Saturday, April 25, 2020

Ten Albums: Number 3 - Marillion - Marbles

In the time of pandemics, we all seem to have a bit more free time. For me, the cancelling of, well, everything has really killed my writing routine, where most of my writing was done at coffee shops while my kids were at sports practice. I haven't been able to adjust and man is it frustrating.

But a friend tagged me in one of those annoying, yet fun, Facebook challenges to post 10 albums that have influenced my musical taste. One record a day for ten days. No explanation, no review, just the cover.

Yeah, I can't do that without an explanation. Plus, it gives me something to write about. So, here, over the next ten days will be my ten albums followed by a bunch of words.



Marillion - Marbles

Where to start with this one. Well, you probably wonder who the hell Marillion is, so let's start there. Well, they are a British prog-rock band. Um, they've been around since 1982. They have released 19 studio albums. Their history can be split into two, the first 8 years with lead singer Fish, the second, with lead singer Steve Hogarth, who replaced Fish in 1989.

Marillion is the band that I've successfully gotten zero other people to listen to. They are totally not cool. Anytime I wear a Marillion t-shirt, people don't even try to ask me who they are. They don't even try! But Marillion fans are dedicated. For nearly twenty years, Marillion has been hosting Marillion weekends in Europe where they play different sets over multiple nights and thousands of people travel the globe to go see them.


Some Smolareks in the Album liner thank yous.
Marillion was the first band to crowdfund the recording of an album way back in 2001 before it was cool. Marbles was also available for preorder and if you did, your name was listed in the album notes. I even let them call me Michael, although my brother went by Dave. And I wouldn't have listened to Marillion without my brother's influence. Hell, I've never been to a Marillion concert without my brother.

But you don't care, and that's fine.

Marbles was released in 2004. It's a two CD album that clocks in at 98 minutes and 44 seconds, and starts with a thirteen minute song, ends with a 12 minute song and has an 18 minute song to close the first disc. There's mellow tracks, rockers, epics songs, short snippets bringing back theme with variation. The opening song, The Invisible Man, is fantastic. The slow, quiet build of Fantastic Place to its string driven crescendo as it ends is majestic. The back to back punch of the The Damage and Don't Hurt Yourself The closing song, Neverland, (yes, Peter Pan) is my favorite Marillion song off all time. 


Marillion played the Park West in Chicago when Marbles came out, playing most of the album as part of their set that night during one of the best live shows I've ever been to. How great was it? When Marillion finished their second encore, no one in the Park West left. They had to be retrieved from the tour bus to play a third encore for the crowd that wound not leave.



Listen, I know you're never going to listen to this album. Who has nearly two hours to listen to music? Wait, we all do right now. But it's okay if you don't listen. I'll listen to it for you over and over and over and over again.

So don't listen to it. It might not be for you. And that's okay.










Sunday, April 19, 2020

Ten Albums: Number 2 - Toad the Wet Sprocket - Fear

In time of pandemics, we all seem to have a bit more free time. For me, the cancelling of, well, everything has really killed my writing routine, where most of my writing was done at coffee shops while my kids were at sports practice. I haven't been able to adjust and man is it frustrating.

But a friend tagged me in one of those annoying, yet fun Facebook challenges to post 10 albums that have influenced my musical taste. One record a day for ten days. No explanation, no review, just the over.

Yeah, I can't do that without an explanation. Plus, it gives me something to write about. So, here, over the next ten days will be my ten albums followed by a bunch of words.



Toad The Wet Sprocket - Fear

There was this girl I liked in high school who was huge into Toad the Wet Sprocket. She was also super cool, liked college rock and new tons of bands I had never heard of. She pressed me to listen to Toad's their prior release, Pale, which I liked, but it was sort of a sad record. Then this came out.

I mean, come on people, it starts with Walk on the Ocean, ends with I Will Not Take These Things for Granted. The songs are all so different, and take on some heavy themes, like Hold Her Down, a song about rape. The angelic voices during the last minute and a half of Pray Your Gods. And the big hit, All I Want, which I still love, even after it became a staple on the 101.9, The Mix as a contemporary adult hit. The afore mentioned girl and I wrote in a notebook together for most of high school. When we got tired of writing, we'd put in song lyrics that the other person had to guess. This album was probably the most quoted album in those notebooks and it's because there is not a bad song on the album. This was also not like anything else I was listening to at the time, a steady diet of Rush, Queensryche, Cracker, Tesla and Stevie Ray Vaughan (but really mostly Rush). It pushed me towards music that wasn't as mainstream

Toad went on a tour of colleges to support the release of this album, including a show at Harper. The girl had an extra ticket at the last minute and asked me to go, but I was already at work at La Roman's Kitchen and I couldn't get someone to work for me.  Fear not, for Toad played a million college campuses over the next few years and I went to seem them at many, including a Tuesday night at ISU while we were juniors. I'm still trying to remember how I talked my mom into letting me go to that.

