Wednesday, April 30, 2025

I'll have a Danish, please

The other night, watching the Orioles game, Peggy jokingly referred to left fielder Heston Kjerstad as "Kierkegaard," and a good time was had by all.

Now, Søren Kierkegaard was a Danish theologian, philosopher, poet, social observer, and Christian author. He was only around for 42 years (1813 - 1855) but in that short life, he founded what is called the philosophical school known as existentialism.

"Søren The K"

Existentialism is often confused or misidentified as the very concept of existence. You're likely to see this among the blurbs on the back covers of cheesy novels in whose scenarios frustrated, unfulfilled suburbanites seek the meaning of life as they pilot their Range Rovers home from Whole Foods..."Walston was struck by the existential nature of life, realizing that if he hadn't joined the water polo team at Yale, he would never have known the love of Heather, whose father owned a chain of lumberyards in the Fair Hills area."

Walston's imaginary plush life notwithstanding, Existentialism holds that we have the freedom and responsibility to make the right choices to lead our lives down successful, proper paths.

In other words, "If it is to be, it is up to me."

The most notable existentialists include Kierkegaard, Friedrich Nietzsche, Martin Heidegger, Jean-Paul Sartre, Albert Camus, Simone de Beauvoir, and Orioles color commentator Ben McDonald, who pointed out in a game this past Saturday against the Tigers that each player is responsible for his own performance. 

And therein lies the meaning of life! 

Ben McDonald can hold 7 baseballs in his hand.

Tuesday, April 29, 2025

1-800- HELPPPP

 If you want to get people all worked up, just ask how they feel about their health insurance. "It's a lot more expensive than it used to be," and "it's confusing," those are the gripes.

Anyone you talk to (and a lot of people you don't) will pause from their daily activities to describe in minute detail just what happened when their cousin Charlotte's hypothalamus went on the fritz. Over and over come the stories about how the Admitting Clerk at St. Hoolahan's Hospital was really a) surly b) busy  c) confused or d) Charlotte's daughter's best friend from the Hammerjacks era.


And the nurse and the doctors and so many stories, and I feel bad for everyone who ever had a bad time at the hands of the health care industry. 

It's just my luck that things go well for me in that area. The medical team that keeps me going, and the pharmacy at Giant, are always reasonable and professional. 

And get this - last week the Computer That Runs The World said that Aetna Medicare rejected my claim for something, so I called Aetna on the phone.  It was almost 6 PM, when most 800 numbers are answered with a curt "our offices are now closed," but no, they were on the job, and a most helpful woman answered, found out that the problem involved "durable medical equipment" and not a drug, and she was back on the phone in a trice, problem solved.

You know what I've learned over the years? When something goes wrong, asking for help works a lot better than DEMANDING A SOLUTION RIGHT THIS VERY MINUTE! 

Unless your problem is with the US Post Office. In that case, hollering is usually the only fix. 


Monday, April 28, 2025

Big Bad Bill

There really and truly is no fool like an old fool.

Say, on another topic, did you happen to see the interview Bill Belichick, former coach of the New England Patriots and current head coach at the U of North Carolina, gave to "CBS Sunday Morning" on Sunday morning? 

Nattily attired as always.

There's a change in Bill these days. If you remember his post-game interviews from his heyday in NE, it was as if he regarded every word that he forced out of his mouth as a golden pellet of wisdom he hated to give away. One or two word answers were his game, and then he would bolt away from the mic as if he had heard himself being called in to supper.

Oh but now! OH! He has a book, an autobiography to sell you, and the words just came out like they opened the sluicegate on some hydroelectric dam. Buy my book! I'm a nice enough sort! Read my stories!

Until Tony Dukoupil asked the 73-year-old swain about the 24-year lady sitting over there eagle-eying the interview about how those two crazy lovebirds met. She is one Jordon Hudson, the current girlfriend of Talkative Bill. She said, "We're not talking about this."

You'd better do as she says, Bill. You know that look all too well.


And doggone if he didn't just sit there and not answer the question! He looked like he was afraid she would send him off without his Ovaltine tonight if he said another word about it.

There was an old song about something like this...here's Leon Redbone's version of "Big Bad Bill Is Sweet William Now."


I wish them many happy years together. He can tell her all about things that happened before she was born, and she can pretend to care!


Sunday, April 27, 2025

Sunday Rerun: Growing Up

 Perhaps this will be a key moment in the maturation of Tyrique Stevenson. Tyrique is 24, and is a cornerback for the Chicago Bears, who had just taken the lead Sunday over the Washington Commanders in exciting National Football League action. With mere seconds left, the Commanders lined up for a last-ditch attempt at a longshot touchdown pass. 

But... instead of preparing for the play, Tyrique spent time waving to the DC fans, taunting them even after the play began.

It gets worse. The fans hooted back at him, gesticulating that he would do well to turn around and play football with the other 21 men on the field, because the play was underway.

