Thursday, May 31, 2007

Sports Fact & Book Rec of the Day 5/31/2007

5/31/2004:
Syracuse wins its eighth national lacrosse championship with a 14-13 victory over Navy at Ravens Stadium in Baltimore. Senior attackman Mike Powell assists on the go-ahead goal and scores the eventual clincher in the closing moments. He's named tournament Most Outstanding Player and selected as a first-time All-American for the fourth straight year, only the fourth lacrosse player ever so honored.

Birthdays:
Happy Hairston b. 1942
Joe Namath b. 1943
Tippy Martinez b. 1950
Jim Craig b. 1957
Kenny Lofton b. 1967


A tasty nibble for mystery buffs. Hannah Swensen, baker and reluctant sleuth, returns to solve another murder. And this time, she’s the prime suspect, as the victim is the owner of the Magnolia Blossom Bakery, direct competition for Hannah’s own shop, The Cookie Jar. Sweet, light, and satisfying, Peach Cobbler Murder is easy to digest.

PEACH COBBLER MURDER: A HANNAH SWENSEN MYSTERY WITH RECIPES, by Joanne Fluke (Kensington, 2006)

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Wednesday, May 30, 2007

Sports Fact & Book Rec of the Day 5/30/2007

5/30/1955:
Unable to avoid a four-car pileup on the track in front of him, Bill Vukovich is killed in a fiery crash in the Indianapolis 500. It all starts when Rodger Ward spins into the wall and catapults end over end. In quick succession, the cars of Johnny Boyd, Al Keller and Ed Elisian crash as they try to avoid Ward's wreckage, and Vukovich-winner of the 1953 and '54 Indy 500s-has no plance to go. Bob Sweikert eventually wins the race.

Birthdays
Turk Lown b. 1924
Gilles Villemure b. 1940
Gale Sayers b. 1943
Lydell Mitchell b. 1949
Manny Ramirez b. 1972

QUIRKY HISTORIES

Michael Servetus was burned at the stake in 1553. His heretical book, Christianity Restored, was so offensive to the Catholic Church that all copies had to be hunted down and destroyed. But were they? The Goldstones, rare-book dealers (and husband and wife), have traced the fates of three copies that escaped the pyre. Their fascinating account of a free thinker and the consequences of dissent in a time of obedience is a testament to the potency of books as well as an entertaining pop-history read.

OUT OF THE FLAMES: THE REMARKABLE STORY OF A FEARLESS SCHOLAR, A FATAL HERESY, AND ONE OF THE RAREST BOOKS IN THE WORLD, by Lawrence and Nancy Goldstone (Broadway, 2003)

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Tuesday, May 29, 2007

Sports Fact & Book Rec of the Day 5/29/2007

5/29/1995:
"'The Dunkin' Dutchman," Rik Smits, drops in a foul-line jumper at the buzzer, giving the Indiana Pacers a 94-93 victory over Orlando to even their Eastern Conference final-round series at 2-2. The dramatic ending climaxes a late flurry of lead-changing three-point goals as, in quick succession during the last 13.3 seconds, Brian Shaw, Reggie Miller and Penny Hardaway all hit clutch treys. Despite the devastating loss, Orlando will go on to win this series before bowing to Houston in the NBA finals.

Birthdays:
Tony Zale b. 1913
Richie Guerin b. 1932
Al Unser Sr. b. 1939
Eric Davis b. 1962
Carmelo Anthony b. 1984


“Plaidy excels at blending history with romance and drama.”—The New York Times

Do you devour the novels of Philippa Gregory? Did you love Sandra Gulland’s Josephine Bonaparte trilogy? Then it’s time for you to discover Jean Plaidy. Rediscover, actually. Plaidy’s books were published in the mid-20th century to great acclaim, and, happily, they have just been reissued. Crowned at six days old, raised abroad, shunned by Scotland, and betrayed by cousin Elizabeth, the story of Mary is well known, but it becomes electric in Plaidy’s masterful hands.

ROYAL ROAD TO FOTHERINGHAY: THE STORY OF MARY, QUEEN OF SCOTS, by Jean Plaidy (1955; Three Rivers Press, 2004)

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Monday, May 28, 2007

Sports Fact & Book Rec of the Day 5/28/2007

Memorial Day observed
5/28/1984:
Seventeen-year-old Manuela Maleeva of Bulgaria wins three matches in one day, including a straight-set triumph over top-seeded Chris Evert-Lloyd to win the rain-plagued Italian Open in Rome. After closing out her quarterfinal against Virginia Ruzici in the third set this morning, Maleeva routs Carling Bassett in the semis, 6-2, 6-2, and Mrs. Loyd in the finals, 6-3, 6-3, with only about a half-hour of rest between matches. The month of May has been good to Maleeva. She won the Swiss Open at Gstaad just two weeks ago.

Birthdays:
Jim Thorpe b. 1888
Red Horner b. 1909
Jerry West b. 1938
Terry Crisp b. 1943
Kirk Gibson b. 1957


HISTORIES

The Bayeux Tapestry is a thin piece of linen, 70 meters long (nearly 230 feet) onto which is stitched a pictorial account of the Battle of Hastings, celebrating Norman invader William the Conquerer’s defeat of British King Harold. Or is it? Bridgeford’s intriguing hypothesis is that the tapestry was of English design and encoded with secret messages meant to undermine the Normans. It’s history with a subversive, fascinating twist.

1066: THE HIDDEN HISTORY IN THE BAYEUX TAPESTRY, by Andrew Bridgeford (Walker & Company, 2005)

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Sunday, May 27, 2007

Joss Whedon's Wesleyan University Speech in May 2007 - Fan Report

From Wesleyan.edu - By SaltyGoodness -
Joss Whedon's Wesleyan University Speech in May 2007 - Fan Report

WESeminar 22: Joss Whedon on "The Importance of Being Keanu"

Join this creator of cult figures who will talk about his career, thoughts on education and work, his life at Wesleyan and future plans, plus anything else the audience wants to ask.

Introduction: Jeanine D. Basinger, Corwin-Fuller Professor of Film Studies, curator of the Cinema Archives, chair of the Film Studies Program, and 1996 recipient of the Binswanger Prize for Excellence in Teaching

Presenter: Joss Whedon ’87, film and television writer who was the creator and executive producer of the television series Buffy the Vampire Slayer, Angel, and Firefly; he is known as an "A-list" screenwriter and script doctor, and has written/co-written films that include Toy Story, Alien: Resurrection, and Titan A.E.

