Thursday, October 28, 2004

RED SOX WIN THE WORLD SERIES!

We are so excited! Last night, we had a role reversal where I was the one clutching my stomach and pacing and yelling at the screen, while Roger (La-di-da, la-di-da, la la) was calm, happy, and filled glee. I was saying: we've left 12 men on base! He was saying: Johnny Damon homered! Yay, Red Sox!

At the end of it all, we high-fived it and hugged and pointed to the screen: You're so money! We loved those guys! All 25 of them - and Terry and Theo and Larry and Tom, and especially John Henry. And Johnny Pesky, too! They all deserved to win.

We now await word, post-victory from our favorite baseball writer (well, second to Peter Gammons - we love that guy, too, a believer), Bill Simmons. AKA ESPN's The Sports Guy. His columns on espn.com have spoken our thoughts.

Here is an excerpt from his column after the Red Sox won Game 7 against New York.

I just watched my beloved Red Sox win the American League pennant. That's only happened twice in my lifetime. I watched them rally back from three games down in a playoff series. That's never happened before, not in the history of baseball. I also just watched the Sox beat the Yankees in a deciding playoff game. Not only has that never happened before, it's a possible sign of the apocalypse.

Now get this ... all three things happened at the same time.

So what happens now? Where do I go from here? Should I throw myself into politics? Backpack across Europe? Take up gourmet cooking? Learn how to fly airplanes? Should I take the bus to Fort Hancock, cross the border and wander the beaches of Zihuatanejo looking for Andy and Red? You tell me. What should I do?


We especially like the Shawshank Redemption reference.

Yay to Keith Foulke - you da man, and Jason Varitek - catcher of all time! To Derek and Curt and Bronson and Wake and Embree and Timlin and Myers and Leskanic and PEDRO! To the offense: to Bellhorn and Orlando and Mueller and Millar and Trot and Youkilis and Manny and DAVID! To the defense: Mientkiewicz, Kapler, Mirabelli, and DAVE ROBERTS!

Fun fact: The St. Louis Factor. The Celtics won their first championship against St. Louis (1957); the Bruins broke a 41-year Stanley Cup drought against St. Louis (1970); and the Patriots won their first Super Bowl against St. Louis (2002). And now the Red Sox have won their first World Series since 1918 against St. Louis (2004). The Cardinals were our Yankees of the World Series: having met with them twice before, 1946 and 1967, and lost both times to them in the seventh game of each.

Wednesday, October 27, 2004

Get Fuzzier


Have you discovered the joy that is Get Fuzzy? Posted by Hello

Wednesday, October 20, 2004

Randy Marsh Is My Hero

Red Sox 4, Yankees 2. We're going to Game 7.

But the real heroes of this game are the umpires. The media and the coaches all agree that these guys have stepped up. They keep the game in line, they keep it clean.

Monday, October 18, 2004

Great Papi


David Ortiz hitting the walk-off homer in Game 3 of the Division Championship Series against Anaheim.

Monday, October 11, 2004

Hi, Bob!

The nostalgia kings at TV Land have sponsored a new life-size bronze sculpture of Bob Newhart as Robert Hartley, that lovable, well-meaning psychologist, currently on display on that avenue of avenues, Michigan Avenue in Chicago. The work features a quizzical Hartley - eyebrows arched, pencil poised - hunched in an office chair next to an empty couch. The sculpture is in front of 430 N. Michigan Ave., where Hartley's office was supposed to have been. In November, it will settle permanently near Navy Pier.

Newhart-as-Hartley is TV Land's fourth bronze of a television character in as many years, following Jackie Gleason as Ralph Kramden at a New York bus station, Mary Tyler Moore as Mary Richards at a Minneapolis mall and Andy Griffith and Ron Howard as Andy and Opie Taylor in Raleigh, N.C.

The Chicago Tribune posted a story on "A Day in the Life of Bob Newhart," featuring pictures of tourists, office workers and school kids sitting down with the statue to wait for a bus, drinking their coffee or discussing their problems.

Five Outs Better

Do you think the Red Sox can beat the Yankees in this year's ALCS? Here's a link to the ESPN article by Sean McAdam detailing five reasons why they can do it.

Thursday, October 07, 2004

One of my favorite images


Madame Vallotton and Her Niece, Germaine Aghion,
by Felix Edouard Vallotton.
Art Institute of ChicagoPosted by Hello

Mr. Modesty - You got to love him

Pedro Martinez on ESPN, after taking Game 2 in the ALDS series against Anaheim: "I was the No. 1 today, and that's all that matters. I don't care what the experts have to say, they were talking trash. Every time they give me the ball, I'm special."

