining the ranks. Mad Men is the bright star in a dark sky of summer television this summer.

Another bright star is the season six LOST DVD. In a little over a month, the DVD will hit the shelves. Radio silence will end. I think. The ultimate last chapter in the LOST experience, which means I’ll be able to write one last LOST entry about new content. Ahhhh, LOST.

IFC has begun airing the short-lived Freaks and Geek series. Many know that Judd Apatow was a producer and writer on the show. The series is where most of Judd’s favorite actors got their start in the business. Seth Rogen would later write for Judd’s “Undeclared.” I watched the pilot episode twice and it is terrific. Paul Feig did an excellent job introducing his characters and defining their essential personalities. This is another show worth watching in the very bleak summer season of television.

Of course, The Soup airs every friday on E! and is an excellent source of entertainment.

Basically, my point is there are quality alternatives to some bad, bad tv. And as always, the Phillies are basically on every night. MLB Tonight is the best baseball program on television. It’s also fun to keep track of all thing NHL free agency. When in doubt, sports are always there.

THE YOUTUBE CLIP OF THE DAY

Jacob’s Foot: Untitled

July 29th, 2009

A day like today calls for me to break my own blog rules. I am going to write a bit about the Cliff Lee deal and the passing of Jim Johnson (and then LOST).

Jim Johnson passed away yesterday afternoon. It wasn’t a complete shock for anyone in Philadelphia. Once Sean McDermott was officially named the defensive coordinator, The Daily News sports section began speculating that Johnson’s condition was dire. A quote in Monday’s paper described McDermott talking about Johnson as omnious. Regardless, it’s still very sad news. Seven months ago he was coaching his defense in the NFC Championship. It was some of the best defense I’ve seen in the ten seasons I was able to watch his defensive mind at work. I loved his defense. He was so creative and smart. He adapted so well. For example, an older Dawkins couldn’t do what younger Dawkins did, and so Johnson used him as the joker. He helped mold Chris Gocong into one hell of a linebacker. Joselio Hanson could’ve been a starter in this league because of Jim Johnson but Hanson was loyal enough to stay (and the eagles recognized the talent of Hanson by giving him starters money to be the nickel corner). All of my favorite Eagles defenders (former and present) are products of the Jim Johnson defense. He wasn’t afraid to make a move. I remember him benching Omar Gaither and inserting Akeem Jordan, the Lito fiasco which spawned Joselio, moving Darren Howard to tackle which paid off huge, deciding to let Troy Vincent and Bobby Taylor go for Sheldon Brown and Lito Sheppard, the defensive line rotation, Quentin Mikell becoming the starting strong safety, etc, etc.

Year after year after year he kept it fresh. One of my favorite defensive performances was the Cowboys game from 2007 when the Eagles were heading for an 8-8 finish and the Cowboys were America’s team again, and the defense just went into Dallas and smacked them across the mouth. A 10-6victory for the Birds. That’s only one of many examples of Jim Johnson’s defense. In 2001, the team didn’t allow more than 21 points in any regular season game. His tenure has produced solid top 5 stats for the defense. He had an extraordinary mind. I didn’t know much about his life except that he was a devoted family man and that he loved football. As a sports fan, he’s given me great memories and showed me what great defense was.

As for the Phillies, they are 19-3 in July (the final game of the d’backs series has not yet completed as of this posting) and they acquired the reigning AL Cy Young winner from the Indians this afternoon. Yes, Cliff Lee is a Philadelphia Phillie. I’m pretty excited. I was worried about what they would’ve given up for Lee. When I saw the details of the deal, it wasn’t too bad. I’m a big Lou Marson fan. He has a lot of potential to make a name for himself in this league. I would’ve liked to have seen him remain a Phil but the big picture is repeating in the world series so I’m okay with trading him. Carrasco was simply expendable. Jason Donald, the now former projected 3B of the future, was hurt most of this year at AAA. He needs consistency with the bat. And I didn’t know anything about Jason Knapp other than he’s supposed to become a very good pitcher. I hope he does. I’m very happy overall with the deal. I know this team can repeat. The big worry now is Lidge in the 9th. He’s been struggling ever since the season started. Lidge is the only big concern. I think the fans have a clue of what the pen and rotation could could look like in a month and September with the call-ups: Hamels, Lee, Blanton, Happ, Moyer; Bullpen: Clay “The Con Man” Condrey, Durbin, Romero, Eyre, Chan Ho, Pedro, Myers, Drabek (hey it’s a possibility), Tyler Walker, Mad-Dog Mammoth Madson, Lidge, Kendrick (just to speculate of course). Their lineup is out of this world. No need to elaborate on that. This team can very well repeat.