I went to this...it was wonderful fun, as expected.

Joss began by sharing his thoughts about Keanu Reeves as an actor; sounds like an odd way to start but it was quite lovely. He explained how Keanu has mastered his own career by embodying a rare and authentic style all his own typified by a sense of compassion for humanity and a subtle detachment. He shared a story about when he was "fixing" the script for Speed and working with Keanu on the character, how Keanu had spent some time with detectives and law enforcement to get a sense of the character and he said he was struck by how polite they were. How they all used "sir" and "Ma’am." Joss was impressed by how Keanu objected to certain lines and actions in the script because they seemed outside of what the character would truly do. He explained how Keanu’s choices of roles has been indicative of his style and how he has kept his private life private. He described Keanu as having an international appeal both by his "pretty" and by his multi-ethnic aesthetic. Ultimately, Keanu is the perfect Neo.

After Joss talked about this he opened it up for questions about anything. I didn’t take notes but a few things stood out as being significant to me anyway. When asked what he felt was his best work ever, he said without hesitation "The Body." When asked about the quality of television today he made a comment that "nothing on tv has ever been as good as Battlestar Galactica." :) When asked what medium he likes the best of comics, movies, or television he said he is definitely more fond of tv and having the time to develop the stories and characters and said he really misses tv.

As for Goners, he did say that he submitted a full script and would find out in a few weeks if he will be shooting it this year (!!!!!) And finally, news to me and very exciting, when asked if he was going to start a comic of Angel S6, he said no but that they were putting out a 12-issue comic series that takes place after Not Fade Away. coming soon.....

Very much fun, sorry I didn’t get to say hello to any whedonesquers who might have attended! I was in the 3rd row with hubby, brother and sisters in law and my adorable 18 month nephew.

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Sports Fact & Book Rec of the Day 5/27/2007

5/27/1983:
Defending his world middleweight title for the seventh time, Marvelous Marvin Hagler knocks out Wilford Scypion in the fourth round at the Providence Civic Center. Hagler (57-2-2) makes short work of the challenger (26-4), whose manager, Kenny Weldon, had publicly questioned the champion's ability-not the shrewdest strategy to employ against arguably the best fighter in the world at any weight.

Birthdays:
Sam Snead b. 1912
Jeff Bagwell b. 1968
Frank Thomas b. 1968
Todd Hundley b. 1969
Antonio Freeman b. 1972

CULT CLASSICS

The macabre tale of four children locked away by a cruel mother and the sequels that followed it, Petals on the Wind (1980) and If There Be Thorns (1981), were massive bestsellers. Their power to frighten has not diminished a bit today. If you are a horror fan and you haven’t read V. C. Andrews, you are missing out on one of the genre’s most celebrated writers.
FLOWERS IN THE ATTIC, by V. C. Andrews (1979; Pocket Books, 2005)
V. C. Andrews died in 1986, but she was so popular, her estate hired a ghostwriter to keep cranking out books in her name.

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Saturday, May 26, 2007

Buffy teaches us how to write a cliffhanger

From Poynter.org -
Buffy teaches us how to write a cliffhanger

Thanks to my friend Vicki Hyatt, I hold in my hand a shooting script for the first episode of "Buffy the Vampire Slayer." This treasure, dated Sept. 4, 1996, was written by Joss Whedon and carries the title "Welcome to the Hellmouth."

"Buffy," as many friends know, is my favorite television series. I own, and have watched three times now, all seven seasons of episodes. Whedon builds his story on a brilliant conceit: that a Valley Girl is the savior of the human race from all things evil, demonic and apocalyptic. She’s the chosen one. And damn cute, too.

I was interested to see that the script, which runs 57 pages, divides into four "acts." Each act ends with a small cliffhanger, a scary or dramatic moment that invites the audience to hang on through the commercial break, a classic bit of television shtick.

That strategy corresponds to Tool 30 in the book "Writing Tools":

To generate suspense, use internal cliffhangers. To propel readers, make them wait.

It was fun to read through the Buffy script to study the locations for each of the most suspenseful moments:

At the end of chapter one, for example, three girls in a locker room gossip about Buffy, the new girl in school. Suddenly:

Something FLIES OUT of the locker at [one of the gossiping girls]! She SCREAMS as the dead body of the boy from the opening collapses on her, eyes horribly wide. ANGLE: FROM ABOVE. The body sprawls out on the floor as the girl steps back, screaming for all she’s worth. BLACK OUT. END OF ACT ONE.

Here’s the end of act three, in an abandoned church. Luke is a vampire:

ANGLE: THE POOL OF BLOOD. We are low, right about the surface, as Luke prays before it. Suddenly a HEAD shoots up from in the blood. Luke starts, looks at it. He moves back away from the pool. Something breaks the surface of the liquid. Something rises. It is THE MASTER, the most powerful of vampires. Born Heinrich Joseph Nest (some six hundred years ago,) he wears a vaguely SS-like outfit.

What he does not wear is anything resembling a human face. He is as much demon as man. As powerful as Luke is, it’s clear that this man is much more so, both from his bearing and from the reverence with which Luke looks upon him. He steps forward, holds out his hand. Luke grasps it reverently. Luke: "Master."

It turns out that this episode is the first of a two-parter. So instead of a nice resolution, Whedon must leave us with another cliffhanger, this one ever more suspenseful, so that we’ll return next week. The scene takes place in a mausoleum, with Luke trying to kill Buffy, knocking her into an open tomb atop a withered corpse:

She’s hurt pretty bad. She looks up but no Luke. Only the wall of the tomb. He could be anywhere. Slowly, achingly slowly, she lifts her head. Truly scared. Looks over one side of the tomb — nothing. Looks over the other. Luke FILLS THE FRAME, roaring, jumping into the crypt on top of her. She tries to fight him off but she’s well pinned. He contemplates her for a moment with gleeful animal hunger. Teeth dripping. He bears down. BLACKOUT.

So that’s how it’s done on television. But let’s not abandon the cliffhanger in print. At the end of a chapter or even of a section of a chapter, or right before the jump, place something interesting or dramatic that forces the reader to turn the page.