Toad became a band I saw every time they toured and bought their records at midnight at Tower Records the minute they were released. I remember my immense sadness when they broke up in 1998, although they performed some one off shows and mini-tours on and off before getting back together for good in 2009.

Of course, you are more likely to hear Walk on the Ocean or All I Want through the overhead speakers when you are at Jewel today than on a radio station.

In the breakup years, Glen Phillips wrote, recorded and toured frequently. The shows were in smaller venues, usually just Glen and his acoustic guitar. A few years into dating, my wife and I went to see Glen at the Black Orchid Nightclub at Piper's Alley. I had a hockey game right before the show and I raced back from the game, hurriedly showered and got ready and was still sweating a little bit by the time we got settled into our seats and ordered drinks. It was such a great night, a great show, a night we talk about frequently, a show all other Glen Phillips shows are measured against. It's a night I could relive again and again.


The lyrics of I Will Not Take These Things For Granted are relevant right now as we are all trapped inside:

but if it's frightening, I'll bear the cold
and on the telephone
your offer warm asylum
I will not take these things for granted

Saturday, April 18, 2020

Ten Albums: Number 1 - Huey Lewis and the News - Sports

In time of pandemics, we all seem to have a bit more free time. For me, the cancelling of, well, everything has really killed my writing routine, where most of my writing was done at coffee shops while my kids were at sports practice. I haven't been able to adjust and man is it frustrating.

But a friend tagged me in one of those annoying, yet fun Facebook challenges to post 10 albums that have influenced my musical taste. One record a day for ten days. No explanation, no review, just the over.

Yeah, I can't do that without an explanation. Plus, it gives me something to write about. So, here, over the next ten days will be my ten albums followed by a bunch of words.


Huey Lewis and the News - Sports

My first record. Well, besides Sing along with Sesame Street.

I vividly remember riding my bike up to The Flip Side (okay, no one called it "The" Flip Side, it was just Flip Side) with my brother to buy this album and the Weird Al Yankovic "Eat It" single. I can assure you that my brother was not buying a pop rock album as he was more of a progressive rock fan (more on that later) but he was there to help introduce me to record stores. Even when he wasn't directly influencing my musical tastes, he was helping me dip my toe into the wonderful world of music.

By the time I bought this album, "The Heart of Rock & Roll" had been played millions of times on radio, and the video was a staple on MTV, and saxophone solos were cool, a trend that continued throughout the eighties until alternative music killed it. We had a record playing in our living room and I listened to this record hundreds of times there. Then I got a boom box and I wanted to listen to this in my room. So I put a cassette tape in the boom box, stuck it up to one of the speakers of the stereo attached to the record player and dropped the needle on Sports. I paused the tape to flip sides of the record, restarted the recording and in forty minutes, I had all nine songs of Sports on side a of a Maxwell CR-90. Then my brother came home. I proudly showed him what I did. He shook his head and told me to play the tape. I rewound to the beginning and started the tape. It took seemingly forever before the heartbeat into to The Heart of Rock & Roll to start. Plus, it didn't sound right, like half the parts of the song were missing. That's how I learned about stereo. Turns out, different parts of the music come out of each speaker. My brother taught me how to record correctly, and for countless nights, I listened to that Maxwell CR-90 through my crappy Kmart bought boom box, propped between the headboard of my bed and my pillow. I usually feel asleep before "I Finally Found a Home" and always woke up to the click of the play button stopping as the tape reached it's end.


"Walking On a Thin Line" is my favorite song on the album. I also loved the closing song, a cover of Hank Williams's "Honky Tonk Blues." But there are no tracks to skip on this album.

The picture is the original record I bought at Flip Side way back in1984. I still have it and I'm listening to it while writing this. Back when album art matter because, well, records were huge, this was a classic. Huey in the foreground, jacket slung over his shoulder, top button undone, skinny 80s tie slightly loose, the rest of band seated at stools around the bar eyes focused at the camera,  bassist Mario Cipollina working the bar, wearing the sunglasses he always wore, a San Francisco 49ers game on the TV. Then, flip to the back, everyone but Cippolina is gone from the bar, and the band is shown on TV, the previously clean rack of pool balls in motion across the pool table.  Cool. The adult in me now sees the bottle of Maker's Mark and wants a bourbon with a splash of coke.

