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  • Featured (Page 52)

Transitions and New Beginnings

Posted on May 26, 2013 by Ron Brand in Featured, Game Recaps

contributed by Mr. Happy

Mr. Happy had a very busy week. It started with a trip to watch my oldest son, an Eagle Scout, graduate from high school and receive the highest award that the American Legion gives to a civilian. The award was unexpected, and I was very proud. As he transitions from high school to LSU, I battled with his mother over his move to Baton Rouge. It was strangely comforting that in all of the swirls of change in my life that I continue to battle with my ex-wife.

Then I made a trip to Boston to make a speech and make a trek to Fenway Park to catch Tito’s successful and triumphant 12-3 return to Boston. Speeches are nothing new for me, but putting a different company name on the slide that states where I work and what I do was new. As some of you know, I had a very long stretch of no full-time employment, all self-inflicted. I’ve only been off of work for ten days, and I’m already getting antsy to go back to work at my new job in Toledo OH.

Today, I got my rental truck and packed it myself (with a little help from a great soul this morning), and then I had them hook up my car for me to tow the car to Toledo. According to AAA, I’ll be travelling over 1,835 miles over the next few days. But another new life awaits me in Toledo, and I’m excited about it. I’m elated about being closer to family and close to a major airport so that I can get back to Louisiana to see my boys more often.

Tonight’s game was about transitions too. Matt Dominguez and Jason Castro are showing signs of turning the corner as big league ballplayers, each homering twice. However, the Astros are still in a transition themselves back to big league form. And tonight it was just a case of not enough hitting or pitching. BP gets an honorable mention for his gutty long relief stint after Lucas Harrell failed to finish the second frame.

Just when Harrell shows signs of turning the corner, as he did in his last outing against the Pirates, he regresses and takes two steps back, as he did tonight. I really like Harrell, but I’m beginning to think that I was oversold on his grit and fast work ethic. Conceptually, he’s got what it takes to be very successful: a great moving 92-94 two-seamer ground ball machine. However, he battles command issues, and it has plagued him this season.

5:6

Posted on May 25, 2013 by Ron Brand in Featured, Game Recaps

contributed by NeilT

I love the As. I love their Southern Baptist feel, the green and the gold and the white shoes. I love that they came from the same town as the Black Panthers, and that their stadium from a distance looks like a large pile. Most of all I love their manager, Mr. Bean. No one has done more to define baseball in the modern era. Plus he invented Tupperware.

Certainly our recent Astros owe Mr. Bean a debt of gratitude. Obviously he has been a great influence.

You people don’t properly appreciate that I myself am a statistics god, and since I was at tonight’s game, I thought, in honor of Mr. Bean, I’d share my running statistical analysis of the game with you.

We got there fashionably late, and already the statistics were a’flowing. This is not obvious to everyone, but the most important metric in baseball—often called The Ratio—is runs scored to runs allowed. When we came into the game in the middle of the 1st, that ratio was already 0:2. Now I personally think that expression of The Ratio is rather simplistic, and prefer (along with others who think deeply about the game) to modify the expression to better reflect the meaning of the raw numbers. Some like to use a multiplier–5 is common–to give the ratio greater transparency. In that expression The Ratio would have been 0:10. I prefer to take the innings of the game into account, and use a first inning multiplier of 1/9. Thus, in the first inning The Ratio was 0:.222. Obviously, this better reflects the state of the game.

I was trying to figure out why Robbie Grossman was the lead-off batter. For this I looked to his batting average, .208, which was the closest on the team to a pure .200. He struck out looking at his first at-bat, but here’s where the statistician has baseball knowledge that the casual fan might not: I know that the lower one’s number in the batting order, the better opportunity one has to have more at bats. This is an inverse relationship. Robbie Grossman is hitting almost exactly one hit every five at bats, and by placing him first in the order, the Astros have guaranteed that he will be very likely to have one hit per game.

Three up, three down for the Astros at the bottom of the first. Grossman would have to wait for his hit. But now Bedard was back to give our hitters a much-needed break.

