As May comes to a close and 2011 continues to speed ahead at a record pace (this year is flying by), it's time to check in on the best pop culture that I consumed in the past 31 days.
Best TV Show I watched- The two part season finale of the Thursday night NBC show Community (5/5 and 5/12). I’ve probably said this about 5-6 different shows, but this might be the most underrated show on TV. It’s certainly the most unique. What I love about Community is that it’s the opposite of your typical comedy/sitcom. There is no formula that each episode generally follows. Community tries new things virtually every episode. It's completely unconventional. Sometimes they fall flat on their faces (the clamation Christmas episode), but other times they hit the ball out of the park and that’s what they did with this two part finale. Of all the shows that just had their finales Community’s was far and away the best.
I also enjoyed- The Tosh.O season premiere (5/17). I’ve definitely said this about 5-6 shows, but this time I really mean it. Tosh.O is the funniest show on TV. Sure there are a few lackluster shows every now and then, but most of the time it’s a non stop laughfest. In this episode Tosh showed a video where a shark farts a green gas, got punched in the face by Manny Pacquiao, and gave the "Chocolate Rain" guy Tay Zonday a web redemption.
Best Movie I saw- I watched about 5-6 movies this month and none of them were that great. I guess the one that I enjoyed the most was Client 9: The Rise and Fall of Eliot Spitzer. Did you know the high priced escort that used this scandal to become quasi famous by posing for Playboy, Ashley Dupre, only had sex with Spitzer once?
There was a different call girl from the same company who was the former governor’s favorite. Apparently she now works in finance. Dupre, on the other hand, is now a sex columnist for the New York Post.
I didn’t go for- Never Let Me Go, which stars Carey Mulligan and my girl Keira Knightley, is based on a novel written by the famous Japanese-English author Kazuo Ishiguro (he also wrote The Remains of the Day which was adapted into an Academy Award nominated film) so I thought it would be good, but it was terrible. Seriously, don't waste your time.
Best Thing I heard- The crowd at Citizen’s Bank Park chanting U-S-A after they found out that Bin Laden had been killed. Phillie fans are often regarded as the worst in sports, but boy were they the best on Sunday, May 1st. I understand the counter argument where some people think that it was a little weird that we celebrated death, but the way that this chant started is just awesome. It wasn’t like the news of Bin Laden's death was flashed on the scoreboard. People just found out by checking their phones and telling the people around them. Then the crowd erupted into jubilant U-S-A chants that seemed to last for an hour. The best part is that the players didn’t even know what they were chanting for until someone in the dugout went into the clubhouse and turned on a TV.
Best Thing I read- I haven’t read any good books this month, so I will take this opportunity to point you in the direction of a website that was recommended to me earlier this month. It is called Bros Like This Site and it’s about 5 notches above me in terms of egomaniacal, misogynistic humor.
I want to read- The two person book club that I’m in with my buddy Kyle Korver decided on the following two books without as much as a discussion about it. We just happened to buy the same two books on our own volition.
1.) Those Guys Have All the Fun by James Andrew Miller
This book provides a look inside the world of ESPN. Apparently it’s a PR nightmare for ESPN because it has an assortment of embarrassing stories and rumors about ESPN personalities.
2.) The Captain by Ian O'Connor
I have long been a Yankee hater, but I’ve always respected Derek Jeter. In fact I dedicated an entire blog post to him back in January 2010. I think he’s a fascinating figure and I’m interested to a get a behind the scenes look at the face of the most successful franchise in sports.
Tuesday, May 31, 2011
Tuesday, May 24, 2011
Hypothetical Interrogatives
As I recently perused the Cultural Studies section at my local Barnes & Noble (I go there quite a bit), I stumbled across what looked like a book on tape by my man Chuck Klosterman. As I took it off the shelf I realized that it was actually a deck of 50 cards each with a Klosterman hypothetical question on it.
After I enjoyed the hypotheticals that he posed in his book "Chuck Klosterman IV" I had to buy it. Unfortunately many of the hypotheticals from the book were included in the deck of 50 cards, but there were still plenty of intriguing questions raised.
I particularly enjoyed the preamble:
"Some people are extremely good at making small talk. These people are better known as “idiots.” These are the kind of humans who can talk to a stranger for 40 minutes without learning anything essential about who that stranger is−they talk about the weather and about other people, and they mention what kind of car they drive and how old their children are. They have conversations in public that are ultimately no different than silence in an empty room.
I refuse to be that kind of person.
I refuse to make small talk. I refuse. I don’t care what the situation is or what the protocol is supposed to be: I see no value in asking someone a friendly, nonadversarial question if neither party cares what the answer is. Instead, I prefer to ask questions where the solution is irrelevant−I pose hypothetical questions where how one answers the query matters far more than the literal conclusion. There is no “right” answer to these kinds of questions. The end never matters; what matters is how you get to the end. What matters is how you think, not what you think.
If these questions seem absurd or boorish or juvenile−that’s totally fine. Don’t read them and don’t answer them. We don’t need to be friends. We are not the same. But if you want to find out who other people really are, these are the conversations you need to have. And you need to have them now."
As loyal Shampoo Effect readers will remember I, too, am annoyed by the mundane daily conversations about the weather, etc.
March 2009
As intrigued as I am by Klosterman's refusal to make small talk I don't think I am currently able to weave his hypotheticals into daily conversations, although I would certainly like to be.
Here are a few of Klosterman's hypotheticals that I found particularly interesting:
1.) Imagine the following three sensations.
-Chewing and swallowing the first mouthful of your favorite food after starving yourself for 48 straight hours. The food is prepared perfectly.
-Lying down on an especially cozy bed after 12 hours of nonstop physical labor on a cold day.
-The first moment of urinary release after having held a completely full bladder for more than 90 minutes.
For the rest of your life, you will feel one of these three ways, all the time. This is how you will always feel, 24 hours a day (you won’t be doing the specific activity, but you’ll always be experiencing the act’s accompanying euphoria).
Which one will you select?
My answer: While all three are incredible feelings I think I would choose the feeling of lying down on an especially cozy bed after 12 hours of nonstop physical labor on a cold day because I would want to live the rest of my life with that sense of relaxation running through my body. Quite frankly I don't think the other two translate nearly as well to daily life. They are more momentary senses of elation whereas the calm, comfortable feeling of lying on a cozy bed is applicable in real world scenarios.
2.) Defying all expectation, a group of Scottish marine biologists capture a live Loch Ness Monster. In an almost unbelievable coincidence, a bear hunter in the Pacific Northwest shoots a Sasquatch in the thigh, thereby allowing zoologists to take the furry monster into captivity. These events happen on the same afternoon. That evening, the President announces that he may have thyroid cancer and will undergo a biopsy later that week.
You are the front-page editor of the New York Times: What do you run as the biggest story?
My answer: My natural inclination, as a politics minor (no big deal), is that the story about the President is the most newsworthy and the most recent, but it definitely wouldn't be my choice. That's a developing story. Catching Bigfoot and Nessy is a one time thing (although details will obviously continue to come out as scientists do their thing). This decision would ultimately come down to which picture/headline combination was the best. I mean, I don't want to cop out and say that I'd put the pictures of the two beasts side by side and write a dual headline ("Captivating!", "Believe It Or Not!", or "Monster Catches"), even though that's what would make the most sense.
That said I'd go with Bigfoot because it happened in North America and our country has always been a little more fascinated with him than Nessy.
