Friday, May 31, 2013

Thursday, May 23, 2013

Communism?

According to Chuck Todd, NBC’s chief White House correspondent, the Obama Administration’s seizure of reporters’ emails and phone records is evidence that “they want to criminalize journalism.”

I see.  Sort of like China, North Korea, Venezuela, etc.

The president might want to read this.

Tuesday, May 21, 2013

What tornado?

An EF4 tornado a mile wide at the ground with winds around 200 mph has ripped through Oklahoma causing mass destruction and killled at least 91 people.

But it's good to see that HLN (formerly Headline News) will not be deviating from their wall-to-wall Jodi Arias coverage.

Monday, May 20, 2013

This Day in History

It’s the 6th anniversary of the greatest article in the history of the Houston Chronicle. Aside from quotes from people like Dat Boy Cuzin and model/waitress/Tomball Community College business management student Blondene Thompson, the most fascinating thing about the article, which highlights the changes taking place in Sharpstown Mall, was that it appeared not in the Style or Society sections, but right on the front page. The Chronicle editors thought this story merited page 1 prime real estate in their paper.  And I agree with them 100%!

Thursday, May 16, 2013

Rod Stewart: Steroid 'addiction' shrank my manhood!

Really?  You don’t think this outfit affected your manhood at all?

According to the notoriously ripped singer, “I let myself down on tours in the late 80s when I was addicted to steroids.” That is a real quote from this guy:

Did the steroids also shrink his muscles?


Obviously, the steroids were in his shampoo.



Or maybe 'steroids' is just a code word for ice cream.


Monday, May 13, 2013

Jacked Worth Visit

lunaticoutpost.com

There is always some interesting posters on there.  I just read about people recommending snorting coconut oil to have more vivid dreams.






I'm on my way to Kroger to get some coconut oil.

Wednesday, May 1, 2013

Cause Célèbre

“NBA Player Comes Out” was the headline followed by this picture:

Despite following professional basketball to a moderate degree, I have to admit that I wasn’t sure who that was, despite his playing in the NBA for 12 years.

“Historic decision”, “courageous”, and “milestone” are just a few of the ways that Jason Collins’ announcement that he is gay has been described by media outlets. Really?  How short our memories are.  It was just six years ago that John Amaechi announced that he was gay.  According to CNN’s Wolf Blitzer, "In the four major sports, he's the first one, the first one as an active player. Not after retirement but as an active player to acknowledge he's gay. So it is a courageous step.”

Hold up there, Wolf.  Perhaps you are not an avid basketball follower, but Jason Collins is far from an active player. Technically, yes, he is currently on a team. His one-year, league-minimum contract will not officially expire until July, but let’s not pretend his career wasn’t over before he made this announcement. He played in only 38 games this season and amassed a whopping 1 point and 1 rebound per game. What may be most surprising is that those totals are not much lower than his career averages. He was still in the league for one reason, and it’s that he’s seven feet tall. As the saying goes, you can’t teach height, and the NBA is the one place where a player like Hasheem Thabeet gets chance after chance after chance.

Before this announcement, Collins’ claim to fame could be found here:

I don’t really care that Jason Collins is gay. I don’t think a person’s sexual life is anyone’s business and shouldn’t define them, but if all of this hoopla is going to occur, how about we reserve it for someone we’ve seen before? You know, someone whose career wasn’t exceeded by the likes of Kurt Nimphius, Blair Rasmussen, Kevin Kunnert or any number of players who averaged at least 4 points per game for their career.

I’ll be honest, what Collins did cannot be easy to do. It does take a certain amount of courage, but this is a player who was barely hanging on in the league.  If anything, this announcement may have helped him get a final one-year, league minimum contract. But in all likelihood, he was done anyway. It would be a much tougher decision for someone who was actually in the spotlight and had their entire career ahead of them. That may actually deserve the term “historic.” What Collins has done is no different than what Amaechi did six years ago. The problem here is not Collins’ announcement, but the overhyping the media has given it. Read over this article and this one to see how over-the-top some of the reporting has gotten. I kid you not, several outlets have actually compared Collins to Jackie Robinson as a trailblazer.

I can’t believe that they get a pass for being so disrespectful to Robinson.  If any writer (or their editor) allows such a comparison to appear on their pages, they really need to go back and study the history of what Robinson had to endure. There have been gay athletes in the past and they were able to conceal it from their teammates and the public. That was their decision. Robinson did not have that choice. Jackie Robinson truly was “Historic” and “Courageous.”