But Bedard failed. Three up, three down. Now our batters would be back to the plate too quickly. Baseball managers like to see pitchers average about 15 pitches per inning. This is to rest the batters. Corporan hit a double in the bottom of the 2nd, and you could see him huffing and puffing as he labored down the line. Too little rest. Fortunately his teammates came to his rescue and gave him a nice long rest at second.

On the other hand, the bottom of the third was a real success for Bedard. It is a little known statistical fact—not opinion—that balls thrown and strikes thrown equals pitches thrown. Bedard started too fast, with Donaldson flying out to center on the first pitch, but after a deep calming breath he walked the next two batters. Brandon Barnes then fouled up his rhythm with an assist on a put-out at third on a long Montz flyball to center.

For The Ratio, it was now 0:.444.

Bottom of the second, three up, three down. Minard was not taking care of his batters. Bedard, on the other hand, was balancing balls to strikes almost perfectly. On 81 pitches, his balls to strikes were 39:42, almost a perfect 1:1. By the bottom of the 4th, Bedard had thrown 92 pitches. These batters were going to be rested! Compare those 92 to Milone’s measly 44 at the end of the 4th. Clearly this evening Bedard was the better pitcher, having gained far more experience throwing pitches.

At the end of the 4th, the ratio was 0:.888.

Matt Dominguez hit a 2-out homer to the Crawford Boxes at the bottom of the 5th. Cedeno followed up with a Texas Leaguer single. Grossman singled to the ferret, and that’s fact, not opinion. Altuve hit an RBI single. The Ratio was now 2:2, or 1:1, or 10:10, or as best expressed, .933:.933. Tie game!

Then J.D., plenty rested from Bedard’s brilliant performance pitching, hit a three-run homer. We’re in the American League, Baybee! 25:10!

Top of the 6th, Smith home run off of Clemens. Damn. 2.888:1.733.

In the 7th, it was Cedeno and then Grossman. Since Grossman had already had his hit he flew out to right. Altuve was robbed on a great catch of a hard liner to third. 3.888:2.333.

Clemens did a great job through the 8th, though he could have been more thoughtful to his batters. Wright came in after the first out in the 8th. Did you know that 92.973% of the time a left-handed pitcher comes in mid-inning late in a game it’s to face a left-handed batter? Who knew? You’d think the left-handed batters would adjust, but they don’t. Smith struck out looking and Moss grounded out softly to second.

You know the very worst statistic in baseball, the one that most breaks your heart? It’s blown saves. I saw one tonight. It broke my heart. Again.

5:6.

In Dreams I Walk With You – Oakland Athletics at Houston Astros

Posted on May 24, 2013 by Ron Brand in Featured, Series Previews

Dreams are given to you when you’re young enough to dream them
before they can do you any harm.
They don’t start to hurt until you try to hold on to them after seeing how they really are.

“That’s a human ear all right.”

I used to think that dreams were for the young. I had to live longer to figure out that wasn’t true.

“Can I come over?” The divorce was final, pending my signature, but this wasn’t about signing papers, this was about Alicia.

Landfall was almost to the day on what would’ve been our third anniversary. Uneasy about sitting through this one alone, she gave me a call. Still in the daze of the blindside I’d refused to see and delusional enough to believe there was still a chance of reconciliation, I agreed. Sure. Come on over. We’ll ride it out together, because that’s what was meant to be.

20 was too young to get married, way too damn young. Everyone had told me so but I was always different, always moving faster than everybody I knew. Hell, they’d been wrong about everything else – no reason to think they’d suddenly smartened up now.

I thought they were jealous. I didn’t know they were speaking from pain.

Maybe it’s normal to spend a period of time after a divorce fumbling for what used to be there, like a limb that has been sawed off. I guess we were still trying to walk on that leg or scratch the itch on that arm we used to have, going through the motions of some kind of muscle memory until our brains caught up to the reality.

Our time together during this period was a weird, gauzy approximation of the past. We’d spend time with each other, watch TV, eat, laugh, sometimes sleep together and punctuate it all with shots that hit like blanks. We’d make remarks about this or that, sharp remarks designed to cut but really only bleeding off from the full reservoir of pain. It was like the viciousness had the consistency of steam and we were somehow removed from it, living in a dream.