LOST!

fileblastdoormap-bd

Today, there is no LOST episode of the day. I recently found these terrific LOST cartoons that were made in 2006. It’s pre-season 3 of course. I think they are brilliant. It pokes fun at the show and I get a kick out of it. Hopefully you watch and agree. My personal favorite will be posted at a later date. Thank you.

OASIS OFF!

Oasis Off has been effectively pointless but I will continue forth with it. There are two songs left and then I will determine if Wonderwall really is the best Oasis song to play acoustically with the hopes of getting laid. Today’s song could very well steal the award from Wonderwall. Who knows?

“Champagne Supernova”

Jacob’s Foot: Slide Part 2 of Pilot

July 21st, 2009

The eclipse taking place all over Asia.

The eclipse taking place all over Asia.

I’m extremely excited for football season. It’s always a good time with football. Since I like to stick to the entertainment side of life I don’t write too much about sports. Luckily, television and sports for reality shows like MLB Network’s The Pen (focused on the great Phillies bullpen) and in a few weeks HBO’s Hard Knocks returns with the Cincinnati Bengals being the team of choice. It was only two years ago the world enjoyed the antics of the Cincinattica Bengals (Sports Guy’s nickname for them of course). Only comedy can ensue from Hard Knocks: The Cincinnatti Bengals. Yes, I will review this on a (hopefully) weekly basis. It’ll be terrific. Speaking of The Pen though…

The show delivered the best episode yet. The middle of the episode focused on Clay ‘The Con Man’ Condrey’s journey to the major leagues (David Murphy, of course, wrote about his journey in March for the Daily News–terrific piece), the episode updated folks on Jack Taschner’s re-assignment to the IronPigs, and they actually didn’t speed through 3 weeks of baseball action. The show didn’t bother to delight their audience and indulge them in the 22-1 victory over the Reds but Mitch did narrate a series of highlights of what the guys do in the bullpen during games. Tyler Walker being designated for assignment has yet to come in The Pen but I’m sure it’ll be a doozy. Overall, I’ve enjoyed the look-in at the bullpen. I haven’t learned anything new about the bullpen. I think they are saving all of the actual who they are outside of baseball for next week. Highlights have been when the crew followed Lidge to Reading for a rehab assignment, the pen’s adventures in San Diego, the lunch when Taschner, Walker, Lidge, and Condrey recalled their major league debuts.

TRUE BLOOD

In this episode, the Rev’s wife got sexy with Jason in a bathtub (her reward for him), Jason once again moved up in the ranks of the Sun, Godric (or is it Goddrick) was revealed as the Maker of Eric, Lafayette is back at Merlotte’s and not the same ol’ Lafayette, Daphne is also a shapeshifter and Sam likes her even more now, Maryann continues to be a so and so by messing with Tara at work as well as wearing Grams’ clothes and inviting and then manipulating her way to a permanent stay in Sookie’s house, Tara continues to be played, Sookie bothers Barry a whole lot, Godric’s crew aren’t loyal, Jessica and Hoyt are a more interesting couple than Bill and Sookie, Bill is still hilarious, Terry and Arlene seemed to have become close thanks to Maryann’s ‘whatever-the-hell-she-does-to-people’ jawn, and Sookie agreed to go undercover within the Fellowship of the Sun. I enjoyed ‘Never Let Me Go.’ First of all, the title reminded me of the Third Eye Blind song ‘Never Let You Go’ and, secondly, interesting things transpired. Sam continues to be suave as hell. Looking forward to next week.

THE ‘LOST’ EPISODE OF THE DAY!

Doc Jensen posted 15 questions that fans want answered in season six. I will do that as well in the future. Comic Con is THIS weekend. The LOST panel is Saturday. I’ll provide my thoughts on not only LOST but also Dollhouse and any other panel Joss Whedon is on. Perhaps I’ll even cover Kevin Williamson’s The Vampire Diaries starring Boone from LOST. I might indeed wait to comment on LOST’s panel until I listen to the podcast. Decisions, decisions. Surely I’ll be providing you with Dollhouse material. Onto the episode:

file1x02-grouphearbearjpg

The episode: Pilot, Part 2
Original Airdate: September 29, 2004
Written By: J.J. Abrams and Damon Lindelof (Story by JJ Abrams, Damon Lindelof, and Jeffrey Lieber)
Directed By: J.J. Abrams

Content: A group of survivors attempt to broadcast a distress signal for help, while Jack tries to save a man who has been impaled by a piece of shrapnel from the plane. Flashbacks show the events just prior to the crash from the points of view of Kate and Charlie.