That he did, and it seems that it would have gone better for the Bears had Tyrique continued his antics, because when he did get into the action, he tipped the toss-up pass into the waiting hands of Washington receiver Noah Brown, who scampered into the end zone to win the game.


Of course, the twitterverse took Stevenson to task, and he replied: "To Chicago and teammates my apologies for lack of awareness and focus," he wrote. "The game ain't over until zeros hit the clock. Can't take anything for granted. Notes taken, improvement will happen."

Stevenson added Monday, "I let the moment get too big and it's something that can never happen again and won't ever happen again."

Moments have a way of taking on the size we allow them to have. Meanwhile, I'm saving that phrase for the next time I forget to check the catbox or buy too many pork chops or say something untoward: "Notes taken, improvement will happen."

Doesn't sound like me, but I won't let the moment get too big.

Saturday, April 26, 2025

The Saturday Picture Show, April 26, 2025

 

This has to be the all-time record for the gap in years between the deaths of twins...poor Emily, alive for but two days, and Minnie lived to see 101 candles on her cake. I can just imagine them catching up on things up in Heaven.
Someone with an artistic bent took a pile of garbage and made shadow art!
In the show business, they call one-hundred-dollar bills "C notes" (C as in Century, as in a hundred) and show biz is the one place they use this fake currency. "That's quite a a pile of lettuce you got there, Lefty!"
This is a pygmy owl. He looks full-size to me. Maybe another owl should pose next to him.
I love the part of nature that makes fallen trees look artistic, and the way the setting sun lights up these weeds and makes them beautiful.
Special shoes used by cattle thieves so that their human footprints look bovine.
It's that sad time of the year when the snow shovels are washed off and set out to dry in the sun before being put away until, we hope, maybe October, November, the latest.
Wile E. Coyote is not messing around this time. This is the Acme of Serious business!
When you ask a stranger to snap your gag vacation photo of you purporting to hold up the Leaning Tower of Pisa, make sure to select a stranger who knows how to figure the angles.
A local VFW post (unknown where) made an interesting mural of their back wall.

Friday, April 25, 2025

Everybody's crazy about a sharp-dressed man

Robert Benchley first came to attention on Broadway by performing a bit called "The Treasurer's Report," which started out with him saying, "First, I would like to remind everyone that it was never my idea to be the treasurer in the first place."

I say that just to remind one and all that I am not a Roman Catholic, although I am going to comment on the shoe choices of the recently departed Pope Francis.

His predecessor, Benedict XVI, went in for the fancy outfits, most notably red shoes. I know you aren't supposed to wear white shoes after Labor Day, but when are red ones ok for a man who is not an outfielder for the Los Angeles Angels?


As the Washington Post said about the fondly-remembered Francis, his vision for the church was “less beholden to its own hierarchy,” meaning he wasn't afraid to change thing up. 

Stories abound of him driving himself around Rome in a Ford Focus, buying his own eyeglasses, bunking in a Vatican City guesthouse, rather than a deluxe apartment he might have occupied.

Eschewing (eshoeing?) the flashy red pumps for serviceable black dress shoes was a good move to me, someone who has no say in the matter and yet butts in on everything under the sun.

Simple black rubber-soled Oxfords.

I mean, he couldn't very well go around in Weejuns (too informal) or Rockports (too casual) but the papal kicks look fine to me. The man was trying to reach the people with the message from God, not dazzle them with his footwear.

Indeed, whenever I saw the Pope on television, he seemed no more duded up than any local parish priest, and maybe that was the plan - not to try to be flashy, just to be a regular servant of God.

Filippo Sorcinelli, the Italian designer who put together his official wardrobe, said that Francis wanted to present a “noble simplicity.”

He was simple and humble, as all leaders should be. If you know what I mean.


Thursday, April 24, 2025

Any way you slice it

If you were any good at Geometry, you are far smarter than I. I mean, the square of the hypotenuse and all that? I couldn't get it, and the other thing I couldn't get was what possible use I would ever have in my future career.

At 16, the only future career I envisioned involved me sitting in a radio studio, playing records and cracking jokes and reading used-car commercials, so the only geometry involved there was making sure the records were round, the bosses weren't square, and not getting involved with any triangles with coworkers.

I mean, who am I,  Tony Curtis or something?

Even then, there were kids in the class who would have known the answer to the eternal question: Where are you going to get more crust, sauce, cheese and pepperoni - in one 18-inch pizza, or two 12-inch pizzas?

More is more, I would have said, so give me the two 12s please, and add sausage and extra cheese.

But the geometrists in the class, and there were some, would have known that one 18-inch pizza has more pizza surface area than two 12-inch pizzas.

Breaking down the math, the 18-inch pizza covers an area of approximately 254 square inches, while two 12-inch pizzas combined have an area of about 226 square inches. 


 Proving, once again, that pi are square!