It’s only right that you should play the way you feel it
But listen carefully to the sound of your loneliness
Like a heartbeat, drives you mad
In the stillness of remembering
What you had, And what you lost
And what you had, And what you lost

“Hey you wanna go for a ride?”

My memories of the A’s started sometime in the mid-60’s. Crummy teams, constant farm team for the Yankees, but their cards were always cool. That green and gold looked really sharp against the grass, and they had these interesting players too. Jim Nash, 12-1 that one year. Jim Hunter. Dagoberto Campaneris, who had like nine names on the back of his card, one for each of the positions he played one year. Blue Moon Odom. And they had those dangerous white shoes, back when white shoes were Striking A Blow Against The Man, a season before you could buy them in every sporting goods store. When I wore my white cleats and jacked my stirrups as far up as they’d go, I knew I was a full-on Outlaw.

They carried this outlaw image into California and the 70s, when they started to win World Series and flaunt their long hair and mustaches. I dug the A’s, they always seemed cool and flashy and full of summer.

Somewhere in there, after baseball woke up to greet the dawn of Free Agency, reality started to slap Oakland’s team hard. They were never, ever going to be able to compete with the big boys on a cash basis, so they had to try to be smarter. This isn’t a new development – hell, the Mahatma got called a genius for it 40 years before – but slapping a catchy name on it and making it a Movement was as fresh as white shoes used to be. This is where the road Oakland has taken begins to converge with the road the Astros are mapping out.

“You put your disease in me. It helps me. It makes me strong.”

Our lives continued to intertwine in an unnatural way after the breakup. I spent six months trying to fight it, but when every road was a road we’d been on, every place I went was someplace I’d been with her and I started to see her face in shadows I knew I had to leave. I moved back to where I’d come from and started to build new dreams on top of the old ones. In three months, she’d moved back too, in an apartment a mile away. Took a part-time job where we used to work, where I still had friends but now couldn’t go back to. She’d call me to tell me about something of mine she’d come across and how should she get it to me? I think every turn of the knife was an unconscious twitch, but they damn sure hurt as if they’d been intentional.

It took years before I stopped hurting myself and everyone around me. It was several years after that before I was rational about the whole thing and could see beyond a field of blood, lies and hurt. There’s a point where dreams become cruel teases of your own failure, and if you can’t replace them with new dreams the fire is going to burn until there is nothing left.

Friday, May 24, 7:10 PM CDT, Minute Maid Park
Tommy Milone, LHP (4-5, 3.47) vs. Erik Bedard, LHP (0-2, 6.00)

Saturday, May 25, 6:15 PM CDT, Minute Maid Park
A.J. Griffin, RHP (4-3, 3.59) vs. Lucas Harrell, RHP (3-5, 4.63)

Sunday, May 26, 1:10 PM CDT, Minute Maid Park
Bartolo Colon, RHP (4-2, 4.31) vs. Dallas Keuchel, LHP (1-1, 4.93)

We’re well acquainted with the dream of the Astros, the plan to emerge from the nuclear winter and climb back to where they were before. It’s too early to judge anything other than their resolve, which seems strong and committed. Only the fans who pay the closest attention can see the infrequent glints – better infield defense, Dominguez thrilling us with plays the same way we used to marvel at Michael Bourn, the continued development of Jose Altuve. They’re trying to build a future, one dream at a time. Maybe if we all click our heels together at the same time, it’ll happen.

A candy-colored clown they call the sandman
Tiptoes to my room every night
Just to sprinkle stardust and to whisper:
“Go to sleep, everything is alright”

“Suave! Goddamn, you’re one suave fucker!”

In the last couple of weeks I’ve climbed into something like a dream myself. I’ve reconnected with some old friends who are trying to drag an old ship back out on the seas, and through luck and happenstance I’m pulling too. It’s been a long time since I worked the road, shows with a band and now I’m in the middle of an escapade with a gang of pirates I truly love. I’ve joked that it’s a little like time travel, slipping into a skin I wore when I was much younger, playing that old game and seeing that only some of the rules have changed. Family and friends have been supportive of me while I take a break from my life for this. I didn’t look at it as recapturing some things I’d lost touch with but in the end there is a sense of redemption and resurrection and rededication about it all. I’m charging some batteries and at the same time making friends of heroes.