Why It’s Worth Re-Watching: Ideally, you watch the pilot as a whole and not in parts but as this is the episode of the day and not episodes…you know the deal. It is a request by STEVE, the other man behind the weekly in-season LOST rankings. Obviously, for rewatchability, it’s the second half of the Pilot that began it all–all the magic, mystery, intrigue, etc. It’s the beginning of a very special series. The end of the episode will leave the unitiated in silence. Mostly, it’s cool to see how the series has progressed. The people were as mysterious as the Island they were on. One of my favorite scenes in this episode leads to a subplot in Hearts and Minds. I won’t give either away because it’ll make it less fun when you re-watch and connect the dots. Sawyer shoots a polar bear, Rousseau’s transmission is picked up and translated by Shannon, Sawyer’s backstory is hinted at when he looks at the letter he wrote to himself while Giachinno’s music swells, Locke tells Walt a secret (also has one of my favorite Locke lines), the symbolism of Backgammon, Jack begins his attempt to heal Edward Mars, Hurley faints at the sight of Mars’ blood, Claire feels her baby again after eating shellfish Jin made for people, etc, etc. It ends with Charlie’s infamous words: ‘Guys…where are we?’

OASIS OFF!

“Slide Away”

FOX’s Attempt to “VS.” Baseball; But the Phillies Are Rolling

July 18th, 2009

At the Lionville YMCA there was a week long camp in which young children, ages 6-12, were taught the basics of baseball. I watched as kids learned how to run under a fly ball, even though they still didn’t understand the concept of catching the ball. I watched them swing through the ball on a tee. While working on throwing the ball to first base they made the catch Scott Smalls and his stepfather having a catch in the beginning of the Sandlot look like Shane Victorino throwing a line to Ruiz; nailing a runner attemping to score from second. That being said, would these kids feel insulted by Tim McCarver trying to explain the game of baseball to them?

Would even these rookies with plastic gloves shake their heads solemnly at comments like “”Well, David Eckstein, like most of us, has 20 digits. Ten fingers. Ten toes,” “Pitching is such a vital part of the game, as far as winning is concerned,” and “There is a world of difference between a count of one ball and two strikes is a lot different situation than hitting with two strikes and one ball.” Keep in mind these are all real comments made by Tim McCarver. If anyone out there reading finds themselves bored or in my case, needs to put off studying for a few hours, may I suggest going to shutuptimmccarver.com. Yes, that is a real web site filled with quotes actually said by McCarver during a live broadcast.

I think that FOX is attempting to do to baseball what VS. is doing to the NHL. As a matter of fact, I am going to make “VS.” into a verb. I am going to send this to Webster’s and see if it sticks. VS. (ver-siz) v.: to sabotage a professional sport by making it nearly unwatchable. Symptoms include announcers with no knowledge of the game, advertising campaigns that spark no interest in the game, and highlighting things no one cares about.

This actually leads me to have to ask myself the question: How is it that I am working for next to nothing at the YMCA while my student loans are reaching a dollar amount that Pacman Jones would actually spend at a strip club while Tim McCarver is saying things like this on television. I mean this is FOX, the television station that carries the World Series, network’s go to guy in the booth. I am sure that without any broadcast experience I could use my baseball knowledge to be a better color guy then McCarver by light years, yet he’s making the big bucks while I am forced to buy Giant brand everything at the grocery store to save a few dollars per trip. And people ask why I am so cynical.

Speaking of cynicism I wonder what Tyler Walker is thinking right now. The 33-year old right-hander pitched in 11 innings while acting as a fill in for Phils relief pitchers on the DL and maintained an immaculate 1.64 ERA. Walker quickly became a guy good ole Charlie could bring in to get some right-handed bats out and was not just a converted starter that had nothing better to offer than to eat up some bullpen innings.