Monday, October 04, 2004

The funny couple


Having fun at the Green Mill.

Je me souviens

Roger and I just came back from a weekend in Montreal. It was one of those rare moments when Roger up and said "Hey, I feel like going somewhere this weekend." And you've got to ride that wave when it comes, because it doesn't come often. (Although they are fun when they happen: The last time Roger proposed an impromptu trip we had a whirlwind weekend in DC!)

Of course, these last-minute proposals tend to put me in a planning frenzy. Roger made the suggestion on Tuesday, and we started to scramble to find potential places to stay and sites to visit. We also didn't know a thing about Montreal, except that it was about 3 hours away. We desperately missed the plethora of Borders and Barnes & Nobles in Chicago, as, surprisingly, we didn't find much in Hanover in terms of books on Montreal. We did most of our research online, which can be good and bad. I looked up tons of stuff on restaurants, bookstores, neighborhoods, and sites of interest. Printed out pages and pages of info, all for a 36-hour visit.

Of course, everyone in the Northeast must have had the same idea as we did because a lot of the places we were interested in staying, B&Bs mainly, were already booked up. One place we really liked, Anne ma soeur Anne, was really lovely and the owner apologized for being all occupied. We settled on Jade Blue B&B in the Latin Quarter.

We drove up Friday night after work. The drive itself wasn’t too bad – a lot of cow pastures though (on the trip home, we made sure to switch the car’s AC to recycle air). We even had our passports ready, but didn’t have to show them.

The good thing was the Latin Quarter is pretty central, close to many metro lines and within walking distance to Old Montreal and the port area. The bad thing was it had a lot of sex shops and whatnot, being that it was formerly the Red Light district. There was a lot of foot traffic, and not necessarily salacious crowds, still it was a little disturbing to arrive at night with flashing signs for “danseuses nues”. A rude introduction, but once we got settled into the B&B, which actually was pretty well-appointed, we started to look forward to visiting areas outside our immediate neighborhood.

On Saturday, we spent the morning walking around Plateau Mont-Royal. It’s a really great residential area, not unlike Lincoln Park. Lovely walk-up houses and lots of shops and restaurants on St. Laurent and St. Denis. St. Laurent was definitely the “hipper” of the two, but I preferred the quieter St. Denis, with its wider streets and pretty windows. We were walking around 10AM, and not a lot of people were out yet, a few young families strolling about. I got to use some of my paltry French skills when we poked into stores and when we bought fries at the funky Frites Alors! – we ordered a large cone of fries with remoulade sauce, greasy, but awesome.

When it started to rain, so we headed for the Underground City, which is a series of underground malls and shops underneath the southern part of Montreal, all connected by the metro. We kind of got lost trying to find our way to the Underground City, but fortunately, we ran into a man who was dropping his son off at Chinese School in Chinatown, and he directed us to one of the entrances. The malls were okay. Perhaps it was all the fries we ate, but we started to feel a bit lethargic after going through one tunnel after another. We took the metro back to our B&B and took a nap.

We woke up a hour later, refreshed and ready to head out again. We were hoping to see if there were any tickets left to Franz Ferdinand, this rock band from Glasgow that sort of sounds like those slightly punk bands from the 80s (Blondie, even The Cure). They were playing at the Metropolis. The sex shop area was also near some famous music venues. Unfortunately it was sold out, so we had dinner instead. After dinner, a nice Italian place, we headed out to Crescent Street by McGill University in the western, more English-speaking area of the city. Roger was a little more comfortable in this part of town, although we both thought it had a generic feeling to it – you know, Hard Rock Café-types and all.

On Sunday, we work up early. The day before was mostly gray with bouts of rain. Sunday was beautiful, very bright and sunny. We went to the Notre Dame Basilica (incidentally, where Celine Dion got married) for mass, although my French wasn’t good enough to understand the readings (there were no missals). When we got to the part when you give peace to one another, I noticed that the lady sitting in front of us was my HIGH SCHOOL FRENCH TEACHER from Merced, Madame Evans!! That was TOO WEIRD!

We politely waited until after the mass to have our mini-reunion on the church steps outside. So funny! She just retired from teaching and was on a trip through French Canada, the Laurentides, to see fall foliage and visit small French towns. Bi-zarre. I used to TA for her husband’s social studies class, too. They were such a cute couple – like Mr. & Mrs. Santa Claus. Roger had fun meeting her, too. After we parted ways, Roger and I took a walk through Old Montreal and along the port before driving home.

Pretty eventful. We still have a few neighborhoods we’d like to check out – on a future visit, perhaps. Overall a very nice trip.