I’m finding out that it’s ok to have dreams again. Sometimes they do come true.

Thunder only happens when it’s raining
Players only love you when they’re playing
They say, women, they will come and they will go
When the rain washes you clean, you’ll know
You’ll know

Astros Are A Royal Foil

Posted on May 23, 2013 by Ron Brand in Featured, Game Recaps

Astros bounce Royals in rubber game 3-2

W: Lyles (2-1)
L: Shields (2-5)
SV: Veras (8)

contributed by Sphinx Drummond

Wednesdays are good to the Astros. The team’s record for Wednesdays improved to 5 wins against 3 losses. If they played all their games on Wednesdays the Astros would finish the season with a 101-61 won-loss record and probably win their division. It wouldn’t make a lot of sense though, because unless they played a lot of double headers, the season would last a little over three years. It would never happen, not with a traditionalist like Bud Selig running the show. We all know how Selig values history and tradition, he’d never go for a Wednesdays only schedule and certainly not if it would be an advantage for the Astros. FYB.

J. D. Martinez’s two run jack in the first turned out to be enough as Jordan Lyles was solid in his 6 innings of work, allowing only one run on 6 hits while walking one and striking out three. It was a rare good night for the bullpen, allowing no runs, with Travis Blackley, Hector Ambriz, and Jose Veras each working a scoreless inning.

The Astros added an insurance run in the eighth, the run was charged to Royal pitcher James Shields. Shields, who didn’t pitch a bad game, is having a hard luck season so far falling to 2-5 though boasting an ERA of 2.47. The Royals join the fallen Angels and the slimy Mariners (twice) as the only teams to lose a series against the Astros.

When he was signed to be a closer, Jose Veras was a big concern for a lot of Astros fans. He had 5 saves in 17 opportunities prior to this season. When he stared this season by blowing two of his first three opportunities, it was ugly. But he has really bounced back well since, saving seven in a row including Wednesday’s game. He might not be so bad after all.

The Astros have an off day Thursday and then welcome the the Oakland Athletics in to Minute Maid Park for a three game series this weekend.

A Very Nice 2/3 Of a Game

Posted on May 21, 2013 by Ron Brand in Featured, Game Recaps

Royals 7, Astros 3

W: Chen
L: Clemens

Contributed by Reuben

Home Bud was back.
Paredes broke out the big bat.
And the defense was spot on.

Then Bud’s back came back.
Porter broke out the bullpen.
And the defense was spotty.

The Gamezone thread details the horrors, and educates you about Australian sports.

NUMBER 9, NUMBER 9, NUMBER 9, NUMBER 9 …

Posted on May 20, 2013 by Dark Star in Featured, News, Series Previews

May 20-22, 2013

Kansas City Royals (20-20) vs. Houston Astros (12-32)

Minute Maid Park
501 Crawford
Houston, TX  77002

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SCHEDULE
• Monday May 20, 2013 — 7:10 p.m. CDT
• Tuesday May 21, 2013 — 7:10 p.m. CDT
• Wednesday May 22, 2013 — 7:10 p.m. CDT

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TURN ME ON, DEAD MAN

I reached over and flipped up the hinged cover on the console, and felt around for the Ziploc bag full of blue-and-clears. I was trying to find it entirely by feel, so as not to take my eyes off of the road. At the time, I was doing 85 miles an hour or so, down some two-lane Chambers County farm-to-market road; in my Camaro, in the dark, and I was severely fucked up, too. So keeping a close eye on the road was beyond imperative. My plan was to pop a couple of blue-and-clear capsules, hoping a jolt of amphetamines might lend some clarity to my situation.

We were headed for the beach, kind of. At three o’clock in the morning, in mid-December.  It was 35 degrees outside, I had three drunk-ass girls with me, and the car had just done a complete three hundred and sixty degree flip, in mid-drive.

Well, that is what it seemed like.