Speaking of converted starters, Walker’s spot was taken by Clay Condrey, the same Clay Condrey that a few months ago was getting ahead of Blue Jays hitters 0-2, before allowing a run parade to assure that the Phils Interleague record would rival the Natinals (if they can’t spell it right on their jerseys than I will not give them the respect to spell it right here). Well now Condrey is back on the team, lurking in the bullpen for a chance to prove he is a glorified AA pitcher while Tyler Walker can go back to the minors and continue his torrid season with 1.40 ERA at Lehigh Valley.

Life isn’t fair sometimes.

Now to get to some positive notes. The Phillies are on a seven game winning streak going into Saturday’s night game in Florida. The starting rotation has finally come into its own, even if Cole Hamels still has me chewing my nails down to the knuckle during his starts. Don’t tell me that you think he looks ok on the mound, this is a guy who torched every team he faced on the way to a World Series MVP, allowing 5 runs to the laughable Pirates lineup. It is not acceptable. However, even with Cole making things nerve-wrecking at times we still have the bullpen settling in as well, including a few reliable guys who made it possible to come back after Cole’s tough outing. Who was the winner of that game again? A guy who shut down the Pirates in the 9th to allow for the big time comeback. Oh, Tyler Walker.

The bullpen is going to be a problem down the stretch, mark my words. When you still see guys like Chad Durbin and Clay Condrey pitching innings with the game on the line, there is going to be issues.

One more final question for anyone out there reading to ponder while I get ready to go see Harry Potter with the fiancé. Is there going to be a point where we cheer for the Mets to win games against our closer competition like the Marlins and the Braves. The Mets have gone from slumping to jumping out of a plane without a parachute. At some point this season the Phillies are going to hit a snag of their own and the Marlins will make a push for the division. With that being said, do we cheer for the Mets to steal some games from the kids in Florida or continue to revile them?

E-mail me at KS609536@wcupa.edu with your answers or anything else baseball/Phillies. I will give you my answer when I am back sometime next week to shed some light on the world of the MLB.

Author: kschmidt Categories: Sports with Ken Tags: , , ,

Jacob’s Foot: Some Season Four Action in this one!

June 3rd, 2009

 

Love this one. It's neat.

Love this one. It's neat.

Written by Chris Monigle

 

I promised archival LOST writing pieces and today you shall get the first of the archival LOST writing pieces…in time. I’m taking a little shortcut way to getting an entry this time. I have my reasons. Firstly, I am (dare I say) pressed for time this week and by pressed, I mean, I am unable to devote the 3+hours it takes me to write a gargantuan entry this week. Now you might be wondering why I don’t simply write it in spurts, why I write it in one fell swoop, and I do not have an answer. The truth: I do break up the days of writing. It’s better in the long run. Better for me because I love to write long pieces. I feel like you get the most bang for the buck you don’t spend by reading a long piece rather than a short piece. I got into a habit (you can decide whether it is bad or good) of writing more than the 600-800 word count required for articles. And I felt that I’d be doing a major injustice to the season five LOST finale if I didn’t write at least 4,000 words (I wanted to get 6,000 but I came way short of that and settled for 4,000 and some change). But enough about word-counts!

I’m in the process of preparing the biggest thing that I will write this summer. Inspired by the experiential post-cards (as he liked to call them) of the late David Foster Wallace, you will, at some point, be reading about my experiences from May 30, 2009 until June 6, 2009. It is a week that includes a trip to the shore, a return to philly that began at 6:52am june 2nd, a return to the shore, and other wild things. Get excited.

Time to spend a few words on sports: Antonio Bastardo made his start last night. I saw about one inning from the entire game because I passed out from my lack of sleep just as the game began at 10pm. It was one of those dealies in which you aren’t concious of passing out but you also are. You’ll find out more about that day in the big jawn I’m going to be writing! But yes, Bastardo pitched 6 innings of 1 run ball. He threw mostly a fast-ball and didn’t really change speeds all too much. But the dude throws heat. Averages 94-95 mph. I happened upon a start of his a saturday or two ago when he was with the Iron Pigs. It was his first start in AAA after pitching twice in AA (I believe). The dude was unbelievable, cruising through the first 4 or so innings before running into a little trouble. Here’s the question though: are the Phillies simply showing him off as a means to end to replace Myers? If I was a betting man, I’d say probably. They’ve got to at least get Roy Halladay though. Just saying. As a whole, the Phils team is playing very solid, fluid baseball. Ruiz is rust-free now and a big, big help out of the 8th hole. It’s an absolutel complete line-up now especially with the offense of Pedro Feliz. The bullpen has been as good as ever. Madson is terrific in the 8th. It’s amazing watching him now that he’s no longer lost in ‘I should be a starter’ thought. One of my favorite memories from the World Series run is when Madson hit 97 on the radar gun. He finally arrived when that happened and realized the potential he’s had since becoming a major leaguer in 2004. That’s about it for the Phillies.