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NY Times article: Adopting the Hollywood Model for Comic Books (Joss' Buffy s.8)

From Nytimes.com -
NY Times article: Adopting the Hollywood Model for Comic Books (Joss' Buffy s.8)

Hollywood has never been shy about poaching ideas from comic books, whether it’s the “Adventures of Superman” television series that inspired a generation of young cape-wearers in the mid-1950s or this month’s “Spider-Man 3,” which has earned nearly $300 million at the box office in just three weeks.

But now it is the comic-book industry that is grabbing ideas from movies and television - in this case not necessarily stories or characters, but the way Hollywood does its work.

¶In “Countdown,” a new weekly series from DC Comics that began this month, Paul Dini, who worked on ABC’s “Lost,” is serving as head writer.

¶The new “Buffy the Vampire Slayer” series from Dark Horse is being promoted as the never-produced Season 8 of the “Buffy” television show and is written by Joss Whedon, Buffy’s creator, who is credited as the comic’s “executive producer.”

¶Marvel Entertainment is also adopting the “season” mentality - a fresh number of issues and then a break - on high-profile series like “Ultimates” and “Young Avengers.”

¶Platinum Comics has adapted television’s “show runner” concept, used to describe the top writer-producer on a series, into a “comic runner” for their Web-only titles.

“Countdown,” a sequel to the popular “52” series that will weave in nearly all of DC’s superheroes, will require precise coordination so that neither the monthly titles nor the weekly series make revelations out of step with the other. It’s a tall order for DC, which has recently faced major delays in some of its monthly titles, including “Batman” and “Wonder Woman.”

“A lot of the DC universe is synching up, month by month, to events within the series,” said Dan DiDio, DC’s senior vice president and executive editor. Some of the steps have been fairly radical - like skipping the conclusion of a story until a later date to get the monthly deadline back on track.

“Countdown” involves a group of heroes who must prevent a great disaster that will destroy the multiverse - a collection of Earths with divergent histories and champions. Some of the characters at the heart of the series are Mary Marvel, kid sister of Captain Marvel; Jimmy Olsen, Superman’s best pal; Jason Todd, the formerly deceased second protégé of Batman; and two sometimes reformed supervillains, the Trickster and the Pied Piper.

Mr. Dini is the man who has been tapped by DC to spearhead the effort. He is a regular writer for “Detective Comics,” starring Batman, and on “Madame Mirage,” a mini-series published by Top Cow, about a femme fatale who hunts supervillains, that begins next month. The protagonist is based on Mr. Dini’s wife, Misty, a magician and illusionist.

Mr. Dini was a writer and story editor on Season 1 of “Lost” and a consultant on Season 2, and says that the same skills will come into play in the comics. “As a story editor in television, whether it’s live action or animation, I’m really the one responsible for the overall direction of the story,” Mr. Dini said in a telephone interview. In “Countdown,” he said, “each week I go over the beats of the upcoming issue with the editor and the writers.”

If new ideas arise, he amends the series’s outline before writing the script. He then reviews the final script before it is sent to the artist. Once drawn and given dialogue, it is reviewed yet again. “We have to make sure the tone is right and that we’re keeping the ultimate vision of the story line,” he said.

A moderately popular title might draw somewhere from 30,000 to 60,000 retail orders per issue. A successful one, like “52,” draws more than 100,000 orders, and DC has similarly high hopes for “Countdown.”

Already “Buffy” has proved a major success for Dark Horse. The first issue, published in March, had to be reprinted to meet demand. All told, retailers ordered nearly 110,000 copies.

The origin of the series is simple enough: “I had an idea for an eighth season and I knew they wanted to start the comic,” said Mr. Whedon, who created Buffy in a 1992 film that preceded the television series.

“I knew there wasn’t going to be another venue for it, so I started to work,” he said.

The series was originally planned for about 24 issues, but will now be closer to 40 or 50. Mr. Whedon is writing the opening story line, while other writers will step in for smaller story arcs, but everyone will be working toward an already planned ending.

“They all have my sort of manifesto, which I update constantly,” Mr. Whedon said. “And I’ll sit down with the writers so that I can fold their stories into the bigger picture.”

This control over the series’s overall vision is why he is billed as executive producer. “It’s a nonexistent title in comics, but it best fits what I’m doing,” he said. “Everyone goes through me. It doesn’t take as many people, but it sometimes comes as down to the wire to produce a comic as it does a TV show every week.”

Scott Mitchell Rosenberg, the chairman of Platinum Studios, which offers Web-only and traditional printed comics, conceived the position of “comic runner” to help produce his company’s online titles.

“The comic runner is basically an entrepreneur who is running a small business,” he said. Mr. Rosenberg called it a “tough job” that required the ability to get comics from idea to final product regularly.

The comic runner must also be the spokesman for the property, helping to make decisions about publicity, merchandising and television or film development.

The traditional model for creating comics is 70 years old, Mr. Rosenberg said, but there is, he added, “no need to be stuck in our old ways.” The company is using “comic runners” on more and more properties.

“The sequel to ‘Cowboys and Aliens,’ which is one of our flagships, is going to be comic run,” Mr. Rosenberg said. “For us, that’s where comics are going.”

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Sports Fact & Book Rec of the Day 5/26/2007

5/26/1929:
Before more than 35,000 Sunday onlookers at the Polo Grounds, Pat Crawford of the Giants and Les Bell of the Braves each produce a pinch-hit grand-slam home run. If that weren't enough for the crowd, sandwiched between the two clutch clouts (Crawford, bottom sixth; Bell, top seventh) is a rare muff of an infield fly by colorful Braves shortstop Rabbit Maranville using his patented basket catch. (No, Willie Mays did not invent the basket catch!)

Birthdays:
Cliff Drysdale b. 1941
Darrell Evans b. 1947
Dan Roundfield b. 1953
Wesley Walker b. 1955
Travis Lee b. 1975

The little idea that could. Dubner is a journalist who in 2003 wrote a New York Times Magazine profile of Levitt, a University of Chicago economist with unorthodox interests. That article became this bestseller, which then became a column in the magazine. What’s so interesting about Freakonomics (besides the name)? Levitt creatively uses economic methods to explain different outcomes in such varied areas as cheating, crime, and parenting. Revolutionary reading.