3.) You are presented with a strange challenge. Someone dares you to count backward from 300 to 0. If you succeed at this simple request, you will be given $25,000 in cash. However, if you misspeak, get any digit incorrect, or make any mistake whatsoever, you will immediately be doused with gasoline and burned alive.
Do you attempt this challenge?
My answer: NO WAY. I like my chances (I'd go real slow), but I think the pressure would get to me and I would stumble and burn alive. In a semi-related note, I often marvel at the ability of college basketball players to make clutch free throws late in games. I always say that I would either shoot the ball either 6 feet in front of me or into the 3rd row.
4.) Imagine your dream house (whatever that house may be.) Think of all the details you would like this home to possess, including furniture. You are suddenly given the opportunity to trade wherever you live now for this hypothetical home, and your mortgage will be whatever you currently pay now. The home will be in (roughly) the same location as your current residence. However, there is one odd caveat.
This “dream home” is buried two miles underground. When you look out of the windows all you will see is dirt. In order to enter the residence, you will have to take an elevator that travels down the two-mile shaft at high speed (it’s about a five-minute trip). The elevator is comfortable and there is a staff (located aboveground) that provides 24/7 maintenance on the elevator−if something breaks or goes wrong with the elevator, you will be rescued immediately.
Would you accept this underground dream home?
My answer: Yes, as long as the head of the elevator workers is named Alfred.
5.) You meet a wizard in downtown Chicago. The wizard tells you he can make you more attractive if you pay him money. When you ask how this process works, the wizard points to a random person on the street. You look at this random stranger. The wizard says, “I will now make them a dollar more attractive.” He waves his magic wand. Ostensibly, this person does not change at all; as far as you can tell, nothing is different. But−somehow−this person is suddenly a little more appealing. The tangible difference is invisible to the naked eye, but you can’t deny that this person is vaguely sexier. This wizard has a weird rule, though−you can only pay him once. You can’t keep giving him money until you’re satisfied. You can only pay him one lump sum up front.
How much cash do you give the wizard?
My answer: This one is tricky because you don't want to push the envelope too far and have everyone that you know suspect that you went Heidi Montag on them (although I wouldn't say that she looks better than she did). I've gone back and forth on this (between $20 and $200), but if $1 made this random person vaguely sexier than I think $50 would work wonders.
6.) At long last, someone invents “the dream VCR.” This machine allows you to tape an entire evening’s worth of your own dreams, which you can then watch at your leisure. However, the inventor of the dream VCR will only allow you to use this device if you agree to a strange caveat. When you watch your dreams, you must do so with your family and your closest friends in the same room. They get to watch your dreams along with you. And if you don’t agree to this, you can’t use the dream VCR.
Would you still do this?
My answer: Yes, as long as I didn't wake up with wet sheets. I don't have too much to hide.
7.) For whatever reason, two unauthorized movies are made about your life. The first is an independently released documentary, primarily comprised of interviews with people who know you and bootleg footage from your actual life. Critics are describing the documentary as “brutally honest and relentlessly fair.” Meanwhile Columbia TriStar has produced a big budget biopic of your life, casting major Hollywood stars as you and all of your acquaintances; though the movie is based on actual events, screenwriters have taken some liberties with the facts. Critics are split on the artistic merits of this fictionalized account, but audiences love it.
Which film would you be more interested in seeing?
My answer: I'd be much more interested in seeing the Columbia TriStar biopic. The documentary would be cool too, but I'd be more intrigued by the writing, liberties taken, and Hollywood actors playing my friends and family than by what people I know said about me on camera.
This does raise an interesting question that I often ask people to spice up conversations. If there was a movie based on your life, which actor/actress would you want to play you?
Here's a quick look at what the cast of my biopic might look like if I was the casting director:
The Stanman- obviously a cross between Denzel Washington and Leonardo DiCaprio. No, seriously Edward Norton. Actually he’s too old. What about Zach Gilford ? Probably too good looking, but we’re trying to sell some tickets, so let’s do it.
My unnamed cousin- Freddie Stroma (I’ve never heard of him until I just searched for young actors, but he’s got the look)
My buddy Kyle Korver- Taylor Lautner (the kid from Twilight)
My buddy Glancy- Phillip Seymour Hoffman
My buddy Max- Michael Pena
My buddy RJ- Shia LaBeouf
My buddy Hermo- Seth Rogan
My buddy Browny- Adam Brody
Female love interest #1- Aimee Teegarden
Female love interest #2- Minka Kelly
Female love interest #3- Keira Knightley
My dad- Jimmy Buffet (I don't know if he's an actor, but I do know that he's not only written a few songs, but also a few books)
My mom- Frances McDormand
My brother Mike- Jon Favreau
My brother Pat- Robert Downey, Jr.
My brother Jimmy- Ben Stiller
My twin sisters Maura and Elizabeth- Mary Kate and Ashley Olsen
8.) Think of a friend of yours−not your best friend, but someone who is (a) more than an acquaintance and (b) physically attractive. One day, while trolling the Internet, you accidentally come across three nude photographs of this person, reclined on a sofa bed. The pictures were clearly taken several years ago, but it’s unclear if the photos were casually posed or taken without the subject’s knowledge (your friend looks comfortable, but he/she is never looking directly into the lens of the camera). The pictures are not labeled, and your friend’s name is not listed anywhere on the site−but you’re certain that this is the same person you know.
What do you do with this information? Do you tell anyone?
My answer: Obviously this depends on whether or not the person is a male or female and on my relationship with that person. If it was a female I would almost definitely (90%) tell plenty of people about the pictures. If it were a male, I'd be very embarassed to have stumbled across the pictures so I the liklihood of me telling people would greatly diminish (45%).
9.) You are kidnapped by a diabolical (but completely honest) madman. He locks you up in an empty attic where the temperature is 100 degrees. Your feet and hands are tied together. There is no food or water. After 24 excruciating hours, the madman opens the attic door and enters with three glasses of ice water on a serving tray. He takes an eyedropper and squirts a colorless, odorless liquid into one of the glasses. “This is poison,” he tells you. He then blindfolds. When he removes the blindfold 30 seconds later, there is a drinking straw in each of the water glasses (but you have no idea which glass contains the poison). “Feel free to have a refreshing sip of water,” he says. “Of course, if you select the glass that contains the poison, you will be dead within ninety minutes. And−just so you know−I promise to release you from this attic…in forty-eight hours.” He then laughs maniacally and exits the attic, locking the door behind him.
What do you do? Do you gamble and drink, or do you try to wait out the madman?
My answer: I think the obvious answer is to try to wait out the madman, but if I were to crack I would drink from a glass in a position where I saw that the madman didn't squirt the poison. By that I mean that if he squirted the poison in the glass that was on the left before I was blindfolded I would drink from the glass that was in the middle or on the right after the blindfold was removed. Basically I wouldn't assume that he moved the glasses around while I was blindfolded.
10.) You are inside a very peculiar rock club: For whatever reason, the manager of the club demands that all his musical acts must take an extensive IQ test before he will allow them to perform. Tonight there are two acts on the bill, and they coincidentally share the same band name, The Industry Standard. Both bands are alleged to be awesome. Sadly, you only have one hour to spend at the club (due to another obligation), and the intermission between the two acts is very long (so you can’t watch both acts). You ask the manager which version of The Industry Standard you should watch. “I have no idea,” he says. “But I will tell you this. The first band had the highest test scores I’ve ever seen, anywhere. Each member of the band is technically a genius−one guy scored higher than Marilyn vos Savant. Conversely, the band playing second had some of the worst scores ever recorded. One member might actually be illiterate. However, I halfway suspect they were all drunk and mocking the entire process. I couldn’t tell for sure.”