THE LOST SECTION OF JACOB’S FOOT!

Anywho, it’s time for the archival LOST writing piece! What is below is my season four recap which has quite a lot of text from lostpedia.com and Jeremy Bentham. In hindsight, it’s entirely unnecessary given that Widmore thought it’d be funny to name Locke after another philosopher. There are quite a few things in this recap that have been shot down completely by the show itself which is yet another reason why everything should default to the people who run the show. There’s a terrific interview with Damon and Carlton at lostpedia.com (which i finally read. i refused to go near it until season five had wrapped. i didn’t read the entertainment weekly cover story on LOST that was featured in early february until the day after the finale ended and it turned out to be a good thing because there’s loads of stuff that didn’t happen when the cover story originally was published) and Damon addresses the world of fan theories. Now, with season six looming in a few months, every thing is going to fall into place but this quote from Damon is certainly apt. It even connects back to a rant of mine from, I believe, the Dead Is Dead recap (in which I went off on Smoky theories). Here’s the man himself:

Alex: Have you ever seen any theory that has come close to solving any major mysteries? Like the Smoke Monster or Jacob?

Damon: You know, the answer is not really, because… Sometimes, like for example, there were popular theories probably about a year ago, or maybe as long as two years ago, right around the time I guess Eko died. About the Smoke monster’s function was some sort of judge. It basically took your memories and processed your life and decided whether you were worthy of living or not, and that is certainly, kind of, one of it’s functions. We’ve dealt with that more specifically now on the show, but the audience simply does not know enough yet to make an educated guess about where all of this is leading. You will know a lot by the end of the Fifth season, probably a lot more to begin to get a much better sense of what the end game of the show may be, but we’ve had to hold a lot of that stuff back so that people wouldn’t get it too early or that all the answers were coming in the penultimate season of the show. Considering what the audience has to work with, they’ve proven to be incredibly resourceful and insightful, but there are some clues that we have not yet presented them, that are really integral to figuring out what the real endgame of the show is, so there’s no way that they could really, you know, really…(http://lostpedia.wikia.com/wiki/The_Lostpedia_Interview:Carlton_Cuse_%26_Damon_Lindelof)

There’s also a great quote from Lindelof from that EW Cover Story about What Is To Come and lays out exactly what they mean by season six mirroring season one: 

‘the storytellers hope that anyone who has ever been a Lost fan will tune in next year as the show moves into payoff mode and begins resolving long-term character arcs. Indeed, compared with this year, season 6 sounds like it could be something of a blast from the season 1 past. Lindelof teases that the sci-fi-heavy season 5 (which includes more Smokey, four-toed statue, and numbers intrigue) ”sets up where we need to go in season 6, which will be much more grounded and character-centric than it is this year.”’

I can’t wait! But in the meantime, here is my season four recap from June 12, 2008 at 9:02pm.

THERE’S NO PLACE LIKE HOME PARTS TWO AND THREE!