FREAKONOMICS: A ROGUE ECONOMIST EXPLORES THE HIDDEN SIDE OF EVERYTHING, by Stephen J. Dubner and Steven D. Levitt (William Morrow, 2005)

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Sports Fact & Book Rec of the Day 5/25/2007

5/25/1953:
Milwaukee Braves right-hander Max Surkont sets a new major league record by striking out eight consecutive batters as he goes the distance to defeat Cincinnati, 10-3, completing a doubleheader sweep at County Stadium. Surkont's feat surpasses the old mark of seven straight K's shared by Dazzy Vance (1924) and Van Lingle Mungo (1936). Tom Seaver of the Mets will shatter this record in 1970 when he fans 10 San Siego Padres in succession.

Birthdays:
Bill Sharman b. 1926
K.C. Jones b. 1932
Tom McMillen b. 1962
Miguel Tejada b. 1976
Brian Urlacher b. 1978

YOU’VE NEVER READ SIGRID UNDSET?

Jenny was scandalous when it was first published. The story of a Norwegian girl who goes to Rome to study painting and ends up having a baby after an adulterous affair, might remind readers of Edith Wharton’s creations. The writing is stellar, and the story involves a modern woman trapped by the narrow conventions of her times. If you’ve never read Undset’s work, Jenny is the best place to start.

JENNY, by Sigrid Undset (1911; Zoland Books, 1998)
Sigrid Undset won the Nobel Prize for Literature in 1928.

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Thursday, May 24, 2007

Sports Fact & Book Rec of the Day 5/24/2007

5/24/1964:
During an Olympic qualifying soccer game in Lima, Peru, pandemonium breaks loose after a goal that would have tied Peru with Argentina is disallowed with two minutes remaining. The riot by enraged spectators results in over 300 deaths and twice that many injured. After ransacking the National Stadium, many in the frenzied mob of over 45,000 set about vandalizing the surrounding neighborhood. The players and referee escape to a steel-enclosed locker room, and Argentina is ultimately declared the winner of the game, 1-0.

Birthdays:
Mitch Kupchak b. 1954
Joe Dumars b. 1963
Pat Verbeek b. 1964
Bartolo Colon b. 1973
Tracy McGrady b. 1979

MEMOIRS

“The most important book I’ve read in a long while.”—Barbara Kingsolver

“This Organic Life has uncommon depth of feeling.”—The New York Times Book Review

Joan Dye Gussow’s memoir of renovating a home, nurturing a vegetable garden, and living as close to the land as possible is inspiring. Read it as a blueprint or as an escape, but if you care about gardening at all, you must read it.

THIS ORGANIC LIFE: CONFESSIONS OF A SUBURBAN HOMESTEADER, by Joan Dye Gussow (Chelsea Green Publishing, 2002)

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Wednesday, May 23, 2007

Sports Fact & Book Rec of the Day 5/23/2007

5/23/2003:
Jeff Friesen's third game-winning goal of the Eastern Conference finals with just over two minutes remaining gives the New Jersey Devils a 3-2 win over Ottawa and a berth in the Stanley Cup finals against Anaheim. After surviving this decisive seventh game on the road at the Corel Center in Ottawa, the Devils will go on to win their third NHL title in nine years by defeating the upstart Mighty Ducks of Anaheim in seven games.

Birthdays:
Zack Wheat b. 1888
Vic Stasiuk b. 1929
John Newcombe b. 1943
Marvin Hagler b. 1954
Rich Karlis b. 1959

WEIRD SCIENCE

More sailors died of scurvy than of any other cause from the Middle Ages to the 19th century. Bown believes scurvy may have cost the British the American Revolution, while the discovery of its prevention and cure may have saved England from Napoleon’s clutches. The answer to a major medical mystery turned out to be vitamin C. Bown serves up juicy, horrific details of sea travel and disease in a compelling, unique scientific history.
SCURVY: HOW A SURGEON, A MARINER, AND A GENTLEMAN SOLVED THE GREATEST MEDICAL MYSTERY OF THE AGE OF SAIL, by Stephen J. Bown (St. Martin’s Griffin, 2005)

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Tuesday, May 22, 2007

Sports Fact & Book Rec of the Day 5/22/2007

5/22/1993:
The Seattle SuperSonics move into the NBA Western Conference finals, beating the Houston Rockets, 103-100, in overtime in the seventh game of their semifinal series. The Sonics, 55-27 during the regular season, prevail by the narrowest of margins when a potential series-winning baseline jumper by the Rockets' Vernon "Mad Max" Maxwell rims out with less than a second remaining. The home team wins all seven games of this intensely played series.

Birthdays:
Al Simmons b. 1902
Larry Siegfried b.1939
Mick Tingelhoff b. 1940
Tommy John b. 1943
George Best b. 1946

“A devilishly entertaining portrait of Kinsey.”—Entertainment Weekly

“The Inner Circle may draw readers in because of its sexy subject matter, but they will stay for the emotional punch of Boyle’s meditations on love, marriage and jealousy.”—San Francisco Chronicle Book Review

“T. C. Boyle never lets you tear your eyes from the page.”—The Washington Post Book World

Wicked T. C. Boyle. As if his writing weren’t provocative enough on its own, he adds to the draw by writing about sex researcher Alfred Kinsey. The Inner Circle is Boyle at his witty, trenchant best.

THE INNER CIRCLE, by T. C. Boyle (Penguin, 2005)

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Monday, May 21, 2007

Joss Whedon speaks for "Equality Now"

From Equalitynow.org -
Joss Whedon speaks for "Equality Now"

Let’s Watch A Girl Get Beaten To Death. This is not my blog, but I don’t have a blog, or a space, and I’d like to be heard for a bit.

Last month seventeen year old Dua Khalil was pulled into a crowd of young men, some of them (the instigators) family, who then kicked and stoned her to death. This is an example of the breath-taking oxymoron “honor killing”, in which a family member (almost always female) is murdered for some religious or ethical transgression. Dua Khalil, who was of the Yazidi faith, had been seen in the company of a Sunni Muslim, and possibly suspected of having married him or converted. That she was torturously murdered for this is not, in fact, a particularly uncommon story. But now you can watch the action up close on CNN. Because as the girl was on the ground trying to get up, her face nothing but red, the few in the group of more than twenty men who were not busy kicking her and hurling stones at her were filming the event with their camera-phones.

There were security officers standing outside the area doing nothing, but the footage of the murder was taken - by more than one phone - from the front row. Which means whoever shot it did so not to record the horror of the event, but to commemorate it. To share it. Because it was cool.