Which version of The Industry Standard do you decide to see?
My answer: I think the prevailing thought is that musicians aren't intelligent, but they are incredibly creative thanks to a dark past or drug/alcohol use. I would pick the group that scored high on the IQ tests because I'm an elitist I think that would be more interesting than the stereotypical rock band.
11.) You meet your soul mate. However, there is a catch: Every three years, someone will break both of your soul mate’s collarbones with a Crescent wrench; and there is only one way you can stop this from happening: You must swallow a pill that will make every song you hear−for the rest of your life−sound as if it’s being performed by the band Alice in Chains. When you hear Creedence Clearwater Revival on the radio, it will sound (to your ears) like it’s being played by Alice in Chains. If you see Radiohead live, every one of their tunes will sound like it’s being covered by Alice in Chains. When you hear a commercial jingle on TV, it will sound like Alice in Chains; if you sing to yourself in the shower, your voice will sound like deceased Alice in Chains vocalist Layne Staley performing a cappella (but it will only sound this way to you).
Would you swallow the pill?
My answer: I enjoy music much more than I lead on, but yes and here's why. I can't fathom having to be with a woman who's dealing with the emotional damage from being attacked with a wrench every 3 years. She would probably be so emotionally scarred that she wouldn't leave the house.
It would absolutely suck to hear Alice in Chains every time I heard a song, but I think I could come to grips with the lack of musical differences quicker than dealing with a routinely injured (physically and emotionally) wife. In fact, I'd probably turn to classical music.
This last one isn't a Klosterman hypothetical. It's an interesting question my buddy Tyler asked me this weekend.
Assuming that after each attempt your energy/stamina returns to 100% which of the following do you think you could do first? Run for a 40 yard touchdown in an NFL game or strike out Ichiro Suzuki?
My answer: Although I would have 10 guys blocking for me I don't think that I have any chance of ever running for a 40 yard touchdown in an NFL game. Strikeouts are much more common (even for great hitters like Ichiro) than 40 yard TD runs. I figure that I would get better at pitching (maybe develop an off speed rather than just throwing my 70mph flames) the more chances I got whereas I wouldn't improve at all in the football scenario.
After I enjoyed the hypotheticals that he posed in his book "Chuck Klosterman IV" I had to buy it. Unfortunately many of the hypotheticals from the book were included in the deck of 50 cards, but there were still plenty of intriguing questions raised.
I particularly enjoyed the preamble:
"Some people are extremely good at making small talk. These people are better known as “idiots.” These are the kind of humans who can talk to a stranger for 40 minutes without learning anything essential about who that stranger is−they talk about the weather and about other people, and they mention what kind of car they drive and how old their children are. They have conversations in public that are ultimately no different than silence in an empty room.
I refuse to be that kind of person.
I refuse to make small talk. I refuse. I don’t care what the situation is or what the protocol is supposed to be: I see no value in asking someone a friendly, nonadversarial question if neither party cares what the answer is. Instead, I prefer to ask questions where the solution is irrelevant−I pose hypothetical questions where how one answers the query matters far more than the literal conclusion. There is no “right” answer to these kinds of questions. The end never matters; what matters is how you get to the end. What matters is how you think, not what you think.
If these questions seem absurd or boorish or juvenile−that’s totally fine. Don’t read them and don’t answer them. We don’t need to be friends. We are not the same. But if you want to find out who other people really are, these are the conversations you need to have. And you need to have them now."
As loyal Shampoo Effect readers will remember I, too, am annoyed by the mundane daily conversations about the weather, etc.
March 2009
As intrigued as I am by Klosterman's refusal to make small talk I don't think I am currently able to weave his hypotheticals into daily conversations, although I would certainly like to be.
Here are a few of Klosterman's hypotheticals that I found particularly interesting:
1.) Imagine the following three sensations.
-Chewing and swallowing the first mouthful of your favorite food after starving yourself for 48 straight hours. The food is prepared perfectly.
-Lying down on an especially cozy bed after 12 hours of nonstop physical labor on a cold day.
-The first moment of urinary release after having held a completely full bladder for more than 90 minutes.
For the rest of your life, you will feel one of these three ways, all the time. This is how you will always feel, 24 hours a day (you won’t be doing the specific activity, but you’ll always be experiencing the act’s accompanying euphoria).
Which one will you select?
My answer: While all three are incredible feelings I think I would choose the feeling of lying down on an especially cozy bed after 12 hours of nonstop physical labor on a cold day because I would want to live the rest of my life with that sense of relaxation running through my body. Quite frankly I don't think the other two translate nearly as well to daily life. They are more momentary senses of elation whereas the calm, comfortable feeling of lying on a cozy bed is applicable in real world scenarios.
2.) Defying all expectation, a group of Scottish marine biologists capture a live Loch Ness Monster. In an almost unbelievable coincidence, a bear hunter in the Pacific Northwest shoots a Sasquatch in the thigh, thereby allowing zoologists to take the furry monster into captivity. These events happen on the same afternoon. That evening, the President announces that he may have thyroid cancer and will undergo a biopsy later that week.
You are the front-page editor of the New York Times: What do you run as the biggest story?
My answer: My natural inclination, as a politics minor (no big deal), is that the story about the President is the most newsworthy and the most recent, but it definitely wouldn't be my choice. That's a developing story. Catching Bigfoot and Nessy is a one time thing (although details will obviously continue to come out as scientists do their thing). This decision would ultimately come down to which picture/headline combination was the best. I mean, I don't want to cop out and say that I'd put the pictures of the two beasts side by side and write a dual headline ("Captivating!", "Believe It Or Not!", or "Monster Catches"), even though that's what would make the most sense.
That said I'd go with Bigfoot because it happened in North America and our country has always been a little more fascinated with him than Nessy.
3.) You are presented with a strange challenge. Someone dares you to count backward from 300 to 0. If you succeed at this simple request, you will be given $25,000 in cash. However, if you misspeak, get any digit incorrect, or make any mistake whatsoever, you will immediately be doused with gasoline and burned alive.
Do you attempt this challenge?
My answer: NO WAY. I like my chances (I'd go real slow), but I think the pressure would get to me and I would stumble and burn alive. In a semi-related note, I often marvel at the ability of college basketball players to make clutch free throws late in games. I always say that I would either shoot the ball either 6 feet in front of me or into the 3rd row.
4.) Imagine your dream house (whatever that house may be.) Think of all the details you would like this home to possess, including furniture. You are suddenly given the opportunity to trade wherever you live now for this hypothetical home, and your mortgage will be whatever you currently pay now. The home will be in (roughly) the same location as your current residence. However, there is one odd caveat.
This “dream home” is buried two miles underground. When you look out of the windows all you will see is dirt. In order to enter the residence, you will have to take an elevator that travels down the two-mile shaft at high speed (it’s about a five-minute trip). The elevator is comfortable and there is a staff (located aboveground) that provides 24/7 maintenance on the elevator−if something breaks or goes wrong with the elevator, you will be rescued immediately.
Would you accept this underground dream home?
My answer: Yes, as long as the head of the elevator workers is named Alfred.
5.) You meet a wizard in downtown Chicago. The wizard tells you he can make you more attractive if you pay him money. When you ask how this process works, the wizard points to a random person on the street. You look at this random stranger. The wizard says, “I will now make them a dollar more attractive.” He waves his magic wand. Ostensibly, this person does not change at all; as far as you can tell, nothing is different. But−somehow−this person is suddenly a little more appealing. The tangible difference is invisible to the naked eye, but you can’t deny that this person is vaguely sexier. This wizard has a weird rule, though−you can only pay him once. You can’t keep giving him money until you’re satisfied. You can only pay him one lump sum up front.