I haven’t been able to stop thinking about LOST. I don’t even mean simply the finale. The show as a whole has been on my mind. I’ve been re-watching episodes. I’ve been reading lostpedia.com, thefuselage.com messageboards, old billie reviews, the bible, and alice in wonderland. I’m not even reading these for theory purposes because I don’t really give a damn about theories to be honest with you. I’m refreshing my memory with regards to the past three seasons which is why I’m reading lostpedia, thefuselage, and old billie reviews. I read Doc Jensen’s columns over at ew.com because he’s great with picking out the allusions to literary texts (which i’m very much interested in). When it comes to theories and all of that jazz, I’m much more interested in waiting to see where the show goes instead of going over theory after theory. Most of all, I’m most interested in the characters. LOST is a character study/drama at its core and thats what drew me to the show in the first season. The first season is one of the greatest seasons in history of television. Episodes like Walkabout, White Rabbit, The Moth, Confidence Man, Solitary, Raised By Another, Special, Outlaws, …In Translation, Numbers, Deus Ex Machina, Do No Harm, and the Exodus finale are some of the finest episodes EVER. How can we forget the reveal that Locke was paralyzed prior to crashing on the island? How can we forget the scene when Jack finds his father’s coffin empty and proceeds to destroy it as well as the scene in which Jack tells the airport clerk the importance of burying his father? How can we forget the scene between Locke and Charlie when Locke tells Charlie about the moth’s struggle and the scene when Charlie battles his way out of the collapsed cave because Jack’s arm is dislocated? How can we forget the scene when we learn that Sawyer wrote the letter to the man who ruined his family as well as the scene when Sayid goes to map the Island because he’s ashamed of himself because he tortured Sawyer? How can we forget Sayid’s first flashback with Nadia? How can we forget Claire’s first episode with the psychic Malkin, her reluctance to have Aaron (a great Claire moment, by the way, is in her episode in the second season in which she talks to Aaron after she’s been to the Staff station. The moment bridges her season 1 and season 2 flashbacks). How can we forget the struggle Michael endured while he was kept away from Walt (and subsequently the bond the two forged on the Island)? Of course, I have more to write on Michael later in the entry and the story that was his. Who can forget the scene between Christian and Sawyer in the bar or the scene when Sawyer killed the wrong guy? Outlaws also had the great Sawyer vs. the Boar plot. Who can forget the great Jin flashback in which we find out he is ashamed of his lineage? One of the top 7 scenes in LOST is when he returns to his father and they talk on the fishing boat. I will have more to write on Jin later as well. How can we forget Hurley’s first flashback in which he travels to Australia to discover whether he’s bad luck or the numbers? How can we forget the epic scene in which John Locke pounds on the door of the hatch, yelling: ‘I’ve done everything you’ve ever asked me to do so why did you do this to me?’ and then the light goes on inside of the Hatch (we of course later learn that Locke ended up saving Desmond’s life that night just as Desmond saved John’s. The light gave John more hope and restored his faith in the Island, and Desmond discovered he wasn’t alone.) Who can forget the birth of Aaron as Boone dies as well as the flashback of Jack’s wedding day with Sarah? Do No Harm is the first episode in which a main character dies. And then there is the Exodus finale in which we see everybody boarding flight Oceanic 815. The point of this long paragraph: I’m big on character study and development. Come on, I’m a Joss Whedon fan. That guy’s all about character. Anywho, those episodes are very cool because of the mythological stuff. I’ll never forget the first time I heard the Whispers in Solitary as Sayid’s wandering through the jungle or when Ethan was there to kidnap Claire (I had to leave for Kairos the next week and missed All The Best Cowboys have Daddy Issues! Drove me nuts!). But this isn’t about the first season. This entry is about the fourth season finale of LOST.

Damon and Carlton did one hell of a job with the season finale. There were three deaths. The Island moved. The Freighter exploded. Lapidus’ copter crashed. Penny Widmore ended up rescuing the Oceanic 6 (with Frank and Desmond). The Others were back in their most primitive form. Locke became the leader of The Others. Sawyer jumped out of the helicopter so that the rest could make it to the freighter to re-fuel. Daniel’s lost at sea along with some random survivors. Charlotte, apparently, was born on the Island. Now it’s time for some thoughts:

–I re-watched the scene when the Freighter explodes and have come to the conclusion that Jin is probably dead. Unless the blast sent him overboard before he was killed and he can survive in the water on something then color me wrong but I think Jin is no more. He’s one of my favorite characters. Before his episode in the first season, I had the sense that Jin was a good guy. Indeed Jin was/is the personification of good. I hope but it is a slim hope.

–I know Michael’s dead. Everything changed for Michael once Walt was taken by The Others. But he redeemed himself in the end. I do hope Walt has some part to play in the final seasons. Damon and Carlton owe it to the fans.

–Is Claire dead? I’m not sure anymore. Had that been real and not a dream, I would’ve been certain Claire died in the explosion. I think she is alive. Not sure what Jacob wants with her. Hopefully Damon and Carlton answer that next season. The opening of Raised By Another is a scene in which Locke tells Claire that she gave him away and now everyone will pay. Just saying.

–The Suicide Beard himself was back: Jack Shepard. Loved everything Jack did in the episode.