I still know every word of every song on this record. I still love it. I still listen to it. I've never seen Huey Lewis and the News live and probably never will, now that Huey is dealing with Meniere's disease, which damaged his hearing making him unable to perform. But I'll always have Sports. The Heart of Rock & Roll is still beating.


Friday, February 28, 2020

Ghost Rider: Travels on the Healing Road by Neil Peart

Ghost Rider: Travels on the Healing RoadGhost Rider: Travels on the Healing Road by Neil Peart
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

I read this in 2003 when it first came out in 2003 and decided to read it again after Neil Peart's death in January of 2020. It's hard to read something and not relate it your own life. I've been a Rush fan most of my life and seeing Rush on their Test for Echo in summer of 1997 marked the start of a new part of my life as I took my last final, graduated from college saw Rush live and started a new job all in a span of four days. Right after that tour, Neil's life changed forever in a much more dramatic way than my life had as his daughter died in a car accident on her way to college and his wife died of cancer within a 10 month span. Thus, starts the ride of the Ghost Rider across Canada, up to Alaska, back through the US and south through Mexico and Belize, in an effort to keep moving, to try to make some meaning out of what happened. There's some hard feelings in this book as Neil fights through his grief, weaving in descriptions of his rides, the scenery around him what he is feeling, and letters he writes, including to his close friend Brutus, who get send to prison early in Neal's travels. What does the Ghost Rider and the other parts of his baby soul find along the way and when does the travel end? Well, I don't want to give away the ending. A must read for any Rush fan, a great read for anyone interested in one person's battle through grief.

View all my reviews

Wednesday, January 29, 2020

How I Ruined Christmas



I ruined Christmas last year. Okay, not everyone’s Christmas, just for my oldest, the twelve-year-old boy. You see, he is still a believer. Well he was. He isn’t anymore. Until December 23, 2019 he fully believed in Santa Clause and the magic of Christmas until I ruined it.

How did I ruin it, dear reader?

Well, when you have children and you need to wrap gifts, you do it under the cover of night, after the children have gone to sleep and somewhere far away from where they sleep. And perhaps after wrapping a mountain of gifts, then hiding them in places where the children won’t look, like in closets where they are supposed to hang their clothes and coats, or behind cleaning supplies, you leave one gift out on accident, one gift that you didn’t notice on the stool in the kitchen where you wrapped last night, or in the morning while you were eating your breakfast in the semi-darkness. But when he wakes up, the twelve-year-old spies the gift and being inquisitive, he looks at it, looks at the gift tag and sees that the gift is from Santa. And it’s sitting in the kitchen. On December 23rd.

Dear reader, did I mention that I was at work on this fine morning, thus leaving the aftermath of this shocking discovery to my wonderful wife. Since she doesn’t like to bother me at work with something as trivial as shattering our children’s belief in a made-up entity, she texted me.

B: You forgot to give me one of the presents that you wrote from Santa. The boy saw and is so upset. 
Me: Oops.
Me: sorry.
B: He still didn’t want to believe it wasn’t magic. He says we always tell him we can’t afford things.
Me: I’m sorry I have made your day even harder.

I should pause here and go back in time a few months. I mentioned how the twelve-year-old is still a believer. That belief extends beyond Santa Clause to other mythical beings whose tasks of giving gifts are really performed by parents, including the tooth fairy.

The twelve-year-old lost a tooth a few months ago. As dutifully as ever, he plopped the tooth in a plastic baggie and slid it under his pillow, eager to trade it for whatever small bills the tooth fairy might have in his wallet (is this why my mother always had a notebook will various denominations of cash in her desk, for these last minute tooth fairy emergencies after banking hours?). Unfortunately for the boy, the tooth fairy is often harried and tired on a week night and often can’t remember to pull the car off the street and into the driveway to avoid an overnight ticket, let alone remember to swap a few dollars for a tiny tooth. Simple put, the tooth fairy, both of them, forgot.



Not the real tooth fairy!
Luckily for me, I was again off at work that morning when the boy sulked into the kitchen after waking up to a tooth still in its bag, not swapped for cash.

“The tooth fairy didn’t take my tooth,” he reported as he dropped the baggie on the kitchen counter.

“Sometimes the tooth fairy forgets,” my wife said. She was being truthful, but that didn’t assuage the boy. He pouted all through breakfast, while making his lunch and while getting his bag ready for school. Finally, my wife had enough and sent to two younger kids upstairs so she could talk to the twelve-year-old alone.

“The tooth fairy isn’t real. I’m the tooth fairy. I’m the one who takes your teeth and replaces them with money, me and your dad.”

He looked at her in disbelief.

“No, that’s not true, mom.”

The conversation continued buts let’s just say she was unable to convince him that there was no tooth fairy. It certainly seemed like his believe was not just about the money. He really, really believed.

