Wednesday’s Commute

Snow finally hit the Chicagoland area this week, but Wednesday was the one day with a break. Here’s the tunes that got me through a pretty decent commute.

Temptation Waits Garbage Version 2.0 2/6/2013 4:48 PM
Teenage Dirtbag Wheatus Wheatus 2/6/2013 4:53 PM
Mama Said Knock You Out LL Cool J Mama Said Knock You Out 2/6/2013 4:59 PM
18 And Life Nina Gordon 2/6/2013 5:04 PM
Pretty Fly (For A White Guy) The Offspring Americana 2/6/2013 5:08 PM
American Nice Mexican Cheerleader Kings And Kings’ Hoots 2/6/2013 5:13 PM
Walk This Way Run-D.M.C. Millennium Hip-Hop Party 2/6/2013 5:17 PM
Pregnant Women Are Smug Garfunkel and Oates All Over Your Face 2/6/2013 5:20 PM
Deuces Are Wild Aerosmith O, Yeah! Ultimate Aerosmith Hits (Disc 2) 2/6/2013 5:24 PM
Unskinny Bop Poison Poison’s Greatest Hits 1986-1996 2/6/2013 5:29 PM
All My Life Foo Fighters Live In Hyde Park 2006 2/6/2013 5:34 PM
No Scrubs TLC Fanmail 2/6/2013 5:38 PM
Fuck You Cee Lo Green The Lady Killer 2/6/2013 5:42 PM
Speak Slow Tegan and Sara So Jealous 2/6/2013 5:45 PM
Unglued Stone Temple Pilots Purple 2/6/2013 5:48 PM
Stupid Girl Garbage Garbage 2/6/2013 5:52 PM
Baby Got Back Sir Mix-A-Lot Millennium Hip-Hop Party 2/6/2013 5:58 PM
That Thing You Do The Wonders That Thing You Do! 2/6/2013 6:02 PM
That Took Stones Mexican Cheerleader Mexican Cheerleader 2/6/2013 6:05 PM

2013 Games Of Interest

408542_10151670598888298_1264282517_nFireworks Night

June 7
June 28
July 3
July 19
July 27
August 9
August 23 (Elvis Night)
September 14 (Halfway to St. Patrick’s Day)

Family Day (Replaces Kids Day)

April 7
April 21
April 28
May 26
June 9 (1983 White Sox Kids Jersey)
June 30
July 21
July 28
August 11 (Spirit & Mascot Day)
August 25
September 15
September 29

Other Fun Stuff

April 6 – 1983 White Sox Knit Bomber Hat
April 20 – White Sox Puzzle Cube
April 27 – Harold Baines Bobblehead
May 11- Paul Konerko Bobblehead
June 8 – Southpaw’s Birthday Party
June 29 – Billy Pierce Replica Statue
July 20 – 1983 White Sox Replica Batting Helmet
August 10 – Ron Kittle Bobblehead

Book 4 (of 52) – The Revolution Was Televised

The Revolution Was Televised: The Cops, Crooks, Slingers And Slayers Who Changed TV Drama Forever - Alan Sepinwall

The Revolution Was Televised: The Cops, Crooks, Slingers And Slayers Who Changed TV Drama Forever – Alan Sepinwall

Starting in the late 1990s, as cable networks started to look to provide more viewing options than reruns of Benson and The Rockford Files and struggling netlets looked to find an identity in order to challenge the big 4, television entered what can only be described as a golden age of quality programming.  TV critic Alan Sepinwall looks at the 12 shows that blazed this new trail, garnering hundreds of Emmy nominations in their wake.

The main leader of this revolution was HBO, which aired 4 of the 12 series Sepinwall profiled.  Whether it was the goings on in Emerald City in the prison drama Oz or the dirty dealings of the western Deadwood or the drug-fueled and gang-infested streets of Baltimore in The Wire or the family run New Jersey business on The Sopranos, HBO showed that their “It’s not TV, it’s HBO” promos were more than just a slogan.

Seeing the success that HBO had with their scripted dramas, other cable networks looked to change their fortunes by following the same path.  FX was looking to reinvent itself and succeeded with The Shield.  AMC broke through in a big way with two hits, Mad Men and Breaking Bad, the only two shows in the book that are still on the air.  Even the channel formerly known as SciFi managed to find themselves a hit with the remake of Battlestar Galactica.

