FB10: Week 11

Another good week thanks to sports.  Things got off to a decent start on Sunday, where a second trip to Little Caesers Arena in Detroit to see Purdue punch their ticket to their first Final Four appearance since 1980 led to my finishing above goal with 7500 steps.  Monday saw a big decrease, coming 5 steps away from 4000.  Things were even worse on Tuesday, as I needed an additional 49 steps just to get to 3000.  Things turned around on Wednesday, as I jumped back over 4000 steps.  Thursday fell back down slightly, finishing just over 3800 steps.  Friday was just slightly worse, falling 24 steps shy of 3800.  A big increase on Saturday left me with 5200 steps, closing out the week on a high-ish note.

Total steps: 31,367

Daily average: 4481

19 Again

No, this is not the same picture we used to kick off the month, but the theme is the same.  Unfortunately, due to illness, we don’t have a lot of choices for Michael pictures these days.  So, we celebrate Michael’s 19th birthday with another shot prior to his high school graduation last May.

Book 14 (of 52) – Luckiest Girl Alive

Luckiest Girl Alive – Jessica Knoll

Ani FaNelli seems to have it all, a fancy Manhattan apartment, a top job in the publishing industry, and a blue-blood fiancé.  On the inside, however, she is broken, ruined by what happened to her in high school.  When she agrees to participate in a documentary looking back at what happened at her prestigious school, she finally confronts the demons that she has hidden for years and just might find the closure she has been looking for.

I first added Luckiest Girl Alive to my to-read list based on its inclusion on a list of “new” Gone Girls.  When I checked it out last week, I was unaware that 1) it was by Jessica Knoll, who I had just read for the first time less than two months ago and 2) I had seen the movie adaptation starring Mila Kunis last year.  I even mentioned both of these facts in my review of Bright Young Women and it still didn’t stick.  This was not as pleasant an experience as my previous one with Knoll’s work.  The attempt to make FaNelli a sympathetic character came way too late and was sort of forced into the last chapter or two, making the ending feel rushed.

2023-2024 Final Standings

Purdue’s season of redemption came one win short, falling to UCONN last night in the national championship game.  It was the best tournament showing by a Purdue team since 1969, their last appearance in the championship game.  Thanks to my donations to the John Purdue Club, I was able to score tickets to two home games, my first visits to Mackey for men’s basketball since 2015.  I then was able to attend the Sweet Sixteen and Elite Eight games in Detroit, adding Little Caesars Arena to my stadium collection.

2023-2024 Team Records – Men

Team Name Won Loss Winning Pctg
Purdue Boilermakers 4 0 1.000
Tennessee Volunteers 0 1 0.000
Jacksonville Dolphins 0 1 0.000
Illinois Fighting Illini 0 1 0.000
Gonzaga Bulldogs 0 1 0.000

On the women’s side, I made it to two Big Ten battles, seeing Caitlin Clark in person for the first time while enjoying Danny’s performances with the band.

2023-2024 Team Records – Women

Team Name Won Loss Winning Pctg
Iowa Hawkeyes 1 0 1.000
Indiana Hoosiers 1 0 1.000
Purdue Boilermakers 0 2 0.000

Fifty Years Of Music – 1986

Fifty years ago, I made my first appeared on the Earth.  In celebration, we are going to take a look at the year-end Billboard Hot 100 singles chart for each year of my life and see what songs resonated with me at the time and if they continue to do so to this day.

We continue our look back at the music of my lifetime today with 1986, the year I finished grammar school, moved on to junior high and the seventh grade, and turned 12.  I am starting to become more familiar with the songs of the day, although there are quite a few here, even in the top ten, which did not stand the test of time.  38 of the Hot 100 are familiar to me now, with 18 of them appearing in my collection in one way or another.

#89: Run-D.M.C. featuring Aerosmith – Walk This Way
iTunes stats: 55 plays

Charting higher than the original did in the 70s, it became the first hip-hop single reach the top five, peaking at #4.  It became Run-D.M.C.’s biggest hit and helped Aerosmith revitalize their career.

#76: Madonna – True Blue
iTunes stats: N/A

The title track from Madonna’s third album, it spent three weeks at #3.

#74: Mike + The Mechanics – All I Need Is a Miracle
iTunes stats: 7 plays

Nominated for the Best Pop Performance By a Duo or Group Grammy, it topped out at #5 on the Hot 100.

#72: John Cougar Mellencamp – Small Town
iTunes stats: N/A

Reaching #6, Mellencamp wrote the song to detail his experiences growing up in small-town Indiana.

#69: Van Halen – Why Can’t This Be Love
iTunes stats: 13 plays

The group’s first single with new singer Sammy Hagar, it shot to #3 on the Hot 100.

#68: Cameo – Word Up
iTunes stats: 10 plays

The lead single from the group’s thirteenth studio album, it became their first Top 40 hit, topping out at #6.