Later that day, the twelve-year-old lost another tooth. Come on, what are those odds that he loses a tooth on back to back days! When he got home from school, he added that tooth to the bag containing the tooth from the previous day.

“Now I get money for two,” he said.

“What are you going to do?” I asked my wife.

“I dunno.”

After we put the kids to bed and watched a little TV, we headed upstairs. She hadn’t really decided what to do and I could see she was torn. Eventually what she decided to do was to avoid a disappointed and disillusioned child by tiptoeing into his room and swapping the two teeth for a five-dollar bill. The next morning was a win, win, win for the boy. He had five bucks, he was happy, and he still believed.

So, back to Santa, back to the fateful morning of December twenty third. The truth is, the boy should have already lost his believe in the tooth fairy months ago, and once one crumbles, they take the others with them. Tooth Fairy: not real. Santa: not real. Easter bunny: not real. That goddamn elf on the shelf doesn’t lose his magic when you touch him, shots at the doctor’s office DO hurt, we DO have a favorite child, we’re just not telling you because it can change daily.

So they boy finds the wrapped gift from Santa. This time my wonderful, again left to deal with this on her own because I'm at work, doesn’t have much to say. There’s nothing to say. He’s figured it out.  No way to cover for this.

He still really wants to believe. He said he always tell him we can’t afford things (I just don’t want to buy him everything he wants because, well, getting everything you want will just set you up to be disappointed when you don’t get what you want. Let me tell you about the GI Joe Cobra Rattler). He wants the magic, he really does.

Does anyone still have their Hatchimal?
I want him to want the magic, too. As you get older and the magic is gone, Christmas can feel like nothing but work; shopping and wrapping and cleaning and cooking and decorating and guests, and staying up late to wrap and trying to find that goddamn Hatchimal that never gets played with after New Year’s day,   and too much to do and not enough time to do it and hiding gifts and lying about what’s in the bag and why does Amazon deliver a box every day and what’s in there  and Santa’s handwriting looks a lot like dad’s even though Dad is really trying to make it look different than his own handwriting but’s he’s really tied and school plays, and holiday programs and work holiday parties and orchestra concerts and unwrapping and bags and bags of the wrapping you spend hours on now just piled four garbage bags high and BAM  it’s over!

But when they wake up and rush downstairs and are excited by what they got, the things they said they wanted, and sometimes even more excited by the things they were surprised the got and didn’t ask for, that’s the fun. The magic.

My wife told him that now he gets to be part of the magic. He gets to help keep it alive for his youngest brother (the youngest always know the truth at the youngest ago as inevitable in a fit of anger, an older sibling ruin it for them). He still believes.

I never noticed it was already opened
What about my other child, my daughter, the poor forgotten middle child? Well, one of her friends told her that her dad told her when she was in second grade that Santa wasn’t real, and he and her mom did all the Christmas shopping and gift giving. She brought this up separately, first to my wife, then to me. I avoided answering, just saying “What do you believe?” but she’d already made up her mind that Santa wasn’t real, so I just turned up the music and we talked about nothing.

So now they are both part of the magic, hopefully keeping their brother a believer for a few more years. I just hope their part of helping with the magic is a bit different that my older brother. One year he opened and played with some of my gifts before my mom had wrapped them, then resealed them in their boxes. I never noticed.

My son did have one final question for his parents:

What did you do with my teeth?

Thanks for reading.

Wednesday, April 03, 2019

Overheard at #AWP19 - Portland, OR



Greetings from Portland!


I spent last week in Portland, Oregon for the annual AWP conference, which is full of panels, craft workshops, the AWP book fair, friends, fun, karaoke, coffee, readings, every skit from the TV show Portlandia and just about anything else you can cram into a three day conference. My favorite thing to do around writers is simply to listen and write down what they say. Here are some  things I heard in Portland.

Things Overhead at #AWP19 in Portland



“I feel so guilty when I print color.”


“Nothing is like being in prison but except being in prison.”
Tayari Jones, author of "An American Marriage" speaks at AWP


“I find it easier to write mean women.”


“I didn’t like your character, so I didn’t want to read it.”

“You’re not having brunch with my character!”


“Pay special attention to the last lines.”

“It’s okay to take a water break.”

“It’s a beautiful day for Jesus.”

“I need coffee.”

“Is that Matt Bell?”

“Where’s Tanzer?”

“What are you working on?”

“Are you a poet? You look like a poet. Fiction? Really? You look like a poet?”

“This is a microscopic picture of my urine."



“What does a bird do?”

“Are you sure you’re not a poet? I mean, you dress like a poet.”

“Where did you get your MFA?”