The one place it is much harder to be revolutionary is on network TV, but that doesn’t mean it is impossible.  Against all odds, ABC took a germ of an idea from an outgoing network chief and somehow ended up with Lost.  The WB, trying to find something to air besides “ethnic” sitcoms, turned to a re-imagined Buffy The Vampire Slayer.  NBC also looked to the cineplex for inspiration and found themselves with Friday Night Lights.  Not to be outdone, FOX managed to turn what could have become a tiring gimmick into the long running 24.

Sepinwall goes back and interviews most of the power-brokers behind the scenes of these revolutionary shows and provides an in-depth look at how they came to be and the struggles it took to get them on the air.  If I wasn’t already reading Sepinwall’s reviews, I would certainly start after finishing this book.

Mix Tape Monday – May 2005

After my tape deck crapped out in 1997, I was stuck listening to either the radio or full albums in whatever order the artist intended.  That all changed in 2001, when the new-fangled MP3 technology got combined with my new CD burner.

This was the last CD of psudeo-new music that I burned.  Fall of 2005 was consumed with other activities and that Christmas, I got a Sirius satellite radio, at which point I pretty much stopped using the CD player in the car.  In fact, the CDs that were in the 5 disc changer at the time stayed there untouched for so long that, when I tried to put in something different, the new discs wouldn’t work.

Tom Petty – I Won’t Back Down

I just now realized that this was from Tom Petty’s solo album and was not a Heartbreakers track.

iTunes stats: 8 plays, most recently on 8/6/2011

Foo Fighters – Best Of You

The latest from the Foo Fighters was the first single from In Your Honor.

iTunes stats: 13 plays, most recently on 3/29/2012

Black Eyed Peas – Don’t Phunk With My Heart

The less successful follow up to the monster hit Let’s Get It Started.

iTunes stats: Never played

Def Leppard – No Matter What

A cover of the old Badfinger song done as a bonus track for their latest best-of release.

iTunes stats: 4 plays, most recently on 9/28/2012

DJ Jazzy Jeff & The Fresh Prince – Summertime

The Grammy winner for Best Rap single of 1991.

iTunes stats: 6 plays, most recently on 6/26/2012

Ramones – Blitzkreig Bop

The debut single for the seminal American punk band.

iTunes stats: 1 plays, on 7/30/2012

Terror Squad – Lean Back

Spent three weeks atop the Billboard Hot 100 charts in August of 2004.

iTunes stats: 7 plays, most recently on 8/4/2011

Weezer – Beverly Hills

The latest single from Weezer was the first from their fifth album.

iTunes stats: 8 plays, most recently on 10/11/2012

The McCoys – Hang On Sloopy

This is the official rock song of the state of Ohio.

iTunes stats: 12 plays, most recently on 11/19/2012

Usher – Yeah!

Usher’s monster hit spent 12 weeks stop the Billboard Hot 100 in 2004 and was the #1 song of the year.

iTunes stats: 12 plays, most recently on 10/23/2012

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Book 3 (of 52) – The Fifth Assassin

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The Fifth Assassin – Brad Meltzer

When I finished Brad Meltzer’s last book 2 years ago, I noted that the ending seemed rife for a follow-up.  His latest picks up the threads left behind and strings together another tale of Beecher White, the latest member of the fabled Culper Ring, as he tries to protect the man who has vowed to take him down: the President of the United States.

Meltzer again follows his formula of the little man going up against the Washington DC power structure, but it once again works for him.  The one knock I have against this book is that it assumes that you have read The Inner Circle, and read it recently.  This one throws you right into the action with little in the way of introduction for the returning characters.  Once you catch up with what’s going on, though, it is full speed ahead.

Judging from the ending, the story of Beecher White is destined to be a trilogy, so it looks like there will be another two year wait before we get the end of the story.

#328 – Brian Bruney

Brian+Bruney

Name: Brian Bruney

Rank: 328

Position: P

Years With White Sox: 2011-2012

Brian Bruney joined the White Sox as a free agent following the 2010 season.  He made his debut with the big league club on May 31 against the Boston Red Sox, allowing 2 runs in 2/3 of an inning.  In August, Bruney was given his unconditional release after refusing an assignment to Triple A.

After the season, Bruney resigned with the White Sox, accepting the minor league assignment he had refused the previous summer.  Bruney spent most of the 2012 season in Charlotte, appearing in only 1 game for the big league club.

Bruney’s numbers in a White Sox uniform, both for games I attended and overall, were:

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