I had been sound asleep at the townhouse – passed out, actually – after a long, wild party to celebrate the end of the fall semester, my first semester at college. I was sharing a townhouse with a friend of mine who had a scholarship to play tennis. It was a pretty nice setup – two bedrooms upstairs, and living area downstairs. Immediately after we’d rented it, we installed an electric keg refigerator in the kitchen, and a local beer distributorship came by once a week and switched out kegs for us. We kept frosted mugs in the freezer in the kitchen, and many of our friends would come in and, before even saying “Hello”, would grab a frosted mug out of the fridge and draw themselves a cold one out of the keg. It was a natural act, like hanging up one’s overcoat.

Then there’s this Welsh rabbit wearing some brown underpants
About the shortage of grain in Hertfordshire
Everyone of them knew that as time went by
They’d get a little bit older and a little bit slower but

My roomie and I were eighteen years old, and the first in our crowd to have a place of our own. So whether we wanted it to be, or not, our townhouse was de facto Party Central for all the other kids in our social group.

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PITCHING MATCHUPS
Monday May, 2013 — 7:10 p.m. CDT
KANSAS CITY – Jeremy Guthrie, RHP (5-1, 2.82)
HOUSTON – Dallas Keuchel, LHP (0-1, 4.82)
 

Tuesday May 21, 2013 — 7:10 p.m. CDT
KANSAS CITY – Wade Davis, RHP (3-3, 5.98)
HOUSTON – Bud Norris, RHP (4-4, 4.32)
 

Wednesday May 22, 2013 — 7:10 p.m. CDT
KANSAS CITY – “Big Game” James Shields, RHP (2-4, 2.45)
HOUSTON – Jordan Lyles, RHP (1-1, 6.63)

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“I fuck you with my hand, yes?  It’s nice.”

I rolled around in bed last night, with that quote repeating itself in my head, for quite awhile.  I was restless, and I kept thinking about the first time I’d heard it, back when I was in college.  It was delivered to my friend Brian by a member of the womens swim team, an Eastern European girl who was no doubt female, but not necessarily obviously so.  She had shoulders broader than mine, for one thing, and a deeper voice.  Steroids.  When she pushed herself in next to me and Dirt (Brian’s universal nickname) one night at the bar in the Cactus Lounge over on Park Street, and bought us a pitcher of Michelob, and told us of her plans to take one of us home with her that night, I cannot say how Dirt felt about it, initially.  Me? I felt all weird inside.  Another friend, sitting on the far side of Brian, overheard all this and told us we’d better get the hell out of there, right away.

“She’ll grind your dick to dust,” he said.  I didn’t have any doubt about that.

It’s all the same thing
In this case manufactured by someone who’s always/umpteen
Your father’s giving it diddly-dee
District was leaving, intended to die
Ottoman Long gone through I’ve got to say, irritably and

Floors, hard enough to put on, per day’s
MD in our district
There was not really enough light to get down
And ultimately slumped down Suddenly …

I was compelled to flee, and Brian may have been, as well; but he was hindered by a couple of factors.  One, he had been in that establishment for most of the night, drinking and commiserating with college friends, and his usually cat-like flight-or-fight reflexes more closely resembled those of a banana slug by that hour.  Also, the thought of being raped by a girl who physically intimidated him was, he told me later … in a weird way, it was kind of, well, thought-provoking.  Also, this girl, and a friend of hers, had us bracketed.  The girl had put her arm around Dirt’s midsection and was squeezing him pretty hard, it looked like.  I could feel my back begin to be rubbed by the swimmer’s equally physically intimidating friend. By then, the friend was leaned into my back hard enough that I had to make a bit of an effort to avoid being shoved face down into my pitcher of Michelob Light.  If I was going to get away from her, it had to be right away.

So I did a quick spin and pivot at the bar. I feinted my left shoulder toward the swimmer’s friend, then cut to the right, leaving her with an armful of nothing. That was a move I had perfected as a left halfback in the Wishbone offense in high school. Even after my hit-and-miss football career ended, I always felt like that feint move might come in handy again, somewhere down the line.

I had evaded the swimmer’s friend. Now all that was left to do was run down the right sideline (actually a shuffleboard table), cut left to avoid one last defender (a wall), and then paydirt (the exit door of the bar.)

