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matton says...

  • Adweek reports from the front lines of the War on Christmas.  If CP+B is responsible and sales go through the roof, I tip my non-existant fedora to them. [Advertising]
  • Reddit loves the most popular review of Sarah Palin's ghostwritten book. Hilarity ensues. [Politics]
  • Warning: Nerd Alert!  Someone re-made Contra in Half-Life 2.  It's as good as it sounds. [Nostalgia]
  • Agencyspy doles out the annual PETA Thanksgiving announcement.  Oh maaannn - Bless those turkey's little hearts.  (Then roast them.) [Thanksgiving]
  • ESPN issues a two-week Twitter suspension to Bill Simmons for calling a spade a spade. [Twitter]
  • Bonus: I was mad at myself for using a lazy cliche when I stumbled upon this sweet website after googling 'calling a spade a spade''. [Nerd]

Filed under: Bill Simmons

Judd6149 says...

I like to do my reading in bars. I like that reading is a solitary activity; I don't like solitary confinement. I like to read in bars because there is always background action. It reminds me of when bar bands play where half of the audience is listening and the other half is fragmented with loud conversations, hook-ups, put downs and bar flies who drink Mad Dog margaritas and roll funny cigarettes.  

The latest bar-book session I had was to finish off Chuck Klosterman's third book, "Killing Yourself to Live: 85% of True Story".  It was my first time reading Klosterman. I had first heard (of) him on Bill Simmon's ESPN podcast, the B.S. Report. Based on that initial listening, I think Chuck would make an excellent, if not slightly deranged, police interrogator. Not Richard Belzer on Law & Order deranged...more like like way Mork from Ork would do the job. I especially liked the way he kept dry humping what ever topic he and Simmons were discussing. He came off like an obsessive compulsive who flicks the light on and off before entering or room or a little kid who can't help picking at his scabs.  

I found it entertaining. 

The book centred on Chuck's road trip from rock and roll grave site to grave site, spanning east coast to west, from NYC to Seattle. Could Chuck find answers to the existential and cultural questions as to why Rock Stars who die prematurely, get (commercially) better with age?  Fuck no. He spent most of the time talking about past and present girlfriends and how he either was fucked up in the relationship, fucked up the relationship or couldn't get fucked in the relationship. 

All of this was mildly entertaining and maddeningly narcissistic. The saving grace of all of this girlfriend bullshit was when he was able to compare evey female relationship he ever had with each original and faux member of the band, KISS. That was worth the price of the book (but only if you buy it used and in paperback).

After reading the book, I am not sure what to think. He is talented for sure, but the book left me with a bad date feel.  You take a girl out, conversation picks up, you think it may be going some place and then...you hit quicksand. Halfway through the book I felt like I in quicksand [note: I have never actually been in or even seen quicksand, but this is how I imagined it would feel]. Chuck was there for me though. He kept offering me a branch to grab on to so he could pull me out. I kept reaching for the fucking branch and every time I was almost out of the quicksand, Chuck would lose his grip and back in I went. 

I am going to give his first book, "Sex, Drugs and Cocoa Puffs" a read and see where that leads me.  As I said, I find Klosterman entertaining and I enjoyed his writing writer. His recent review of the Beatles re-issues was sardonic, funny and, oddly, right. Check it out HERE.

I finished the book at the bar. I usually know how engrossed I am in a book by how many beers I drink while reading. If I can get off my stool and not have to take a piss straight away, I didn't drink too much and was engrossed. If I put down the book and need to do my Usain Bolt impression to the toilet, I know I made many trips to the bar and wasn't all that into what was I reading.

As soon as I finished Chuck's book, I sprinted for the bathroom. In fact, I forgot to leave the book at the table. I got in there, tucked it up under my arm and did my business. When I was leaving, I decided this book needed a fitting resting place other than my Shelves of Cool.   I left the book atop the paper towel dispenser.  I figured if someone would actually want a book that was left in a Swine Flu, Ass Flu or Flu Du Jour filled London pub bathroom...they could have it. 