How much cash do you give the wizard?
My answer: This one is tricky because you don't want to push the envelope too far and have everyone that you know suspect that you went Heidi Montag on them (although I wouldn't say that she looks better than she did). I've gone back and forth on this (between $20 and $200), but if $1 made this random person vaguely sexier than I think $50 would work wonders.
6.) At long last, someone invents “the dream VCR.” This machine allows you to tape an entire evening’s worth of your own dreams, which you can then watch at your leisure. However, the inventor of the dream VCR will only allow you to use this device if you agree to a strange caveat. When you watch your dreams, you must do so with your family and your closest friends in the same room. They get to watch your dreams along with you. And if you don’t agree to this, you can’t use the dream VCR.
Would you still do this?
My answer: Yes, as long as I didn't wake up with wet sheets. I don't have too much to hide.
7.) For whatever reason, two unauthorized movies are made about your life. The first is an independently released documentary, primarily comprised of interviews with people who know you and bootleg footage from your actual life. Critics are describing the documentary as “brutally honest and relentlessly fair.” Meanwhile Columbia TriStar has produced a big budget biopic of your life, casting major Hollywood stars as you and all of your acquaintances; though the movie is based on actual events, screenwriters have taken some liberties with the facts. Critics are split on the artistic merits of this fictionalized account, but audiences love it.
Which film would you be more interested in seeing?
My answer: I'd be much more interested in seeing the Columbia TriStar biopic. The documentary would be cool too, but I'd be more intrigued by the writing, liberties taken, and Hollywood actors playing my friends and family than by what people I know said about me on camera.
This does raise an interesting question that I often ask people to spice up conversations. If there was a movie based on your life, which actor/actress would you want to play you?
Here's a quick look at what the cast of my biopic might look like if I was the casting director:
The Stanman- obviously a cross between Denzel Washington and Leonardo DiCaprio. No, seriously Edward Norton. Actually he’s too old. What about Zach Gilford ? Probably too good looking, but we’re trying to sell some tickets, so let’s do it.
My unnamed cousin- Freddie Stroma (I’ve never heard of him until I just searched for young actors, but he’s got the look)
My buddy Kyle Korver- Taylor Lautner (the kid from Twilight)
My buddy Glancy- Phillip Seymour Hoffman
My buddy Max- Michael Pena
My buddy RJ- Shia LaBeouf
My buddy Hermo- Seth Rogan
My buddy Browny- Adam Brody
Female love interest #1- Aimee Teegarden
Female love interest #2- Minka Kelly
Female love interest #3- Keira Knightley
My dad- Jimmy Buffet (I don't know if he's an actor, but I do know that he's not only written a few songs, but also a few books)
My mom- Frances McDormand
My brother Mike- Jon Favreau
My brother Pat- Robert Downey, Jr.
My brother Jimmy- Ben Stiller
My twin sisters Maura and Elizabeth- Mary Kate and Ashley Olsen
8.) Think of a friend of yours−not your best friend, but someone who is (a) more than an acquaintance and (b) physically attractive. One day, while trolling the Internet, you accidentally come across three nude photographs of this person, reclined on a sofa bed. The pictures were clearly taken several years ago, but it’s unclear if the photos were casually posed or taken without the subject’s knowledge (your friend looks comfortable, but he/she is never looking directly into the lens of the camera). The pictures are not labeled, and your friend’s name is not listed anywhere on the site−but you’re certain that this is the same person you know.
What do you do with this information? Do you tell anyone?
My answer: Obviously this depends on whether or not the person is a male or female and on my relationship with that person. If it was a female I would almost definitely (90%) tell plenty of people about the pictures. If it were a male, I'd be very embarassed to have stumbled across the pictures so I the liklihood of me telling people would greatly diminish (45%).
9.) You are kidnapped by a diabolical (but completely honest) madman. He locks you up in an empty attic where the temperature is 100 degrees. Your feet and hands are tied together. There is no food or water. After 24 excruciating hours, the madman opens the attic door and enters with three glasses of ice water on a serving tray. He takes an eyedropper and squirts a colorless, odorless liquid into one of the glasses. “This is poison,” he tells you. He then blindfolds. When he removes the blindfold 30 seconds later, there is a drinking straw in each of the water glasses (but you have no idea which glass contains the poison). “Feel free to have a refreshing sip of water,” he says. “Of course, if you select the glass that contains the poison, you will be dead within ninety minutes. And−just so you know−I promise to release you from this attic…in forty-eight hours.” He then laughs maniacally and exits the attic, locking the door behind him.
What do you do? Do you gamble and drink, or do you try to wait out the madman?
My answer: I think the obvious answer is to try to wait out the madman, but if I were to crack I would drink from a glass in a position where I saw that the madman didn't squirt the poison. By that I mean that if he squirted the poison in the glass that was on the left before I was blindfolded I would drink from the glass that was in the middle or on the right after the blindfold was removed. Basically I wouldn't assume that he moved the glasses around while I was blindfolded.
10.) You are inside a very peculiar rock club: For whatever reason, the manager of the club demands that all his musical acts must take an extensive IQ test before he will allow them to perform. Tonight there are two acts on the bill, and they coincidentally share the same band name, The Industry Standard. Both bands are alleged to be awesome. Sadly, you only have one hour to spend at the club (due to another obligation), and the intermission between the two acts is very long (so you can’t watch both acts). You ask the manager which version of The Industry Standard you should watch. “I have no idea,” he says. “But I will tell you this. The first band had the highest test scores I’ve ever seen, anywhere. Each member of the band is technically a genius−one guy scored higher than Marilyn vos Savant. Conversely, the band playing second had some of the worst scores ever recorded. One member might actually be illiterate. However, I halfway suspect they were all drunk and mocking the entire process. I couldn’t tell for sure.”
Which version of The Industry Standard do you decide to see?
My answer: I think the prevailing thought is that musicians aren't intelligent, but they are incredibly creative thanks to a dark past or drug/alcohol use. I would pick the group that scored high on the IQ tests because I'm an elitist I think that would be more interesting than the stereotypical rock band.
11.) You meet your soul mate. However, there is a catch: Every three years, someone will break both of your soul mate’s collarbones with a Crescent wrench; and there is only one way you can stop this from happening: You must swallow a pill that will make every song you hear−for the rest of your life−sound as if it’s being performed by the band Alice in Chains. When you hear Creedence Clearwater Revival on the radio, it will sound (to your ears) like it’s being played by Alice in Chains. If you see Radiohead live, every one of their tunes will sound like it’s being covered by Alice in Chains. When you hear a commercial jingle on TV, it will sound like Alice in Chains; if you sing to yourself in the shower, your voice will sound like deceased Alice in Chains vocalist Layne Staley performing a cappella (but it will only sound this way to you).
Would you swallow the pill?
My answer: I enjoy music much more than I lead on, but yes and here's why. I can't fathom having to be with a woman who's dealing with the emotional damage from being attacked with a wrench every 3 years. She would probably be so emotionally scarred that she wouldn't leave the house.
It would absolutely suck to hear Alice in Chains every time I heard a song, but I think I could come to grips with the lack of musical differences quicker than dealing with a routinely injured (physically and emotionally) wife. In fact, I'd probably turn to classical music.