I’d barely made it out, once again.  But I had.  Brian/Dirt was not so lucky, I am afraid. I heard later the two East German swimming buddies bought him several more drinks, until he was basically non-ambulatory. Then they picked him up – literally. The last anyone saw of him that night, he was being carried out of the bar.

I asked him later what had happened to him that night, after the Cactus Lounge.  He said that it was unspeakable. And I guess it was, because he never did tell me. It was left to me to imagine it.

So there I was 30 years later, lying wide-awake in bed one night, thinking about those swimmer (sort of) chicks, and my poor friend Dirt Dauber.

I don’t remember most of what I learned in college, but I damn sure remember that night. I’ll bet, as much as he has probably tried to forget it, Dirt does, too.

Who’s to know?
Who wants to know?

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People ride, people ride Ride, ride, ride, ride, ride
Number 9, number 9, number 9, number 9
Ride! Ride! Ride! Ride! Ride!

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I read the news today, oh boy
A burnt-out sportswriter with an axe to grind
And though his paper’s on the skids
He thought we’d give a shit
Some people just don’t get it

He said the lineup is subpar
He doesn’t like the makeup of the pitching staff
The team’s GM doesn’t have a clue
But we’ve read this shit before
Nobody’s really sure
If the owner is a weirdo or just isn’t pure

I heard a show today, oh boy
Some Midday Mongoloids were ranting on
A crowd of people called in to say
Just what was on their minds
What a fucking waste of time

I’d love to tuu-uurn yooooou ooffff. . .

… it was located on ______ Ave. near the college, across the street and tracks and down to the southwest a bit from the Cactus Lounge. It is hard to remember where exactly, but it was generally in the area of the Tex-Joy warehouse, the old 7-Up bottling plant, and the old Sunbeam bakery.

In contrast to the Cactus, which was cramped and crowded and sort of reminded one of being in a somebody’s backyard storage shed, ———-’s was like a large open barn. The was a bar all along the north wall, an open area/dance floor in the middle, and restrooms at the back. The décor was sparse, and women scarce (I don’t believe I ever saw anyone actually dance in there.) To tell the truth, it was kind of a biker bar.

I can say with some confidence I never set foot in the place myself with a blood-alcohol content of less than .15, or before about 12:30 A.M. …

Call him Joba Chamberlain
He won’t answer you again
Not the washed-up Yankee starter
Who’s been demoted to the ‘pen

Gather ‘round me people there’s a story I would tell
About a youngster from Nebraska you might remember well
From the land of the corn-husker
A proud but boring state
Who went off to New York City to pursue his fate

He was pitching for his college when he got the news
The New York Yankees had chose him in the draft
Well, the first thing you know, Joba was a millionaire
But he was headed for the minors to work on his craft

Now, Joba’s momma was a drug-head
And his daddy’d never been around
So when the Yankees called, Joba just said, “Yes”
He’d pitch anywhere they had a mound

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Rogue doctors have brought this specimen
I have nobody’s short-cuts, aha
With the situation
They are standing still

The plan, the telegram
Number 9, number …

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Woke up, fell out of bed,
Brushed my teeth and took my meds
Got online and checked the schedule out
At home vs. the Royals in the middle of May

Downed a fifth of Tangueray
That’s my breakfast nowadays
Found my way downtown to the Minute Maid Park
Bought a ticket and a program and I passed out into a dream

Aaaaah –aaaaah-aaaah-aaaah …

***************

Discovery Channels Launches A Line Of Alcoholic Beverages

•Alien Ale™ – Brewed in the Nevada desert, glowing reviews attribute this fine ale with an out of this world taste.

•Bermuda Triangle Rum™ – Produced on Walker’s Cay in the Abacos Islands, Bahamas, this tasteful rum possesses a kick that will cause your interior navigational instruments to malfunction; drink enough of it, and you might even disappear entirely, at least for awhile.

•Bigfoot Beer™ – Brewed in the American Northwest, the heart of Bigfoot country, and filtered through. . . well, you don’t want to know what it is filtered through.