“Just write.”

“I’m a poet scientist.”

“It’s legal here, right?”

“What was the question?”

“Can you hear me?”
“No.”
Gets slightly closer to the microphone but still too far away.
“How about now?”

“The New York houses….”

“The New York Publishing world…”


Beech Street Salon


“Is your coffee carbon neutral?”

“I can’t remember who said it and I’m totally going to mess it up but <insert any quote about writing>”

“The great writer…”


“The great poet…"

“The fabulous writer…”

“The terrific writer…”

“Okay, we have one more reader.”

“What do you write?”

“You look like just like this guy I went to high school with.”

“I need coffee.”

“Seriously, you’re not a poet?”

“Do you have gum?”

“It’s a drabble story.”

Sometimes you just gotta stretch
“I don’t believe in writer’s block.”


“Is hand job one word or two?”

“It’s better than Instagram.”

“I have Uber on my phone now.”

“Do you teach?"
"Oh, god, no.”

“I can’t remember who said this, but it’s something like <totally messes up quote about writing>”

"No, really, you must be a poet. Look at your scarf."

"Did you go to Powells?"




That's all I've got. Hopefully there will be more words of wisdom at AWP20 in San Antonio, Texas next year.

Thanks for reading!
This is AWP19 - Photo Credit Jeff Pfaller







Sunday, August 19, 2018

Stand by Me: Thirty Years Later



Riley Elementary: Not what it looked like when we attended
They say the friends you make in middle school are the friends you have for life. When I was eleven years old and in sixth grade, way back in 1986, my best friends were Phil, Mitch, and Jon. The four of us hung out all the time, with lots of sleepovers, most often at Phil’s house where we had the run of either the basement or the lower level family room of their split-level house. We’d hang out, play basketball, the Pursue the Pennant baseball strategy game, do mad libs, and make stupid fart and burp jokes. We usually walked to school together. I lived the furthest, so I picked up Mitch as I walked past his house, then Jon, who lived down the street and closest to our school, and Phil would meet us coming from his house right before we got to the cream-bricked James Whitcomb Riley Elementary school. We were among the first kids to the school grounds which gave us as much time as possible to play basketball on the school’s unbreakable playground hoops where nothing but a perfect shot would go in.

About that time the movie “Stand By Me” made its theatrical debut. Starring Wil Wheaton, Corey Feldman, River Phoenix and Jerry O’Connell, and based on the Stephen King novella “The Body,” the movie tells the story of four friends taking a journey to find the dead body of Ray Brower, a local kid who went missing. The movie immediately stuck a cord with me. First off, the four boys swore a lot, more than I ever did, and I learned many new words watching that movie. My God the movie was rated R, how the hell did I see it? Oh, yes, the joys of premium cable television. Thank you, HBO. Second, the main characters were four best friends, just like my quartet of friends, and right about the same age as us. Third, the lead character, Gordie Lachance, was dealing with the death of his older brother, similar to how I was still adjusting to my father’s death. Finally, I wanted to be a writer, just like Gordie does in the movie. In the end, after jumping out of the way of a train, running away from a vicious dog named Chopper, getting covered in leeches and fending off a group of high school thugs led by Ace and Spider, the boys find Ray Brower but instead of claiming it themselves, they place an anonymous call to the police with his location and head home.

Read it!
 After watching the movie I knew had to read “The Body.” And I truly intended to. A couple times I’d look for it at the bookstore or library, but mostly unsuccessfully. Then twenty-five years passed. The movie disappeared into the corners of my brain, and I never read the book. While flipping through TV channels a few months ago, I came across “Stand By Me” on basic cable. It was heavily edited for language, but it got me thinking about reading “The Body” again. I watched for fifteen minutes then turned it off and ordered the book on Amazon. It sat on my nightstand among the pile of other books I was either currently reading or about to start (I always have more than one book in progress at any time). The novella was much longer than I expected, about 180 pages. I read it in a few sittings over a week. Much of the book was exactly like the movie. Portion of the narrator’s part, , were word for word from the novella. Often when reading parts of dialogue in the book, I could hear the character’s saying the lines in my head while reading the words on the page. There were also a few things in the book that seemed different from what I remembered of the movie. Was I losing my mind? Had it just been too long since I’d seen watched the movie that I just didn’t remember it correctly?

So I headed to my library and borrowed Stand By Me - I was a little shocked they had it- and watched it again.