#67: El DeBarge – Who’s Johnny
iTunes stats: 23 plays

Featured in Short Circuit, the debut solo single from DeBarge peaked at #3.

#66: John Cougar Mellencamp – R.O.C.K. in the U.S.A.
iTunes stats: N/A

The third single from Mellencamp’s Scarecrow, it reached #2 on the Hot 100.

#65: James Brown – Living in America
iTunes stats: 27 plays

Featured prominently on the Rocky IV soundtrack, the tune, which reached #4, earned Brown a Grammy for Best Male R&B Vocal Performance.

#62: The Outfield – Your Love
iTunes stats: 101 plays

Peaking at #6, the song became a popular sports anthem and was used locally as the walkup music for former White Sox infielder Gordon Beckham.

#59: Eddie Money – Take Me Home Tonight
iTunes stats: 22 plays

Featuring Ronnie Spector in the chorus, the single topped out at #4 in November.

#58: Janet Jackson – Nasty
iTunes stats: N/A

Reaching #3 on the Hot 100, the song ranked at #11 on Rolling Stone’s 200 Best Songs of the 1980s.

#56: INXS – What You Need
iTunes stats: N/A

The band’s first top ten hit in the US, it peaked at #5 on the Hot 100.

#54: Genesis – Invisible Touch
iTunes stats: N/A

The first of five consecutive top five singles, it was their first and, to date, only #1 single in the United States.

#53: OMD – If You Leave
iTunes stats: 24 plays

Recorded for the Pretty in Pink soundtrack, the song topped out at #4, becoming the group’s highest-charting single.

#51: Stacey Q – Two of Hearts
iTunes stats: 19 plays

The first single my sister owned, which took her years to realize she was playing on the wrong speed, it peaked at #3 in the fall of 1986. Continue reading →

40 Minutes To Glory

The Purdue redemption tour continued last night in Glendale, AZ, as the Boilermakers, competing in their first Final Four since 1980, defeated North Carolina State 63-50.  They advance to the championship game for the first time since 1969, facing UCONN tomorrow night, as the Huskies attempt to go back-to-back.

Win or lose, this iteration of Purdue basketball will be lacing it up for the final time.  Here’s hoping they go out with a bang,

Hope Springs Eternal

Only four teams remain standing following a tournament filled with minor upsets.  My bracket is busted and my Final Four predictions, save one, are completely toast.  But, how about that one.  Purdue finds itself in the Final Four for just the third time ever and the first time since 1980, so the hope remains alive for this weekend.  Purdue faces 11-seed NC State tonight, and wouldn’t losing to a double-digit seed be a way to go out after these last three years, with defending champion UCONN and Alabama in the other game.  The winners face off on Monday for the national championship.

Heading To Vegas… Via Sacramento

Last November, MLB owners approved the relocation of the A’s from Oakland to Las Vegas, where the team hopes to have a stadium built by the 2028 season.  A fine plan all around, except that the team’s current lease in Oakland expires after this season, leaving them in a bit of a bind for the 2025-2027 seasons.  After failing to reach a deal with Oakland for an extension, the Sacramento Kings announced today that the A’s will play the next three seasons in Sacramento.

Sutter Health Park, the current home of the Sacramento River Cats of the Pacific Coast League, will house the A’s for through the 2027 season, with an option for 2028.  The River Cats are expected to continue to use the stadium as well, which I’m sure will cause no scheduling issues whatsoever.

The move will end the team’s stay in Oakland at 57 seasons, after previously calling Philadelphia and Kansas City home.  Assuming they ever make it to Vegas, and that seems less likely now than it did in November, the A’s will become the first franchise to have played in five different municipalities while using the same name.  On a personal note, removing Oakland Coliseum from my active stadium count means I would now have eleven parks to get to in order to finish off the set.  I’ve made two trips to the stadium once known as Oakland–Alameda County Coliseum, first in 1999 and again in 2008, seeing the Tigers and Orioles respectively.

FB10: Week 10

It looked to be a bleak week thanks to work, until sports reared its head at the to change the trajectory.  Things got off to a decent start on Sunday, finishing just 5 steps away from 4600.  Monday saw a small decrease, falling down to the 3900-step plateau.  Things were even worse on Tuesday, as I dropped down even further to 3300 steps.  Thanks to meetings, Wednesday bottomed out, leaving me 13 steps shy of 2500.  The start of the baseball season on Thursday helped turn things around, as I returned to Guaranteed Rate Field for the first time in 2024 and earned 6500 steps.  An impromptu trip to Detroit on Friday for the Sweet Sixteen propelled me just past my 7500 daily step goal for the first time since January.  A Purdue victory on Friday meant spending Saturday in Detroit, with dinner over the border at Caesar’s Palace in Windsor, finishing the week with 4400 steps.

Total steps: 32,876

Daily average: 4696.6