I could start a rant about the level to which we have become desensitized to violence, about the evils of the voyeuristic digital world in which everything is shown and everything is game, but honestly, it’s been said. And I certainly have no jingoistic cultural agenda. I like to think that in America this would be considered unbearably appalling, that Kitty Genovese is still remembered, that we are more evolved. But coincidentally, right before I stumbled on this vid I watched the trailer for “Captivity”.

A few of you may know that I took public exception to the billboard campaign for this film, which showed a concise narrative of the kidnapping, torture and murder of a sexy young woman. I wanted to see if the film was perhaps more substantial (especially given the fact that it was directed by “The Killing Fields” Roland Joffe) than the exploitive ad campaign had painted it. The trailer resembles nothing so much as the CNN story on Dua Khalil. Pretty much all you learn is that Elisha Cuthbert is beautiful, then kidnapped, inventively, repeatedly and horrifically tortured, and that the first thing she screams is “I’m sorry”.

“I’m sorry.”

What is wrong with women?

I mean wrong. Physically. Spiritually. Something unnatural, something destructive, something that needs to be corrected.

How did more than half the people in the world come out incorrectly? I have spent a good part of my life trying to do that math, and I’m no closer to a viable equation. And I have yet to find a culture that doesn’t buy into it. Women’s inferiority - in fact, their malevolence — is as ingrained in American popular culture as it is anywhere they’re sporting burkhas. I find it in movies, I hear it in the jokes of colleagues, I see it plastered on billboards, and not just the ones for horror movies. Women are weak. Women are manipulative. Women are somehow morally unfinished. (Objectification: another tangential rant avoided.) And the logical extension of this line of thinking is that women are, at the very least, expendable.

I try to think how we got here. The theory I developed in college (shared by many I’m sure) is one I have yet to beat: Womb Envy. Biology: women are generally smaller and weaker than men. But they’re also much tougher. Put simply, men are strong enough to overpower a woman and propagate. Women are tough enough to have and nurture children, with or without the aid of a man. Oh, and they’ve also got the equipment to do that, to be part of the life cycle, to create and bond in a way no man ever really will. Somewhere a long time ago a bunch of men got together and said, “If all we do is hunt and gather, let’s make hunting and gathering the awesomest achievement, and let’s make childbirth kinda weak and shameful.” It’s a rather silly simplification, but I believe on a mass, unconscious level, it’s entirely true. How else to explain the fact that cultures who would die to eradicate each other have always agreed on one issue? That every popular religion puts restrictions on women’s behavior that are practically untenable? That the act of being a free, attractive, self-assertive woman is punishable by torture and death? In the case of this upcoming torture-porn, fictional. In the case of Dua Khalil, mundanely, unthinkably real. And both available for your viewing pleasure.

It’s safe to say that I’ve snapped. That something broke, like one of those robots you can conquer with a logical conundrum. All my life I’ve looked at this faulty equation, trying to understand, and I’ve shorted out. I don’t pretend to be a great guy; I know really really well about objectification, trust me. And I’m not for a second going down the “women are saints” route - that just leads to more stone-throwing (and occasional Joan-burning). I just think there is the staggering imbalance in the world that we all just take for granted. If we were all told the sky was evil, or at best a little embarrassing, and we ought not look at it, wouldn’t that tradition eventually fall apart? (I was going to use ‘trees’ as my example, but at the rate we’re getting rid of them I’m pretty sure we really do think they’re evil. See how all rants become one?)

Now those of you who frequent this site are, in my wildly biased opinion, fairly evolved. You may hear nothing new here. You may be way ahead of me. But I can’t contain my despair, for Dua Khalil, for humanity, for the world we’re shaping. Those of you who have followed the link I set up know that it doesn’t bring you to a video of a murder. It brings you to a place of sanity, of people who have never stopped asking the question of what is wrong with this world and have set about trying to change the answer. Because it’s no longer enough to be a decent person. It’s no longer enough to shake our heads and make concerned grimaces at the news. True enlightened activism is the only thing that can save humanity from itself. I’ve always had a bent towards apocalyptic fiction, and I’m beginning to understand why. I look and I see the earth in flames. Her face was nothing but red.

All I ask is this: Do something. Try something. Speaking out, showing up, writing a letter, a check, a strongly worded e-mail. Pick a cause - there are few unworthy ones. And nudge yourself past the brink of tacit support to action. Once a month, once a year, or just once. If you can’t think of what to do, there is this handy link. Even just learning enough about a subject so you can speak against an opponent eloquently makes you an unusual personage. Start with that. Any one of you would have cried out, would have intervened, had you been in that crowd in Bashiqa. Well thanks to digital technology, you’re all in it now.

I have never had any faith in humanity. But I will give us props on this: if we can evolve, invent and theorize our way into the technologically magical, culturally diverse and artistically magnificent race we are and still get people to buy the idiotic idea that half of us are inferior, we’re pretty amazing. Let our next sleight of hand be to make that myth disappear.

The sky isn’t evil. Try looking up.

Click on the link :

http://www.equalitynow.org

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Sports Fact & Book Rec of the Day 5/21/2007

Victoria Day (Canada)

Fun-loving, tobacco-chewing utility infielder Rocky Bridges had this to say about his frequent changes of scenery in the big leagues: "My wife used to write me care of Commissioner Ford Frick. He was the only one who knew where I was."

Birthdays:
Johnny Majors b. 1935
Pete Banaszak b. 1944
Dave Wannstedt b. 1952
Kent Hrbek b. 1960
Dorsey Levens b. 1970


Moby-Dick is such a towering achievement that it’s easy to forget about Herman Melville’s other work. This collection of 22 of his best short fiction efforts reminds readers of Melville’s mastery over that form as well. Included are “Billy Budd, Sailor”; “Benito Cereno”; and our favorite tale of Wall Street, “Bartleby, the Scrivener: A Story of Wall-Street”—the story of an employee who “would prefer not to” do his work. Whether writing about office work or the high seas, Melville’s vision of the world remains fresh, his themes eternal.