Instantly I was zapped back to sixth grade. I think we might have watched Stand By Me at my birthday party that year. The memories of that movie, that time in my life, what I felt when I watched it over thirty years ago, I felt it all over again, even more strongly in some parts. I could feel for Gordie and the loss of his brother. Gordie felt he had become the invisible boy around his house, his parents so overcome by grief at the death of Denny that they barely noticed Gordie was present. My father had died a few years earlier, and I was still struggling with it. I wasn’t the invisible boy around my house but now that my mother was working full time while on her own trying to raise three children, I had more time to myself than I had ever had. Little things would send me into hysterical crying fits. Nothing felt right, and people were always asking me how I was, bringing up memories of my father. Everywhere Gordie went people would bring up some memory of his brother.

We had our own Stand By Me moment when we were younger. There was a tiny creek that wandered through our town, a creek so small it disappears for blocks at a time under street and doesn’t show up on most maps. It might have been called Mill Creek, or at least that’s what the subdivision it ran through seemed to be called. One day we decided to follow it to see where it went. We knew it ran behind our friend Raquel’s house (and part of us probably want to see Raquel in her bathing suit by her pool). We weren’t going to find a dead body, but it was about as adventurous as you could get in the suburbs in the 80s.

 Our story didn’t end well. We ran into our Ace Merrill, the bad kid played by Kiefer Sutherland in the movie (to this day I am still scared of Kiefer Sutherland because of how well he played Ace Merrill). Some kid and his sidekick toadie, some 80s bully, fou
I bought my orignal NES here.
nd us as we were following the creek. He followed us on his bike, threatening to beat us up. We outnumbered him, but he was bigger than us and let’s face it, the four of us were more Teddy and Vince, who ran away from Ace in the movie, than Chris Chambers and Gordie Lachance, who stood up to Ace at the climax of the move. Plus, none of us snagged our dad’s revolver while he was deep into his whiskey.

Eventually Ace followed us away from the creek and into the Venture (think Target, but black and white stripes instead of a red bullseye) parking lot. We went inside, while the bully paced outside the store, waiting for us to come back out. We used the pay phone to call Jon’s mom to come get us. It was a sad mix of fear and shame, plus trying to explain why were even at Venture in the first place was difficult. “You remember the movie ‘Stand by me,’ Mom?”
           

 At the end of the real movie, Teddy and Verne disappear into the hallways in junior high and high school and Gordie and Chris see little of them. Gordie and Chris remain friends through high school but lose track of each other after that. We find what triggers adult Gordie to think back on his friends is that Chris Chambers, now a successful attorney, dies breaking up a fight at a restaurant. 

Mitch, Jon, Phil and I thought that would never happen to us, we’d never not be friends. We were too close at the time. But thirty years later, where are my friends? Where are Mitch, Jon and Phil?

The good news is all of them are alive. I haven’t seen or talked to Mitch since high school graduation. We didn’t have any classes together in high school, we stopped playing the same sports together and they became just two people I saw passing in the halls at school, just what we thought wouldn’t happen. With social media, it’s easy to track people down, at least the ones who want to be found. Mitch works for a big computer company, and Jon is a high school teacher. They both live near where we grew up. I never had a falling out with either of them, we just slowly faded away from each other’s lives. I wonder if they feel the same way. I wonder if Mitch still has my G.I. Joe action figures and vehicles that I left at his house in seventh grade when we had an epic battle in his backyard with  our stuff combined.

Cubs Win! Cubs Win!
 Phil and I still talk and see each other regularly. We go to Cubs games regularly and last year we went to Washington, D.C. to see the Cubs in the playoffs and finally saw them win a playoff game together. Phil and I have never gone too long without talking to each other. In high school We had a few classes together and still hung out together, not as much as grade school or junior high. Our birthdays are two days apart, for a few days every year we were easily reminded of our friendship. Maybe that triggered us to stay in touch. I don’t know. The world is kind of weird that way.

 When I started writing this I reached out to Phil to see what he remembers about the four of us and Stand By Me”. He said he and Mitch hung out together in High School, and he hung out with Jon right after college, but it had been a long time since he had talked to either of them.

 Maybe Phil and I were closer friends with each other than we were with Mitch and Jon. Maybe we were the pair, the Chris Chambers and Gordie Lachance. Who knows, but he is still one of my best friends. Life gets complicated as you get older. More responsibilities, college, girlfriends, moving away, wives, jobs, careers, children. It’s hard to find time, or to make time, for people you were close to thirty years ago.

 When I checked in with Phil I said I was glad we were still friends and that we still hung out and that he took honors biology with me freshman year. We studied a lot together for that class. I also told him I was glad he didn’t get stabbed in the neck trying to break up a fight at a fast food restaurant.

His answer, “Ha, yes, we will hang out for fifty more years. Don’t go breaking up any fights.”

Thanks for reading.