–I feel like Sun’s going to become my least favorite character on the show. In the flashforward, she basically tells Widmore that she and the other five weren’t the only ones to leave the Island. She’s going to ruin everything but Yunjin Kim knocked it out of the park after The Freighter exploded. Holy cow! Intense.

–Looks like it took Ben 10 months to re-surface after moving the Island. No comment until I see more but Ben is one of the greatest characters ever created. Michael Emerson deserves an Emmy. 

–I’m excited to see the zany antics and adventures Hurley and Sayid will have together next season as they try to get out of harm’s way. But I think Sayid’s safe place is that Island. Speaking of Sayid, his fight vs. Keamy rocked!

–There’s gotta be more Richard Alpert next season. Very interesting character. If there’s one thing Richard does its get rid of someone he feels is no longer qualified to lead his people. Is that what happened with Locke? We shall soon see (I hope and, of course, in about 8 months. Ugh.) 

–Speaking of John Locke’s corpse, he was going by the name Jeremy Bentham! Who is Jeremy Bentham? Welllllllllllllllll keep reading (there’s very interesting info in here especially about The Jacobins):

FROM LOSTPEDIA.COM

Jeremy Bentham (15 February 1748–6 June 1832) – was an English jurist, philosopher, and legal and social reformer. He was a political radical, and a leading theorist in Anglo-American philosophy of law. He was a child prodigy and was found as a toddler sitting at his father’s desk reading a multi-volume history of England and began his study of Latin at the age of three. 

He was a political radical best known for his advocacy of utilitarianism, a form of consequentialism, meaning that the moral worth of an action is determined by its outcome – the ends justify the means. Utilitarianism argued that the “right” action or policy was that which would cause “the greatest happiness of the greatest number”. His critics objected saying that it would therefore “…be acceptable to torture one person if this would produce an amount of happiness in other people outweighing the unhappiness of the tortured individual.” 

Bentham also designed a famous prison structure called the “Panopticon”, which creates a sense of constant surveillance and paranoia amongst prisoners. 

Bentham was also known for his outspoken opposition to the French revolutionary discourse of natural rights, an idea championed by philosopher John Locke (whose father, also named John Locke, worked for Jeremy Bentham). He also suggested a procedure for estimating the moral status of any action. His principle regards “good” as that which produces the greatest amount of physical or spiritual pleasure, and the minimum amount of pain; and “evil” as that which produces the most pain without the pleasure. 

Bentham also argued that the ability to suffer, not the ability to reason, must be the benchmark of how we treat other beings. He stated that if the ability to reason were the criterion, many human beings, including babies and disabled people, would have to be treated as though they were things, rather than beings. 

The Jacobins
Bentham was an outspoken critic of the violence which arose after a group called “The Jacobins” seized power in a coup after the fall of the French monarchy — on September 21, 1792. 

Originated as the “Club Bentham”, “The Jacobin Club” was the largest and most powerful political club of the French Revolution. It was led by Maximillian Robespierre, self-styled as “the Incorruptible”, he was a disciple of philosopher Jean-Jacques Rousseau. As such, his political views were rooted in Rousseau’s notion of the social contract, which promoted “the rights of man” (however, Robespierre’s version was of collective rights, rather than individual rights). Any club member who by word or action showed that his principles were contrary to the constitution and ‘the rights of man’ was to be expelled, a rule which later on facilitated the “purification” of French society by the expulsion of its more moderate elements – this became known as the “Reign of Terror”. Robespierre described it thus: “Terror is nothing other than prompt, severe, inflexible justice.” 

Later, Robespierre (leader of The Jacobins) had a decree passed that established the “Cult of the Supreme Being”. The notion of the Supreme Being was based on ideas that Jean-Jacques Rousseau had outlined in “The Social Contract”. Robespierre made it clear that his concept of a Supreme Being was far different from the traditional God of Christianity. Robespierre’s Supreme Being was a radical democrat, like the Jacobins. He explained: “Is it not He whose immortal hand, engraving on the heart of man the code of justice and equality, has written there the death sentence of tyrants? Is it not He who, from the beginning of time, decreed for all the ages and for all peoples liberty, good faith, and justice? He did not create kings to devour the human race. He did not create priests to harness us, like vile animals, to the chariots of kings and to give to the world examples of baseness, pride, perfidy, avarice, debauchery, and falsehood. He created the universe to proclaim His power. He created men to help each other, to love each other mutually, and to attain to happiness by the way of virtue.” 