This last one isn't a Klosterman hypothetical. It's an interesting question my buddy Tyler asked me this weekend.
Assuming that after each attempt your energy/stamina returns to 100% which of the following do you think you could do first? Run for a 40 yard touchdown in an NFL game or strike out Ichiro Suzuki?
My answer: Although I would have 10 guys blocking for me I don't think that I have any chance of ever running for a 40 yard touchdown in an NFL game. Strikeouts are much more common (even for great hitters like Ichiro) than 40 yard TD runs. I figure that I would get better at pitching (maybe develop an off speed rather than just throwing my 70mph flames) the more chances I got whereas I wouldn't improve at all in the football scenario.
Tuesday, May 17, 2011
The Little Things
If I've said it once I've said it a thousand times. I'm an idea man. I thrive on enthusiasm. No seriously, for as long as I can remember I've had an idea to make a list/write a book about all of the little pleasures of life. The smell of pancakes in the morning, snow days, power naps, etc. Naturally I was a bit disappointed to come across a book at Barnes & Noble last week that had the exact same premise. In fact, it was clear that it was the second edition because of the title, "The Book of (even more) Awesome". So I bought it, read it, and didn't really enjoy it. The guy's writing style just bothered me. He thought he was funny, but wasn't, every 8th word was seemingly in bold for no apparent reason, and he ended every idea with AWESOME! Either way, the premise of the book is still rock solid, so I think it's appropriate to celebrate the little things in life that make us happy.
Finally getting that tiny piece of (insert food item here) out of your teeth- It’s pretty crazy that getting something stuck in your teeth virtually takes control of your entire consciousness. It’s all you can think of until you get it out. You’re constantly trying to unlodge whatever it is with your tongue, but it never works. That sensation when the popcorn kernel or whatever finally falls out is something else. A return to normalcy if you will.
Coming back to your bed after a long trip
Finally realizing where you know someone from after staring at them forever- This is similar to the feeling that you know something, it’s on the tip of your tongue, but you can’t connect the dots for a while, except with people it’s a feeling that’s intensified.
During freshman orientation in college they split us up into groups of about 14-15, have us play icebreakers, etc. There was a kid in my group who I swore I knew from somewhere else, but I couldn’t figure it out. I kept looking at him trying to think of where I knew him from. Finally it dawned on me. The kid looked exactly like the actor that played Mike Eruzione in the movie Miracle. Sure enough the kid lived on my floor during my freshman year and I, of course, told everyone about his doppelganger and he was known as “Rizzo” from then on.
(on the left)
After a long night of shenanigans in NYC I was walking through Grand Central on my way to catch a train and about 200 yards in front of me was an 50-60 year old man that I recognized, but I didn’t know why and obviously didn’t know his name. As I got to within about 10 feet of him I realized that he was one of my politics teacher in college, but for the life of me I couldn’t remember his name. Like a bumbling idiot I said something like, “Hey, you teach politics at Fairfield University, right? I took one of your classes.” He said, “Yes, Dan, how’s it going?” I still didn’t recall his name so I said, “Good, good. Great seeing you,” and kept moving like I was in a hurry, but I really wasn’t. No more than 10 minutes later his name came to me: Professor Kevin Cassidy.
Finding $20 in your winter coat
No longer getting ID’d- This actually might be a bad thing because it means we’re getting old, but 2 weeks ago I went to a Blue Jays/Yankees game with my buddy Mad Max and we stopped at a bar before heading into the stadium. I walked in first and was not asked to show ID, but Max, in his business attire because he came straight from the financial district, was.
Learning a new keyboard shortcut- I’m not exactly tech savvy, but about a year ago I learned CTL+Z, which is a shortcut that will undo your last action(s), and it has made my life soooo much easier at work. I often edit audio highlights/sound bytes at work and in the process I try to take out “umms” and “uhhs”, among other things (when people repeat themselves by saying the same thing in two different ways) and sometimes taking out a breath or a few words makes the audio sound unnatural and I have to go back (by hitting CTL+Z) and find a different way to clean up the byte.
The sound of waves crashing into a dock
“Glue Movies”-This is the terrible term that the author used to describe the movies that you always stop and watch if they are on TV. It doesn't matter if you catch the movie when its 5 minutes in or an hour and twenty minutes in, you're watching it. My top 5 (not necessarily ranked) are:
1.) The Shawshank Redemption
2.) A Few Good Men
3.) Enemy of the State
4.) Rounders
5.) The Departed
Getting a stuck ball out of somewhere by using another ball- Looking back, I feel like this happened once a month in my childhood. Either a wiffleball/football got stuck in a tree or a basketball/dodgeball got stuck in the rafters. Getting the ball unstuck was always a challenge. About 50% of the time another ball, bat, etc. would end up getting stuck in the process too, but it was quite the feeling when the ball became dislodged.
Walking into class and seeing a substitute teacher
Becoming a regular somewhere- This is one of my goals in life. Someday I want to be able to walk into a diner, deli, or whatever and have the person behind the counter start fixing my order without me having to say it. Back in 2009 I went to a Dunkin Donuts every Sunday morning before work for about a 5 month stretch and ordered the same exact thing (Medium coffee 2 and 2 and a chocolate glazed donut). About 75% of the times I went the same 16-17 year old kid took my order. Each week I walked up to the counter hoping he would just say, “Medium coffee 2 and 2 and a chocolate glazed donut, right?”, but it never happened.
When the plane suddenly speeds up on the runway- I’m usually frantically chewing gum so my ears don’t pop (and I always start chewing the gum about 10 minutes too soon), but this is still a pretty cool experience.
In fact, on the way to Spring Back during my senior year of college a bunch of us got to talking about how fast the plane is going just before it lifts off. Guesses were all over the map. 200, 250, 300, 175, etc. As our curiosity intensified we asked the stewardess to ask the pilot. If memory serves, and it usually does, the correct answer was about 150mph which isn’t really all that exciting.
Finally peeing after holding it forever
Realizing that you still remember your childhood friend’s phone number- What’s sad is that people our age are probably the last one’s that will ever experience this because knowing someone’s house number is no longer necessary. After entering someone’s number into a cell phone it’s rare that someone would then memorize that number. Either way, if anyone wants to call my friend J.J.’s old house the number is 315-656-9617.
Going on a field trip
Passing under a bridge on the highway when it’s pouring rain- That momentary break from the downpour, no matter how short-lived, is a bit comforting.
The fries at the bottom of the bag- I rarely eat fast food anymore (not that I’m a health nut or anything), but this was the best growing up.
When the bubbles in your drink go right to the top but not over- I feel like it takes a lottt for the bubbles to spill over because for all the times this happens I’d say that only about 10-25% of the time they spill over. Either way, it’s a pretty cool thing.
Putting on freshly ironed pants or sweatpants/socks straight from the dryer
When you fold a piece of paper so it fits in the envelope perfectly- I can’t tell you the amount of times that I’ve folded something in half (I think that’s just instinct) and then realized that I should have actually folded it into thirds. I’ll tell you what, though, I’m on a pretty good folding streak and when it lines up perfectly it feels pretty good.
Finally getting that tiny piece of (insert food item here) out of your teeth- It’s pretty crazy that getting something stuck in your teeth virtually takes control of your entire consciousness. It’s all you can think of until you get it out. You’re constantly trying to unlodge whatever it is with your tongue, but it never works. That sensation when the popcorn kernel or whatever finally falls out is something else. A return to normalcy if you will.