Thursday, April 26, 2018

NHL 2018 Playoffs - Round 2


Well how about that? What a first round, right? Well, sort of. Not so much if you were a Flyers fans, but at least they go to boo their team. The Las Vegas Golden Knights swept the Los Angeles right out of the playoffs, while Toronto and Boston went to a game seven again, only to see Toronto lose a third period lead and the series. But the future looks good in Toronto. Maybe. If they improve their defense.

All the number 1 and number  2 seeds  in each division won their series in the first round. Yes, there were no upsets. Columbus had an early series lead over the Capitals but Washington clawed back to oust the Blue Jackets in six. And our very own Bob Wichard picked all 8 first round series correctly. Is he brilliant, or did he just pick the best 8 teams. He gets a chance to prove it wasn’t a fluke in the second round. Here are our standings:

              Bob       8
              Jarret    6
              Jax         6
              Mike     5
Yes, the guy writing the blog and who ultimately decides who we pick is in last place after the first round. But, hey, there are 7 more series to pick. I can catch up. Without further ado, here are our round 2 picks

Western Conference

Nashville Predators vs Winnipeg Jets

This is the series I am most looking forward to. Two teams who can skate, Nashville’s awesome D and depth, Winnipeg’s toughness. These teams are very evenly match, and both looked good in their first-round series wins.  The Jets won a playoff series for the first time since 1987. This one is so close. If these teams play 10 times, each wins 5. But they only gotta play 7.

Jets in 7

Las Vegas Golden Knights vs San Jose Sharks

This is the series I will probably not see because I just can’t stay up that late anymore. The Knights exposed the Kings as the slow team we forgot they were and skated circles around them in their first round sweep.  The Sharks made quick work of the Ducks, too, and Joe Thornton might be back during this series. But does that make them Sharks better? It makes them slower. My head keeps saying how is this friggin expansion team still around? My heart says they are going to win this series.

Knights in 6
 
Eastern Conference

Pittsburgh Penguins vs Washington Capitals

The Penguins scored 80 goals in their series win over Philadelphia. Okay, it only seemed like 80. Flyers fans booed the home team and Claude Giroux said that probably hurt them. Philly was the worst team to make the playoffs. Washington had a harded matchup against the Blue Jackets and trailed early in the series but prevailed. They are a deeper team that during some other years. Can they finally beat the Penguins? Ovechkin would sure like to get the best of Crosby in the playoffs just once.

Caps in 7


Boston vs Tampa Bay

The Massholes taunted Leafs fans a second time by overcoming a third period deficit in game seven in a game where Tuuka Rask didn’t have his best performance. Next the Massholes are going to fetcher la vache and catapult it their way). It was cool to see hordes of Leafs fans outside the Air Canada Center. It was disappointing not to get that crowd shot after the game. Tampa is the better team here and got a few more days rest.

Tampa in 6

 

Tuesday, April 10, 2018

NHL 2018 Playoffs


 

This April feels weird. Weirder than it has felt in ten years. No Blackhawks in the Stanley Cup playoffs. It used to not feel weird. From the 1997-98 through 2007-08 (much of the time when I had season tickets and sat in section 332 by myself) the Hawks only made the postseason once. And it did not end well.  But at least our friends 280 miles south in St. Louis still have their Blues to cheer for. Wait, no, the Blues lost their final game of the season to miss the playoffs for the first time after six straight appearances.  But, hey, 260 miles east in Detroit, they are ready for their first post-season at Little Caesar’s Arena. Wait, no, the Wings  finished near the bottom of the Eastern Conference. Wait, what, the Hawks, Blues and Wings are all sitting out the postseason? When was the last time that has happened? NEVER. It has never happened in the 50 years since the Blues joined the NHL.

So, alas, Midwesterners, we can go into the post-season with a clear mind, not worrying about how our home squads do, and simple cheer against the teams we hate.

DETROIT SUCKS!  DETROIT SUCKS!

Sorry, it is a hard habit to break.

As always, my crackpot staff of experts shares their picks with you. Normally, we go up against ESPN’s experts, but they fired most of their hockey people during last season’s playoffs, so they can suck an egg. To make it more fun, I will only use the nicknames of the teams given to me by said crack panel. It might cause you to do more thinking than you want to do, but trust me, it’s worth it. So, without further distraction, may we present the first-round picks. Note: I watched less hockey this year than pretty much any year since 1993 (well, except the locked-out seasons), so I am totally not qualified to make any predictions.
 