•Chupacabra Tequila™ – A cheap mescal made from surplus maguey cactus plants, and distilled at a refinery outside of El Paso, Texas; drink enough of this “tequila”, and you will believe in the legendary Mexican goat-sucker, and just about anything else anyone tells you.

•Mothman Moonshine™ – A rough tasting “white lightning”, 190 proof and distilled in a hollow somewhere in the Appalachian Mountains (we cannot divulge the exact location, for legal reasons), this stuff may not be the smoothest to cross the palate, but it does the trick. . . in addition to causing visions of a giant moth with red eyes, it will assuage the pain of living in a crappy house trailer in West Virginia somewhere, sans teeth.

•Tunguska Vodka™ – Distilled in the legendary Tunguska region of Siberia, where the alien spaceship crashed in 1908; this vodka will not only give you an inner glow, but will also set off any Geiger counter in the vicinity, a sure indicator of a quality spirit.

***************

I saw the game today, oh boy
Two runs and four hits off Jer-em-ee Guth-three
And though the score was rather small
The Astros scored them all
Now we know how many runs it takes to make Guthrie scream and punch a fucking wall

 I’d love to tuu-uurn yooooou ooffff. . .

***************

One recent morning, I was attempting to get my slug-a-bed child up and ready for school. I tried gently at first, then more firmly. But nothing was working. So next, without thinking, I stood in the hallway in my briefs and started singing “Figaro” at the top of my lungs. That got him up. Hell, I’ll bet the neighbors could hear it.

I was pretty satisfied with myself. Hey, whatever works, right? Then all of the sudden I realized what. . . oh, goddamn it! Son of a BITCH.

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The ancients adorned their sarcophagi with the emblems of life and procreation, and even with obscene symbols; in the religions of antiquity the sacred and the obscene often lay very close together. These men knew how to pay homage to death. For death is worthy of homage as the cradle of life, as the womb of palingenesis.

Dark star crashes
Pouring its light into ashes
Reason tatters
The forces tear loose from the axis

Searchlight casting
For faults in the clouds of delusion

Shall we go, you and I
While we can?
Through the transitive nightfall
Of diamonds

Mirror shatters
In formless reflections of matter
Glass hand dissolving
To ice petal flowers revolving

Lady in velvet recedes
In the nights of goodbye

Shall we go, you and I
While we can?
Through the transitive nightfall
Of diamonds

Spinning a set the stars
Through which the tattered tales of axis
Roll about the waxen wind of never
Set to motion in the unbecoming roundabout
The reason hardly matters
Nor the wise through which the stars
Were set in spin

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Astros lose the series, 0-3.

Love stands opposed to death. It is love, not reason, that is stronger than death. Only love, not reason, gives sweet thoughts. And from love and sweetness alone can form come: form and civilization.  We, when we sow the seeds of doubt deeper than the most up-to-date and modish free-thought has ever dreamed of doing, we well know what we are about. Only out of radical skepsis, out of moral chaos, can the Absolute spring, the anointed Terror of which the time has need. The body, love, death, these three are just one. For the body, this is the disease and exquisite delight, and this that does die, yes, they are carnal both of them, love and death, and thus their terror and their great magic!

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Dear Mr. TZ dweller, will you read my post?
It took me four minutes to write, maybe five at the most
It’s based on a preview by a man named Raup
And I want the fame, so I want to be a game recap writer,
Game recap writer.

It’s the sorry story of a sorry team
And the bandwagon fans don’t know what it means.
I don’t want to a column like Noe or Zipp,
They have the glamour jobs but I’d rather be a game recap writer,
Game recap writer.

Game recap writer (game recap writer)

It’s fourteen lines, give or take a few,
I can write another in a day or two.
I can make it longer if you want to pay,
I can change it ’round and I want to be a game recap writer,
Game recap writer.

If you really like it, how I turn a phrase,
You know, like “Fuck the Cubs”, or maybe “Sting the Rays”.
You can move me up to doing series previews
But for now I’ll be your game recap writer,
Game recap writer.

Game recap writer
Game recap writer …

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It’s alright, it’s alright, it’s alright
It’s alright, it’s alright, it’s alright

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