Coming back to your bed after a long trip
Finally realizing where you know someone from after staring at them forever- This is similar to the feeling that you know something, it’s on the tip of your tongue, but you can’t connect the dots for a while, except with people it’s a feeling that’s intensified.
During freshman orientation in college they split us up into groups of about 14-15, have us play icebreakers, etc. There was a kid in my group who I swore I knew from somewhere else, but I couldn’t figure it out. I kept looking at him trying to think of where I knew him from. Finally it dawned on me. The kid looked exactly like the actor that played Mike Eruzione in the movie Miracle. Sure enough the kid lived on my floor during my freshman year and I, of course, told everyone about his doppelganger and he was known as “Rizzo” from then on.
(on the left)
After a long night of shenanigans in NYC I was walking through Grand Central on my way to catch a train and about 200 yards in front of me was an 50-60 year old man that I recognized, but I didn’t know why and obviously didn’t know his name. As I got to within about 10 feet of him I realized that he was one of my politics teacher in college, but for the life of me I couldn’t remember his name. Like a bumbling idiot I said something like, “Hey, you teach politics at Fairfield University, right? I took one of your classes.” He said, “Yes, Dan, how’s it going?” I still didn’t recall his name so I said, “Good, good. Great seeing you,” and kept moving like I was in a hurry, but I really wasn’t. No more than 10 minutes later his name came to me: Professor Kevin Cassidy.
Finding $20 in your winter coat
No longer getting ID’d- This actually might be a bad thing because it means we’re getting old, but 2 weeks ago I went to a Blue Jays/Yankees game with my buddy Mad Max and we stopped at a bar before heading into the stadium. I walked in first and was not asked to show ID, but Max, in his business attire because he came straight from the financial district, was.
Learning a new keyboard shortcut- I’m not exactly tech savvy, but about a year ago I learned CTL+Z, which is a shortcut that will undo your last action(s), and it has made my life soooo much easier at work. I often edit audio highlights/sound bytes at work and in the process I try to take out “umms” and “uhhs”, among other things (when people repeat themselves by saying the same thing in two different ways) and sometimes taking out a breath or a few words makes the audio sound unnatural and I have to go back (by hitting CTL+Z) and find a different way to clean up the byte.
The sound of waves crashing into a dock
“Glue Movies”-This is the terrible term that the author used to describe the movies that you always stop and watch if they are on TV. It doesn't matter if you catch the movie when its 5 minutes in or an hour and twenty minutes in, you're watching it. My top 5 (not necessarily ranked) are:
1.) The Shawshank Redemption
2.) A Few Good Men
3.) Enemy of the State
4.) Rounders
5.) The Departed
Getting a stuck ball out of somewhere by using another ball- Looking back, I feel like this happened once a month in my childhood. Either a wiffleball/football got stuck in a tree or a basketball/dodgeball got stuck in the rafters. Getting the ball unstuck was always a challenge. About 50% of the time another ball, bat, etc. would end up getting stuck in the process too, but it was quite the feeling when the ball became dislodged.
Walking into class and seeing a substitute teacher
Becoming a regular somewhere- This is one of my goals in life. Someday I want to be able to walk into a diner, deli, or whatever and have the person behind the counter start fixing my order without me having to say it. Back in 2009 I went to a Dunkin Donuts every Sunday morning before work for about a 5 month stretch and ordered the same exact thing (Medium coffee 2 and 2 and a chocolate glazed donut). About 75% of the times I went the same 16-17 year old kid took my order. Each week I walked up to the counter hoping he would just say, “Medium coffee 2 and 2 and a chocolate glazed donut, right?”, but it never happened.
When the plane suddenly speeds up on the runway- I’m usually frantically chewing gum so my ears don’t pop (and I always start chewing the gum about 10 minutes too soon), but this is still a pretty cool experience.
In fact, on the way to Spring Back during my senior year of college a bunch of us got to talking about how fast the plane is going just before it lifts off. Guesses were all over the map. 200, 250, 300, 175, etc. As our curiosity intensified we asked the stewardess to ask the pilot. If memory serves, and it usually does, the correct answer was about 150mph which isn’t really all that exciting.
Finally peeing after holding it forever
Realizing that you still remember your childhood friend’s phone number- What’s sad is that people our age are probably the last one’s that will ever experience this because knowing someone’s house number is no longer necessary. After entering someone’s number into a cell phone it’s rare that someone would then memorize that number. Either way, if anyone wants to call my friend J.J.’s old house the number is 315-656-9617.
Going on a field trip
Passing under a bridge on the highway when it’s pouring rain- That momentary break from the downpour, no matter how short-lived, is a bit comforting.
The fries at the bottom of the bag- I rarely eat fast food anymore (not that I’m a health nut or anything), but this was the best growing up.
When the bubbles in your drink go right to the top but not over- I feel like it takes a lottt for the bubbles to spill over because for all the times this happens I’d say that only about 10-25% of the time they spill over. Either way, it’s a pretty cool thing.
Putting on freshly ironed pants or sweatpants/socks straight from the dryer
When you fold a piece of paper so it fits in the envelope perfectly- I can’t tell you the amount of times that I’ve folded something in half (I think that’s just instinct) and then realized that I should have actually folded it into thirds. I’ll tell you what, though, I’m on a pretty good folding streak and when it lines up perfectly it feels pretty good.
Tuesday, May 10, 2011
Blurring the Line
I often marvel at what Sports Illustrated has accomplished. Somehow they've maintained a sterling reputation for their sports coverage while at the same time selling sex (their swimsuit issue). They've managed to successfully tap into the two things that most men are most interested in: sports and scantily clad women. This two pronged approach has no doubt elevated and helped them maintain their popularity. The reason I marvel at Sports Illustrated is because the notion of selling sex is something that ESPN would never (explicitly) condone. ESPN seems to have taken a separation of church and state approach when it comes to the top two interests of most males. This decision has no doubt led to an increase in ESPN's credibility among fans (although I would argue that Sports Illustrated hasn't lost any credibility because of their swimsuit issue) and in this business your reputation is everything. ESPN holds themselves to a higher standard and that's part of what makes them the worldwide leader in sports. Their strategy is tried and true and there's no sense in changing it.
However, if they did, wouldn't a calendar of female ESPN talent sell like hotcakes? There is almost no chance that this would ever happen because that would blur the lines too much. Sports Illustrated uses models for their swimsuit issue. They don't use their reporters, writers, etc. There's a degree of separation there.
That said, what would a calendar of ESPN female talent look like? Well, I'm glad you asked. It would look something like this.
Note- This would not be a swimsuit issue, but if some of the females wanted to pose in swimsuits I'm sure that no one would mind. In fact, it would probably be recommeneded that some do.
January- Wendi Nix
Wendi is the perfect ESPN female to kick off the calendar. She’s hot, but in a mature way. She’s a woman. The 36-year-old is from South Carolina, but she has Boston ties (ex-husband is the VP of Player Personnel for the Red Sox). She’s also very talented in that she’s not just a pretty face. She knows her stuff (specifically baseball and football).
Would she do it? I’m not entirely sure. I think she could be talked into it if a few others were already committed. Plus, if she’s now single then why not? Either way she would absolutely be required to wear her glasses.
February- Rachel Nichols
Who better to represent February than everyone’s favorite redhead? Rachel Nichols is one of those women who seems a lot more attractive than she is because of her profession. That’s not to say that she isn’t attractive. She is. It’s just that she gets a huge bump in her attractiveness because she’s a sports reporter. My one problem with Rachel, and maybe I’m nitpicking, is that she uses an excessive amount of gesticulations when she talks. Specifically head movements. She literally looks like a life-size bobblehead doll sometimes.