GREAT SHORT WORKS OF HERMAN MELVILLE, by Herman Melville, edited by Warner Berthoff (Perennial, 2004)

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Sports Fact & Book Rec of the Day 5/20/2007

5/20/1945:
One-armed outfielder Pete Gray gets two hits in the first inning for the St. Louis Browns, fueling a seven-run salvo that leads to a doubleheader sweep of the Yankees, 10-1 and 5-2, at Sportsman's Park. Batting leadoff against Atley Donald, Grey singles and scores the first run, then singles again to drive in the last run. An intense competitor despite his handicap from a childhood injury, Gray got his big break after earning MVP honors in the Southern Association at Memphis in 1944. Next year, when all the regular players have returned from the war, he'll be back in the minors; soon after, he'll leave the game for good.

Birthdays:
Hal Newhouser b. 1921
Stan Mikita b. 1940
Sadaharu Oh b. 1940
David Wells b. 1963
Liselotte Neumann b. 1966

An incredibly inspirational story of one man’s ability to change kids’ lives. Coach Bob Hurley works in one of the poorest, toughest schools in New Jersey, yet he has managed to inspire 100 percent of his students to go to college for the last ten years. Journalist Wojnarowski followed the school’s 2003-2004 season and documented the transformation of underachievers to successful athletes and students. A heart-swelling, unforgettable Cinderella story.

THE MIRACLE OF ST. ANTHONY: A SEASON WITH COACH BOB HURLEY AND BASKETBALL’S MOST IMPROBABLE DYNASTY, by Adrian Wojnarowski (Gotham, 2006)

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Saturday, May 19, 2007

Sports Fact & Book Rec of the Day 5/19/2007

5/19/1959:
Baltimore left-hander Billy O'Dell pitches and hits his way to a 2-1 victory over the Chicago White Sox at memorial Stadium. Before being struck in the leg with a hard comebacker, he hurls seven innings of five-hit ball and wins his own game with an odd hit to right field in the second inning. The ball bounces over the head of Al Smith and rolls all the way to the wall, allowing baserunner Billy Gardner and O'Dell to reach home and providing all of Baltimore's offense for the night off tough-luck loser Billy Pierce.

Birthdays:
Dolph Schayes b. 1928
Archie Manning b. 1949
Bill Laimbeer b. 1957
Turk Wendell b. 1967
Kevin Garnett b. 1976


IF YOU LIKE VAMPIRES, YOU’LL LOVE...

Vampires are slaying the competition on the bestseller lists these days. Two of the most popular series are the smoldering romances in Hamilton’s Meredith Gentry series, and the light, madcap capers starring Sookie Stackhouse by Harris. If you like your demon chasing moody, choose Hamilton; if bright, pick Harris. If you are a true vampire junkie, you’ll want to try both.

A STROKE OF MIDNIGHT, by Laurell K. Hamilton (Ballantine Books, 2005)

DEAD AS A DOORNAIL, by Charlaine Harris (Ace, 2006)

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Friday, May 18, 2007

Sports Fact & Book Rec of the Day 5/18/2007

5/18/1996:
Louis Quatorze shatters the tout sheets when he gallops to victory in the Preakness after finishing 16th at the Kentucky Derby two weeks ago. Trained by Nick Zito, he snaps a record-setting streak of six straight Tripple Crown wins by horses trained by D. Wayne Lucas.

Birthdays
Fred Perry b. 1909
Brooks Robinson b. 1937
Reggie Jackson b. 1946
Rod Milburn b. 1950 (Wikipedia has him born 3/18/1950, but I'm betting that's a mistake)
Jari Kurri b. 1960


INVESTIGATIVE NONFICTION

When the national group that governs sororities banned journalist Robbins from communicating with their local chapters, Robbins went undercover. She posed as a would-be sorority girl to uncover what life in the Greek letter system is really like. Her exposé reveals a mélange of date rape, hazing, binge drinking, racism, romance, insecurity, and jealousy. It’s a roiling stew that makes for a riveting read as well as a strong, cautionary tale.

PLEDGED: THE SECRET LIFE OF SORORITIES, by Alexandra Robbins (Hyperion, 2005)
Robbins’s previous book, Secrets of the Tomb, was about Yale University’s famous secret society, Skull and Bones.

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Thursday, May 17, 2007

Sports Fact & Book Rec of the Day 5/17/2007

5/17/1978:
Super sub Lee Lacy of the Los Angeles Dodgers becomes the first man in baseball history to hit three consecutive pinch home runs in three official times at bat when he connects off Jim Rooker of the Pirates at Dodger Stadium. Earlier this month, Lacy homered off Rick Reuschel of the Cubs and John Candelaria of Pittsburgh. In 1978 Del Unser of the Phillies will equal Lacy's achievement, and Matthew LeCroy of the Minnesota Twins will become the third member of this unique club in 2004.

Birthdays:
Cool Papa Bell b. 1903
Earl Morrall b. 1934
Tony Roche b. 1945
Sugar Ray Leonard b. 1956
Danny Manning b. 1966


What if Jane Austen hadn’t left the Napoleonic Wars out of her books? What if, alongside lovers wooing one another at elegant parties, there were spies tiptoeing around? Lauren Willig’s first novel envisions just such a situation, with delightful results. Her heroine, Eloise Kelly, is a modern-day graduate student who gets whisked into the past when she discovers a cache of papers that will reveal the true identity of a spy to rival the Scarlet Pimpernel himself, the Pink Carnation. A delicious, literary treat for historical mystery buffs and a must for all fans of the Regency period.

THE SECRET HISTORY OF THE PINK CARNATION, by Lauren Willig (NAL Trade, 2005)

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Wednesday, May 16, 2007

Sports Fact & Book Rec of the Day 5/16/2007

5/16/1982:
Kathy Whitworth wins the Lady Michelob Classic in Atlanta by four strokes over Barbara Moxness, establishing two women's golf records. With the 83rd victory of her career, she passes Mickey Wright for the all-time LPGA leadership, and her $22,500 purse pushes her past JoAnne Carner for the top spot on the career money list. Before she's through, Whitworth will win five more tournaments to finish with 88 professional victories, the most by any man or woman in golf history.

Birthdays:
Billy Martin b. 1928
Jack Morris b. 1955
Joan Benoit Samuelson b. 1957
Thurman Thomas b. 1966
Gabriela Sabatini b. 1970

“Riveting...a fierce, elliptical novel that’s both a gripping psychological thriller and highly moving meditation on the emotional consequence of war.”—The New York Times

France. World War I. Five soldiers are taken by Germans and shot. Or are they? The fiancée of one of the soldiers receives a mysterious letter that makes her realize that the truth may not have been so straightforward. She investigates, in a novel whose plot is utterly engrossing and whose writing, breathtaking. A movie starring Audrey Tautou (Amélie) was adapted from the book, but don’t watch it before you experience Japrisot’s original vision.

