Hub Kid Bids Updike Adieu
John Updike wrote many things, but I am mostly familiar with his essay on Ted Williams’ last game, with its egregiously compact, famous first line.
John Updike wrote many things, but I am mostly familiar with his essay on Ted Williams’ last game, with its egregiously compact, famous first line.
There was a typo in an essay I’m writing and it caused me to refer to something as “a painstakingly-crafted ribbon of pain.” The new search is to find something that can be described as such, and use it, because I love it. That is, if Trent Reznor didn’t use it first.
Lots of side projects at the moment (Me and Pedro, a Last Exit article, another blog, potential book stuff), but nothing’s coming today, so here I am.
First, check out fivethirtyeight.com, the best election site on the web that I mistakenly sometimes call fiveeightythree.com.
Second… I’m not sure there is a second. Not much going on today, but wanted to post something, somewhere.
Last Exit is doing a (shhh) Animals issue coming up, and ya boy got all exciting and ripped off a column about his dog. Then he had a much better (secret) idea, and we’re going with that. As I’ve been delinquent, here’s my ode to youth and Chickens. We never gave it a headline, so I’ll give it my pretentious one
Ceci n’est pas un chien
Since I got cable television, I’ve been watching a log of the Dog Whisperer, the National Geographic show where the host has an incredible ability to alter the behavior of dogs, old or otherwise. The host, Cesar Milan, constantly excoriates lazy dog owners for anthropomorphism; when the owners treat their dogs as human, the dogs act like greedy humans would, and take physical ownership of the coach, carseat, house, whatever. A careless owner is liable to be following the whims of an angry Chihuahua, rather than dictating rules to the six-pound mammal. The key is to treat a dog like a dog — that is, a lesser species — which is a lot more revolutionary than it sounds.
All this has me thinking back to my childhood, and our childhood dog, whose behavior was nothing short of astonishingly poor-mannered. Charlie was a Tibetan Spaniel, which looks like a plus-sized lapdog, and he was protective of the front door, only a handful of times to the point of biting. Charlie, growing up mostly with my brothers and I while my mom was at work, lived a complacent life, to say the least. He slunk around the house while played video games, street hockey or watched after-school cartoons and only responded to commands that indicated he was about to go outside or eat. I made a point of never feeding him, because the canned food absolutely repulsed me, and technically he belonged to my brother. Still, my mom fed him most of all, which must have been weird for them because even the dog knew that my mom absolutely detested him. She loved that her kids liked the dog, but as she was the one that cleaned up after him, I think she resented him — and I’m talking on a personal level — for shedding and occasionally pooping in the house. Whatever it was, he slunk in her presence, and was never deferential to anyone else. We may have treated him like the fourth brother, but she treated him like a no-good, freeloading cousin.
The dog was a highlight for all my friends who came over, just for his distinctly entitled ways. He’d got up to people he trusted and roll over on his back, exposing his tummy to them in way that say “RUB IT NOW,” and even if you did, he might just get up and leave in two minutes. It was feline behavior; cats bother me, but coming from Charlie, it was hilarious. He had a Napoleon complex. He also had about 100 nicknames, Chickens being the most popular and apropos of mostly nothing, and he would respond to all of them if you had the right inflection of your voice. Just like everyone else in the house, he loved everyone but had a funny way of showing it. People often say dogs “smile,” but you’d be hard pressed to find an occasion where Charlie was accused of it. His entire life was spent on a small L.L. Bean bed, angling for biscuits or hightailing it on the rare occasion where we tried to give him an outdoor bath.
Eventually I moved away and, years later, Charlie died at the old age of “15 or so.” We don’t have an exact date because the friend who gave him to us had found him in a Boston park as a puppy. What I do know is that should I ever have another dog, I’ll have a much better idea about how to treat it, thanks to both the Dog Whisperer and the sandpaper-like effect of old age. I’ll smooth that dog out if I have to do it one small bit at a time. Charlie had it easy. He was our friend. But he was a great friend to have.
McDonald’s! The Vineyard! High School! What’s not to like?
I wrote an Arizona State preview for Deadspin last week for the NCAA tournament, which they were likely to make. They did not. The University of Arizona Wildcats, whom the Sun Devils beat twice, did. There was an inflammatory paragraph about the opposite scenario — an ASU berth with U of A out — shows what I know.
N.I.T.! N.I.T.!
The first line of A.O. Scott’s review of Horton Hears a Who!:
What distinguishes “Horton Hears a Who!” from the other recent Dr. Seuss film adaptations —“How the Grinch Stole Christmas” and “The Cat in the Hat,” in case you need reminding — is that it is not one of the worst movies ever made.
I know praise when I see it.
I wrote a very thorough and, in retrospect, early Sports Guy-esque column evaluating whether the Yankees front-office family compared more favorably to that of The Godfather or Arrested Development over here.
I also had a good Republican/Democrat give and take with a friend of mine in the comments to this post.
For those of you looking for lighter fare than Queens Stories 2, my Will Leitch interview, for his new book God Save The Fan, is up on Last Exit Magazine.