Western Conference

Nashville Predators vs Colorado Avalanche

The Preds won the President’s trophy with 117 points. The ‘Lanche clinched the last spot by beating the Blues in game 82 of the regular season. The Preds have Pekka Rinne, probably the best top four defensemen of any team in the league and some forward depth and Carrie Underwood’s husband. The ‘Lanche have Nathan McKinnon and legal weed. Also, people seem to think Preds fans are great fans now, so they have a great home ice advantage. Our experts all picked the Preds.
Preds in Six
 

Winnipeg Jets vs Minnesota Wild

The Peg finished second in the division and second in the NHL to the Preds. Blake Wheeler piled up 91 points, Patrik Laine lit the lamp 44 times and Connor Hellebuyck had a great season in net, going 44-11-9. Plus, come on, Dustin Byfuglien on D. The Wild quietly went on about their work, with Eric Staal having a bounce back season, but -have a big hole with Ryan Suter’s broken ankle keeping him out of the playoffs. The Peg are too good this year and then win both a playoff game and series for the first time since moving from Atlanta. All our experts agree
The Peg in 5

Las Vegas Golden Knights vs Los Angeles Kings

The Las vs the Los. The Knights vs the Kings.  A shitty place to live and also Las Vegas. The playoffs haven’t started, and Vegas already has had the most successful expansion season in any sport ever, and the second most successful team is, well, it doesn’t matter because it isn’t even close. Really, they should just lose so their fans don’t get used to it. For a portion of the season they were leading the entire NHL. WTF!!!!  The Kings are the 7th seed who had a +36 goal differential on the season, better than nine other playoff teams. Anze Kopitar had a career best season for the Kings, while everyone one Vegas did as well. Our experts were split on this, 2 picking Vegas, 2 choosing the Kings. Since it’s my blog, we get to use my pick.
Kings in 11 (double down), wait, no 7

Anaheim Ducks vs San Jose Sharks

I feel like Les Canards and Los Tiburones play each other every post-season, but their only previous matchup was a quarterfinal win by Les Carnards in 2009. I can’t stay up to watch West coast games, so I didn’t watch these teams much this year (except in person when Los Tiburones spanked the Hawks in March in San Jose). Goaltending will be key. John Gibson was strong all season for Les Canards but was injured the last two weeks of the season. Martin Jones struggled early and lost time to Aaron Dell early in the season for Los Tiburones. Again, our experts were split. Again, it’s my blog, so we go with my pick.
Les Canards in 7
 

Eastern Conference

Tampa Bay Lightning vs New Jersey Devils

What a difference a year makes. The Bolts missed the playoffs last year while the Devils finished in last place in the East. The Bolts piled up the goals, with Nikita Kucherov hitting 100 points while Taylor Hall lead the Devils in scoring. The Bolts also have Steve Stamkos, which is a good thing to have around for the playoffs. No dissent from the experts here. We like the Bolts.
Bolts in 5
 

Boston Bruins vs Toronto Maple Leafs

It’s a shame that only two Original Six teams made the playoffs and that one of them is heading to the golf course after the first round. Even with Brad Marchand seeming suspended every other month, he and the rest of the Massholes finished second in the East. The Maple Laughs are a young, talented team and this should be the first of many playoff runs for them. Which is good. People in Toronto are still recovering from their collapse against the Massholes in 2013. The experts were split on this series, too. I think Toronto wins in, though.
Maple Laughs in 7

 
Washington Capitals vs Columbus Blue Jackets

Hawks fans are pissed to learn the Artemi Panarin lead the Blow Jackets with 82 points while Brandon Saad scored a meager 35. After one year, the Blow Jackets got the best out of that deal. But will the Caps finally put together a strong post season and get Ovi’s name on the cup, now that Stan Mikita, Bobby Hull and Gordie Howe’s names are all coming off of it? Our experts think so, although one person thinks CBJ will pull an upset special.
Caps in 7

 
Pittsburgh Penguins vs Philadelphia Flyers

Okay, these two teams seem to always play in the playoffs, but really, this is only their seventh meeting. But it’s an all Pennsylvania series, so it’s like a big deal to, you know, that one state. Evegeni Malkin, and Sidney Crosby for Los Penguinos (I know, the nicknames are getting ridiculous).  Claude Giroux and that other guy for the Flyers. Seriously, how did the Flyers make the playoff? Oh wait, Shayne Gostisbehere, Sean Couturier and Jakub Voracek (some serious jersey lettering there, people). This series should be fun to watch, especially when Pierre MaGuire is covering the games so he can tell us how great Sidney Crosby is (and he is pretty great). “Hey Edzo, isn’t it great how great Sidney Crosby is?” Maybe we should all do a shot anytime Pierre says “Sidney Crosby.”

Penguins in 7

 

 

Look Who's Fifty

One of my friends sent me these words today on a group text on my 50 th birthday: “Time is the trickster. Today I woke up half a century ...