Fun Fact- Her mother-in-law is Diane Sawyer, so she has connections up the ying yang.
Not So Fun Fact- Nichols is 37 (turns 38 in October). I would’ve guessed 31.
Would she do it? Probably not, but she’s almost a necessity. If she did there’s no doubt that her photo shoot would take place in Hattiesburg, Mississippi because she’s spent more days there on Favre watch than she has in her own home.
March- Sara Walsh
She’s relatively new to ESPN (approximately 1 year) and a lot of people hate on her because she has a bit of a horseface, but she has legs for days and she seems like she has an engaging personality (She’s filled in on Fantasy Football Now and SportsNation). She grew up in Florida and is 33 years old.
Would she do it? Absolutely. She has to be looking for more exposure and what better venue than this?
April- Nicole Briscoe
You’ve probably never heard of her (unless you live in the South), but she works primarily on NASCAR shows and she’s a babe. Speaking of auto racing, the former Miss Illinois Teen USA was on the same cheerleading squad as Danica Patrick in highschool. Briscoe is 30 years old and she’s married to an IndyCar driver.
Would she do it? My guess would be no, but if this was actually happening I’m sure she could get talked into it pretty easily.
May- Hannah Storm
Hannah is probably the most accomplished female at ESPN (Not only did she graduate from Notre Dame, but she’s worked for CNN, NBC, CBS, and now ESPN/ABC). She’s also out of control hot for someone that’s turning 49 in a month. Seriously, she’s incredible to see in person. With her great looks and impressive resume (She’s interviewed George W. Bush, Barack Obama, Hilary Clinton, etc.) I hear that she can be quite the diva. Either way I think she’s a better NBA studio host than Stuart Scott, so there’s that. Storm (who’s real last name is Storen) is married to sportscaster Dan Hicks who does a lot of golf for NBC.
Would she do it? Hard to tell, but ultimately I’d say yes. If you’re closing in on 49 and you have a rocking body wouldn’t you want to show it off? The only thing that would hold her back is the credibility issue that has kept this project from happening in the first place.
June- Jenn Brown
Jenn Brown should be the next big thing among female sideline reporters. The former softball player at Florida works the sidelines primarily for college football games on ESPN and ESPN2. I almost get the sense that they are taking things slow with her, but I don’t know why. She’s 30 years old. She’s smoking hot (some people knock her for her fivehead, but she’s right up my alley). She graduated summa cum laude, so she’s smart. She played 5 varsity sports in highschool, so she has a great knowledge base. Quite frankly, I think she’s the total package.
Would she do it? In a heartbeat. She’s the best kept secret at ESPN and something like this would put her on the map nationally.
July- Erin Andrews
Obviously she’d be on the cover as well (We’re trying to move some product here). EA, who’s 33 by the way, is the most famous female sideline reporter in the business. Before her fame skyrocketed thanks to her appearance on Dancing With the Stars (which probably only happened because of the exposure she gained from the whole peephole thing) she was on the dance team (the Dazzlers) at the University of Florida, where she graduated in 2000. Back in the summer of 2007 when ESPN was trying to figure out who “the most now” athlete in sports was, my buddy Pete (Jose Bautista’s clone) concluded that it was actually Erin Andrews, who I believe hosted those segments.
Would she do it? I doubt it, but without her there would be no calendar. She would have the most leverage of any ESPN female and because of that it would probably take an exorbitant amount of cash to get her on board. Everyone has a price, so if the powers at be really wanted to make this happen (and they should) they probably could.
August- Sage Steele
For those of you that work normal hours, you probably don’t see Sage Steele too often, but she’s one of the regular hosts of the 10am and 11am weekday SportsCenters. She is tall, slender, and incredibly good looking. In fact, whenever one of our radio hosts sees her on a TV in a studio he infers that she is out of this world hot by saying “Sage Steele, take me to your leader”. Steele is 38 and I’m actually stunned by that. I would have guessed anywhere from 29 to 33.
Would she do it? Maybe. She’s the mother of 3 children and might be against posing for a calendar, but if her picture was shot somewhere on the set of SportsCenter or something I think she’d be more than agreeable.
September- Michelle Beadle
Beadle, the co-host of SportsNation, is perhaps the hottest name among female sportscasters these days. She is loved by many fans because she’s good looking and has an almost male personality. Basically she knows what she’s talking about, she’s funny, and she’s hot. Having met her a few times I can confirm that she is definitely hot and really cool off camera as well. In fact, a few weeks ago I lent her my headphones and after telling my brother about it he told me to never wash those headphones again (Which I guess is just something you say because who washes headphones?). Either way, as fate would have it, the very next day I attended a training session (we are moving into new studios in a matter of weeks) and was given a brand new set of headphones.
Would she do it? Definitely. She’d be all about it.
October- Suzy Kolber
Kolber is a multi-faceted talent at ESPN. She can work the sidelines with the best of them and she can also seamlessly host a football oriented studio show. She has a high football acumen, she has a great voice, and she’s extraordinarily nice. She’s not the best looking female talent at ESPN (hard to compete with Jenn Brown and Erin Andrews), but she’s definitely an attractive person. Also, October seems very appropriate for Suzy because of her football ties.
Would she do it? I think so. She handled the Joe Namath situation with incredible poise and grace and she’d handle this very professionally as well.
November- Shannon Spake
You probably haven’t seen, let alone heard of Shannon Spake (a bit of a porn star name, right?), but you probably want to get acquainted with her now. She’s mainly a NASCAR reporter, but I’ve also seen her work the sidelines for college basketball games and she’s worked a few college football games for us on radio.
Would she do it? Probably. If she wants to further advance her career she needs some more exposure.
December- Jeannine Edwards
Edwards is a veteran of the sideline reporting game who covers college football, college basketball, horse racing, etc. for ESPN. She received some national attention in January while working the sidelines at the Fiesta Bowl for ESPN Radio. Apparently in the pre-show meeting play-by-play man Ron Franklin was talking with fellow announcers Rod Gilmore and Ed Cunningham about Gilmore’s wife, who was recently elected as the mayor of Alameda, CA. When Edwards attempted to join in on the conversation Franklin reportedly said, “Why don’t you leave this to the boys, sweet cakes?” When Edwards took offense, Franklin reportedly called her an expletive. Franklin was pulled from the Fiesta Bowl broadcast and was subsequently fired.
Fun Fact- Guess who the (studio) producer was for that game? That's right. Yours truly.
Would she do it? No chance.
It should be noted that Stacey Dales would have been an ideal candidate for a women of ESPN Calendar.
Unfortunately, though, she left the company in November of 2008 because she was upset that she was forced to ride coach when other reporters rode first class. It became an impasse in contract negotiations and Dales chose to walk away.
However, if they did, wouldn't a calendar of female ESPN talent sell like hotcakes? There is almost no chance that this would ever happen because that would blur the lines too much. Sports Illustrated uses models for their swimsuit issue. They don't use their reporters, writers, etc. There's a degree of separation there.
That said, what would a calendar of ESPN female talent look like? Well, I'm glad you asked. It would look something like this.
Note- This would not be a swimsuit issue, but if some of the females wanted to pose in swimsuits I'm sure that no one would mind. In fact, it would probably be recommeneded that some do.
January- Wendi Nix
Wendi is the perfect ESPN female to kick off the calendar. She’s hot, but in a mature way. She’s a woman. The 36-year-old is from South Carolina, but she has Boston ties (ex-husband is the VP of Player Personnel for the Red Sox). She’s also very talented in that she’s not just a pretty face. She knows her stuff (specifically baseball and football).