A VERY LONG ENGAGEMENT, by Sébastien Japrisot (Picador, 2004)

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Tuesday, May 15, 2007

Sports Fact & Book Rec of the Day 5/15/2007

5/15/1960:
Making his first appearance for the Cubs after a trade from the Phillies just two days ago, Don Cardwell pitches a no-hitter, blanking the St. Louis Cardinals, 4-0. Only a first-inning walk to Alex Grammas mars what could have been a perfect game for the tall right-hander. Ernie Banks hits a two-run homer to provide sufficient offensive support, and outfielders George Altman and Moose Moryn both make fine running catches in the ninth inning to preserve the gem. It's the first time the Cardinals have been no-hit since 1919, when Hod Eller of the Reds set them down.

Birthdays:
Don Nelson b. 1940
George Brett b. 1953
John Smoltz b. 1967
Emmitt Smith b. 1969
Ray Lewis b. 1975

QUIRKY HISTORIES

Stewart Lee Allen believes that the course of history has been shaped by coffee, and he’ll convince you he’s right in this nifty little history of the magic bean. Allen traveled from Ethiopia and Yemen to Paris and the American South for his research, and his findings are wildly entertaining. Are caffeinated societies better able to dominate decaffeinated ones? The American Civil War pitted Southern decaf (chickory) drinkers against caffeinated Northern force....Coincidence? Allen thinks not. This book is a must for history buffs with a quirky streak and perhaps a penchant for a fresh brew.

THE DEVIL’S CUP: A HISTORY OF THE WORLD ACCORDING TO COFFEE, by Stewart Lee Allen (Ballantine Books, 2003)

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Monday, May 14, 2007

Sports Fact & Book Rec of the Day 5/14/2007

5/14/1983:
Cam Nelly scores three goals to lead the Portland (Oregon) Winter Hawks to an 8-3 victory over the Oshawa Generals for the Memorial Cup championship. For the first time in history, the games to determine Canadian Junior Hockey supremacy are played in the United States, enabling the Winter Hawks to compete for the Cup as the host team despite not winning their Western League title (another first). The Winter Hawks added to their roster before the event, picking up topflight goalie Mike Vernon in a controversial move that will bring about next year's rule change precluding such 11th-hour roster additions.

Birthdays:
Gump Worsley b. 1929
Tony Perez b. 1942
Dick Tidrow b. 1947
Dennis Martinez b. 1955
Pooh Richardson b. 1966

LITERARY FICTION

Brookner’s acclaimed short novel is a meditation on love. Romance novelist Edith Hope is sent by friends to a Swiss hotel to recover from a disastrous social transgression. Hope interacts with the guests at the hotel and meditates on her behavior and fate. The Christian Science Monitor calls Hotel du Lac “spellbinding.” Anne Tyler, writing for The New York Times Book Review, says it’s “Brookner’s most absorbing novel...graceful and attractive.”

HOTEL DU LAC, by Anita Brookner (Vintage, 1995)
Hotel du Lac won England’s prestigious Man Booker Prize.

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Sunday, May 13, 2007

Sports Fact & Book Rec of the Day 5/13/2007

Mother's Day
5/13/2004:
In arguably the most thrilling final second in sports history, Tim Duncan hits a clutch shot to give the Spurs a one-point lead over the Lakers in Game 5 of their Western Conference semifinal. Then, after two time-outs, reserve guard and third option Derek Fisher hits a fall-away jumper at the buzzer for a 74-73 victory for the Lakers, who head home to close out the series in six games.

Birthdays:
Dean Meminger b. 1948
Bobby Valentine b. 1950
Dennis Rodman b. 1961
Mike Bibby b. 1978
Barry Zito b. 1978

MEMOIRS

Momoirs” are all the rage lately. Suddenly women are clamoring to document all the difficult, funny, and often-unspoken truths of pregnancy and motherhood. But Operating Instructions remains the classic. Anne Lamott’s journey to motherhood is as introspective and honest as it is funny and warm.

OPERATING INSTRUCTIONS: A JOURNAL OF MY SON’S FIRST YEAR, by Anne Lamott (Ballantine Books, 1994)
The flip side of Operating Instructions might be The Three-Martini Playdate by Christie Mellor (Chronicle Books, 2004). This humorous gem is a collection of essays advocating—in hilarious terms—a return to a more parent-centric time.

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Saturday, May 12, 2007

Sports Fact & Book Rec of the Day 5/12/2007

5/12/1961:
Detroit outfielder Rocky Colavito climbs into the stands at Yankee Stadium to defend his father and his wife against some obnoxious fans in the eighth inning of an eventual 4-3 Tiger victory. The hecklers are briskly removed, Colavito must be ejected by rule and Detroit wins behind Frank Lary (28-13 lifetime vs. the Yankees), who scatters 11 hits and wins his own game with a ninth-inning home run.

Birthdays:
Yogi Berra b. 1925
Felipe Alou b. 1935
Johnny Bucyk b. 1935
George Karl b. 1951
Lou Whitaker b. 1957

THRILLERS

An old-fashioned thriller with big characters, an exotic backdrop, and plenty of dangerous action, Smith’s Elephant Song takes readers into the African rain forest where a documentary producer battles ivory poachers. Add to the mix traders from Europe and the Far East, a love interest, a murder, and angry tribal chieftains, and you have a glamorous, clamorous, rip-roaring read ahead of you that the Chicago Tribune calls “sweeping and majestic.”
ELEPHANT SONG, by Wilbur Smith (Fawcett, 1995)

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Friday, May 11, 2007

Sports Fact & Book Rec of the Day 5/11/2007

5/11/1988:
The bonus cantos lamp is brightly lit throughout major league baseball tonight as 6 of the 12 games on the slate go extra innings, 5 of them in the National League. The Mets beat the Astros, 9-8, in 10 innings and the Cubs blank the Padres, 1-0, also in 10. Taking a bit longer, the Phils edge the Reds, 4-3, and the Pirates nip the Dodgers, 2-1, both in 11 innings. The lone AL entry sees the Indians best the Angels, 4-3 in 13 innings, while the longest game of the evening produces a 5-4 win by the Giants over the Cardinals in 16 innings. It's the third time in history that 6 games go extra innings on the same day.