Bentham’s auto-icon
As requested in his will, Jeremy Bentham’s body was preserved and stored in a wooden cabinet, termed his “Auto-icon”. The Auto-icon is kept on public display at the end of the South Cloisters in the main building of University College London, his alma mater. For the 100th and 150th anniversaries of the College, the Auto-icon was brought to the meeting of the College Council, where he was listed as “present but not voting”. Tradition holds that if the council’s vote on any motion is tied, the auto-icon always breaks the tie by voting in favour of the motion. The Auto-icon has always had a wax head, as Bentham’s head was badly damaged in the preservation process.

–I’m positive that Sawyer’s still surviving on that Island despite the horrible things that have happened. If I were a betting man, I’d bet the season 5 premiere belongs to Sawyer. It’s just a gut feeling.

–’If anything goes wrong, Desmond is my constant’–Daniel’s words in his journal. Again, if I were a betting man, I’d bet that Daniel uses his constant while he’s lost at sea. I don’t think he moved with the Island.

–Regarding Charlotte, I think we’ll finally learn about the toe statue in season five. And Miles is going to tell me what happened to Claire! ATTICA! ATTICA! ATTICA! ATTICA!

That’s about it for thoughts on the finale. It’s time for the Rankings!

THE OFFICIAL LOST RANKINGS

For the first time ever, me and STEVE commented on each character’s ranking. Me and STEVE have new number ones. Yes, Sayid is no longer number 1 for the first time since the rankings became official. The new number one for me deserves the top spot. I need not say more. Read and enjoy the final rankings until our pre-season rankings in January 2009. Mic’s Rankings will be posted sometime before the fifth season begins.

AFTER EPISODES 13 AND 14
Ranked: 5/30/08

CHRIS
1. Jack–He got them rescused and now he needs to go back to finish what he started. Welcome back to the top spot, Jack.
2. Sawyer–JABOY season for Sawyer. I’m sure he’ll be kicking some more ass in Season 5!
3. Sayid–Sayid’s great. Always dependable. But don’t kill Penny, Sayid. She rescused you. And sorry, Sayid. Records are sometimes broken.
4. Locke–’Wait til you see what I’m about to do’ and ‘This is a place of miracles.’ Locke is amazing.
5. Desmond–He’s great. Sure he was absolutely wrong about his vision of rescue but he never stopped helping the effort to get off of the Island. One of my favorite characters.
6. Michael–You stepped up, Michael. 
7. Hurley–I love crazy Hurley.
8. Jin–Don’t believe he’s dead. He could’ve grabbed onto debris. Come on, Lindelof and Cuse! Jin’s amazing!
9. Claire–She might be dead. Who knows. I still love her. BAM!
10. Ben–one of the greatest characters of all time. He is 10 because it is a numbers game.
11. Kate–How dare she call Aaron her son with Claire sitting there!
12. Frank–the best freighter character.
13. Juliet–Solid character she is.
14. Daniel–Was once 4 and now is 14. Why? Not sure. Just feels right.
15. Miles–He’s great but hasn’t done anything to move up.
16. Sun–How dare she blame Jack for Jin’s death!
17. Charlotte–Don’t care about her yet.

STEVE
1. Ben – The most original character of the show. He’s wild. The actor is great. The writing is great.
2. Sawyer – Should be part of the Oceanic 6 if it wasn’t for Fatty McFatFat
3. Desmond – I love the character of Desmond. Hopefully we will see more of him.
4. Locke – Crazy Locke. Great stuff this season. Can’t wait till he’s resurrected. 
5. Sayid–The only reason you’re down this far is because you after the island.
6. Jack–They should of made Jack black.
7. Michael–He did what he had to do. RIP.
8. Jin–RIP
9. Miles– Don’t know why Miles is this high…I wanted to get him to #8. Get it 8 Miles. 8 Mile…ha..whoo whoo ha ha
10. Frank–The Real Flyin’ Hawaiian holdin’ shit down.
11. Sun-Woo Kim
12. Claire–Ghostface
13. Kate-Murderer! Stealer of a child! Slut!
14. Charlotte-Starting to Like her
15. Daniel-Can’t stand ‘em.
16. Juliet-She said she wanted to get off the island as bad as anyone. Then she didnt even get on the boat to get off the island. WHOOOOOOOOORE.
17. Hurley-Should of jumped out of the plane. Unnecessary weight.