Would she do it? I’m not entirely sure. I think she could be talked into it if a few others were already committed. Plus, if she’s now single then why not? Either way she would absolutely be required to wear her glasses.
February- Rachel Nichols
Who better to represent February than everyone’s favorite redhead? Rachel Nichols is one of those women who seems a lot more attractive than she is because of her profession. That’s not to say that she isn’t attractive. She is. It’s just that she gets a huge bump in her attractiveness because she’s a sports reporter. My one problem with Rachel, and maybe I’m nitpicking, is that she uses an excessive amount of gesticulations when she talks. Specifically head movements. She literally looks like a life-size bobblehead doll sometimes.
Fun Fact- Her mother-in-law is Diane Sawyer, so she has connections up the ying yang.
Not So Fun Fact- Nichols is 37 (turns 38 in October). I would’ve guessed 31.
Would she do it? Probably not, but she’s almost a necessity. If she did there’s no doubt that her photo shoot would take place in Hattiesburg, Mississippi because she’s spent more days there on Favre watch than she has in her own home.
March- Sara Walsh
She’s relatively new to ESPN (approximately 1 year) and a lot of people hate on her because she has a bit of a horseface, but she has legs for days and she seems like she has an engaging personality (She’s filled in on Fantasy Football Now and SportsNation). She grew up in Florida and is 33 years old.
Would she do it? Absolutely. She has to be looking for more exposure and what better venue than this?
April- Nicole Briscoe
You’ve probably never heard of her (unless you live in the South), but she works primarily on NASCAR shows and she’s a babe. Speaking of auto racing, the former Miss Illinois Teen USA was on the same cheerleading squad as Danica Patrick in highschool. Briscoe is 30 years old and she’s married to an IndyCar driver.
Would she do it? My guess would be no, but if this was actually happening I’m sure she could get talked into it pretty easily.
May- Hannah Storm
Hannah is probably the most accomplished female at ESPN (Not only did she graduate from Notre Dame, but she’s worked for CNN, NBC, CBS, and now ESPN/ABC). She’s also out of control hot for someone that’s turning 49 in a month. Seriously, she’s incredible to see in person. With her great looks and impressive resume (She’s interviewed George W. Bush, Barack Obama, Hilary Clinton, etc.) I hear that she can be quite the diva. Either way I think she’s a better NBA studio host than Stuart Scott, so there’s that. Storm (who’s real last name is Storen) is married to sportscaster Dan Hicks who does a lot of golf for NBC.
Would she do it? Hard to tell, but ultimately I’d say yes. If you’re closing in on 49 and you have a rocking body wouldn’t you want to show it off? The only thing that would hold her back is the credibility issue that has kept this project from happening in the first place.
June- Jenn Brown
Jenn Brown should be the next big thing among female sideline reporters. The former softball player at Florida works the sidelines primarily for college football games on ESPN and ESPN2. I almost get the sense that they are taking things slow with her, but I don’t know why. She’s 30 years old. She’s smoking hot (some people knock her for her fivehead, but she’s right up my alley). She graduated summa cum laude, so she’s smart. She played 5 varsity sports in highschool, so she has a great knowledge base. Quite frankly, I think she’s the total package.
Would she do it? In a heartbeat. She’s the best kept secret at ESPN and something like this would put her on the map nationally.
July- Erin Andrews
Obviously she’d be on the cover as well (We’re trying to move some product here). EA, who’s 33 by the way, is the most famous female sideline reporter in the business. Before her fame skyrocketed thanks to her appearance on Dancing With the Stars (which probably only happened because of the exposure she gained from the whole peephole thing) she was on the dance team (the Dazzlers) at the University of Florida, where she graduated in 2000. Back in the summer of 2007 when ESPN was trying to figure out who “the most now” athlete in sports was, my buddy Pete (Jose Bautista’s clone) concluded that it was actually Erin Andrews, who I believe hosted those segments.
Would she do it? I doubt it, but without her there would be no calendar. She would have the most leverage of any ESPN female and because of that it would probably take an exorbitant amount of cash to get her on board. Everyone has a price, so if the powers at be really wanted to make this happen (and they should) they probably could.
August- Sage Steele
For those of you that work normal hours, you probably don’t see Sage Steele too often, but she’s one of the regular hosts of the 10am and 11am weekday SportsCenters. She is tall, slender, and incredibly good looking. In fact, whenever one of our radio hosts sees her on a TV in a studio he infers that she is out of this world hot by saying “Sage Steele, take me to your leader”. Steele is 38 and I’m actually stunned by that. I would have guessed anywhere from 29 to 33.
Would she do it? Maybe. She’s the mother of 3 children and might be against posing for a calendar, but if her picture was shot somewhere on the set of SportsCenter or something I think she’d be more than agreeable.
September- Michelle Beadle
Beadle, the co-host of SportsNation, is perhaps the hottest name among female sportscasters these days. She is loved by many fans because she’s good looking and has an almost male personality. Basically she knows what she’s talking about, she’s funny, and she’s hot. Having met her a few times I can confirm that she is definitely hot and really cool off camera as well. In fact, a few weeks ago I lent her my headphones and after telling my brother about it he told me to never wash those headphones again (Which I guess is just something you say because who washes headphones?). Either way, as fate would have it, the very next day I attended a training session (we are moving into new studios in a matter of weeks) and was given a brand new set of headphones.
Would she do it? Definitely. She’d be all about it.
October- Suzy Kolber
Kolber is a multi-faceted talent at ESPN. She can work the sidelines with the best of them and she can also seamlessly host a football oriented studio show. She has a high football acumen, she has a great voice, and she’s extraordinarily nice. She’s not the best looking female talent at ESPN (hard to compete with Jenn Brown and Erin Andrews), but she’s definitely an attractive person. Also, October seems very appropriate for Suzy because of her football ties.
Would she do it? I think so. She handled the Joe Namath situation with incredible poise and grace and she’d handle this very professionally as well.
November- Shannon Spake
You probably haven’t seen, let alone heard of Shannon Spake (a bit of a porn star name, right?), but you probably want to get acquainted with her now. She’s mainly a NASCAR reporter, but I’ve also seen her work the sidelines for college basketball games and she’s worked a few college football games for us on radio.
Would she do it? Probably. If she wants to further advance her career she needs some more exposure.
December- Jeannine Edwards
Edwards is a veteran of the sideline reporting game who covers college football, college basketball, horse racing, etc. for ESPN. She received some national attention in January while working the sidelines at the Fiesta Bowl for ESPN Radio. Apparently in the pre-show meeting play-by-play man Ron Franklin was talking with fellow announcers Rod Gilmore and Ed Cunningham about Gilmore’s wife, who was recently elected as the mayor of Alameda, CA. When Edwards attempted to join in on the conversation Franklin reportedly said, “Why don’t you leave this to the boys, sweet cakes?” When Edwards took offense, Franklin reportedly called her an expletive. Franklin was pulled from the Fiesta Bowl broadcast and was subsequently fired.
Fun Fact- Guess who the (studio) producer was for that game? That's right. Yours truly.
Would she do it? No chance.
It should be noted that Stacey Dales would have been an ideal candidate for a women of ESPN Calendar.
Unfortunately, though, she left the company in November of 2008 because she was upset that she was forced to ride coach when other reporters rode first class. It became an impasse in contract negotiations and Dales chose to walk away.
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