Birthdays:
Charlie Gehringer b. 1903
Rip Sewell b. 1907
Jack Twyman b. 1934
Milt Pappas b. 1939
Kerry Ligtenberg b. 1971

“I have visited and seen many lovely towns across America, but nothing has taken my breath away like old Nantucket.”—Frank Conroy

Frank Conroy, director of the Iowa Writers’ Workshop until his death in 2005, had a love affair with a small island off the coast of Massachusetts since he was a teenager in 1955. Time & Tide is a slice of memory—an appreciation, a portrait, a history of a place with deep resonance for Conroy. A must for those who love Nantucket and a good pick for armchair travelers with a soft spot for beautiful, poetic writing.

TIME & TIDE: A WALK THROUGH NANTUCKET, by Frank Conroy (Crown, 2004)

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Thursday, May 10, 2007

Sports Fact & Book Rec of the Day 5/10/2007

5/10/1993:
Julius Erving and Bill Walton head a contingent of eight new members inducted into the Basketball Hall of Fame in Springfield, Massachusetts. Also enshrined are centers Walt Bellamy and Dan Issel, guards Calvin Murphy and Dick McGuire, UCLA All-American Ann Meyers and Latvian seven-footer Ulyona Semyonova. Dr. J earned universal acclaim for his leaping ability and awesome dunk shots, while Walton won two NCAA titles at UCLA and two more in the NBA-one at Portland and one with the Celtics.

(I think that's Ulyana but this is how it's spelled on the thing. I couldn't find anything on Wikipedia for either spelling.)

Birthdays:
Pat Summerall b. 1930
Manuel Santana b. 1938
Jim Calhoun b. 1942
Phil & Steve Mahre b. 1957
Rony Seikaly b. 1965

BIOGRAPHIES

Jackie Onassis was passionate about many things, among them: fashion, literature, and horses. Moon—the publisher of The Middleburg Life, a riding magazine in Virginia—considers Mrs. Onassis the equestrienne. From childhood through the end of her life, horses were a refuge and a source of joy for the former first lady. Moon’s loving tribute to a lesser-known aspect of Mrs. Onassis’s life will enthrall the horsey set.

THE PRIVATE PASSION OF JACKIE KENNEDY ONASSIS: PORTRAIT OF A RIDER, by Vicky Moon (Regan Books, 2005)

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Which Battlestar Galactica character are YOU?

You scored as Capt. Lee Adama (Apollo). You have spent your life trying to life up to and impress your Dad, shame he never seemed to notice. You are a stickler for the rules. But in matters of loyalty and honour you know when they have to be broken.

Capt. Lee Adama (Apollo)


75%

CPO Galen Tyrol


69%

Tom Zarek


56%

President Laura Roslin


56%

Dr Gaius Baltar


50%

Number 6


44%

Lt. Kara Thrace (Starbuck)


25%

Lt. Sharon Valerii (Boomer)


25%

Commander William Adama


19%

Col. Saul Tigh


13%

What New Battlestar Galactica character are you?
created with QuizFarm.com

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Wednesday, May 09, 2007

Book Rec of the Day 5/9/2007

THRILLERS

“In Hidden Prey, Sandford has outdone himself. He is at the top of his game.”—The Washington Post

The KGB comes to Duluth in another superb, un-put-downable thriller in the Lucas Davenport series. The detective is asked to escort a Russian investigator who arrives to solve the murder of a countryman. Together, she and Davenport uncover a conspiracy dating back to the Cold War. Sandford is one of the best thriller writers around, with complex plots, memorable characters, and strong writing. If this one hooks you, you’ll have fifteen (and we hope even more) books in the series to look forward to.

HIDDEN PREY, by John Sandford (Berkley, 2005)

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Sports Fact of the Day 5/9/2007

5/9/1961:
Diamond Jim Gentile becomes the first player to hit grand-slam homers in consecutive innings, leading the Orioles to a 13-5 rout of the Twins at the Met in Bloomington. After connecting in the first and second innings, Gentile adds another RBI for a total of nine in the game. Only Tony Lazzeri (1936), Jim Tabor (1939) and Jimmie Foxx (1946) had hit two slams in one game. In all, Gentile will hit 46 homers and 141 RBIs in 1961, the best season of his career.

Birthdays:
Pancho Gonzales b. 1928
Ralph Boston b. 1939
Howard "Butch" Komives b. 1941
Tony Gwynn b. 1960
Steve Yzerman b. 1965

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Exclusive: "Glimmer of Hope" for Veronica Mars

http://community.tvguide.com/blog-entry/TVGuide-Editors-Blog/Ausiello-Report/Exclusive-Glimmer-Hope/800014541

« Ausiello Report

Exclusive: "Glimmer of Hope" for Veronica Mars

070508veronica.jpg

Kristen Bell by Mike Ansell/The CW

This is why I always tell you people that it ain't over till it's over: According to my CW moles, bless their hairy little hearts, the odds of Veronica Mars being renewed just went from "so-so" to "pretty good." Suddenly, per my spy, "There's a glimmer of hope." Here's why:

• Since Gilmore Girls is packing it in, the network suddenly has an extra hour of prime real estate available. What are they gonna do, renew 7th Heaven again? (That was a joke, CW. Don't get any ideas.)

• CW prez Dawn Ostroff is said to have responded very favorably to the trailer that series creator Rob Thomas shot for a potential reworking of the show with VM as an FBI agent (think Jodie Foster in Silence of the Lambs, only with way better hair and funnier dialogue). What's more, sources whisper to me that on the strength of that presentation, Thomas and Co. have been asked for more deets of the proposed revamp.

• Big changes are afoot — starting at the very top. "They've talked about a title change," says my spy. (Hey, if the quality remains the same, they can call it Veronica Mars Presents: The Search for the Next Pussycat Doll for all I — and I suspect all of us V fans — care.) Furthermore, there would likely be a major cast shake-up, with Bell the only guaranteed carryover.

So what do you think, people? Isn't VM worth saving, even if it means we'll have to flash-forward through her remaining college years? (There are only so many keggers a girl can go to, anyway.) And what about new titles? Do we really want to leave that up to the suits that eighty-sixed Everwood? Methinks now might be a good time to start offering up suggestions.

TVGuide Links:

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