I would love to see their reaction when they got to the end of it and realised that I ripped out the second to last page. Maybe it will make sense after all...

Tune Tags (Chuck's Blues):

Filed under: Bill Simmons

Yes it can.... :)

Filed under: bill simmons

Seriously, if you are a sports fan and don't know about Bill Simmons (guy in the Jersey) then you need to get to know him. Although, this is just a spoof, the "lies" are in fact true.

Filed under: bill simmons

rodneycajudo says...

I've read about this series for a few months now.  I'm a big Bill Simmons fan.  He's a columnist for ESPN.com.  His story is pretty remarkable in of itself.  Boston native, passionately loves sports, starts up a website in college writing about sports.  He's a diehard homer.  Bird is his hero, lives and dies by the Red Sox, hates the Lakers.  He's a fan.  But he's also one of the most knowledgeable and entertaining sports writers out there.  His columns on the NBA are must reads for me.  Ever since I discovered him about 4 years ago, I've read pretty much everything he's written.  And even though I'm a lifelong Laker fan and he's a lifelong Celtic fan, I still respect his insight, acumen, and witty observations into the world of sports.

His career now finds him as an executive producer for a new series of documentaries on ESPN called 30 for 30.  30 sports stories from the past 30 years.  They gathered up some well known directors that are also big sports fans and asked them to tell compelling sports stories. 

Here is an essay from Bill Simmons explaining the project;

http://30for30.espn.com/bill-simmons-essay.html

It sounds fascinating, compelling, and very entertaining.  As a big sports fan and fan of well told stories, I'm intrigued.

Here are a few trailers of 30 for 30

Trailer for the whole project:

http://espn.go.com/video/clip?id=4446146

The Band that Would Never Die

http://espn.go.com/video/clip?id=4472811

Excerpt from piece on the Wayne Gretzy trade to L.A. Kings

http://espn.go.com/video/clip?id=4497992

And 30 for 30's main website

http://30for30.espn.com/

Sports has always been said to be a metaphor for life.  The competition, the triumph, the agony, the struggle.  The hope.

If you are a fan of sports, a fan of good storytelling, check it out with me.  Let me know what you think.

Filed under: bill simmons

Joe says...

HEY! Manny Pacquiao was a Celtics fan last year... this year he is a Lakers Fan???

He is what my main man Bill Simmons refers to as a 'sports bigamist'... please read the formerly unwritten rules of being a sports fan.

To just switch teams is bad enough.... but from Celtic Green to Laker Gold??? Unheard of...but understandable!

Well, I'm sure after shooting the commercial with Kobe in L.A. recently, where he also trains and owns a home, he should have converted to being a Laker fan.

While waiting for the Kobe/Pacquiao commercial, look back to this one where Pacquaio was just a 'bit' player among the athletes. Click here.

Filed under: Bill Simmons

tuyenvo says...

UPDATE: As I hit the send button on this post, just saw that there's a trade brewing to send Jamal Crawford to the Hawks for Acie Law and Speedy Claxton.  Gotta let that marinate for a sec before I give my thoughts but I was never a big fan of Crawford and his big contract.

Before I talk about the W's, just read a great article by Bill Simmons re: the Clippers and their curse. The Native American angle is interesting and humorous.
 
Lots of goings-ons have occurred in the past 24 hours that may shift a lot of what happens in tomorrow's draft.  That's not including the Richard Jefferson trade to San Antonio which suddenly makes them much better, in my opinion. First, they get a 20 point scorer to go alongside Duncan, Parker, and Manu. Plus, they may actually sign back Bowen and Thomas if they are bought out of their contracts (highly likely). Overall, a win for the Spurs. The other big trade news was Minnesota getting the 5th pick from Washington for Foye and Miller. That gives them to 5th, 6th, 18th, and the 28th pick in the first round. Wow - if only this wasn't a weak draft. Word around the campfire is that their looking to package the 5th and 18th or the 6th and 18th to get the 2nd or 3rd pick to grab Rubio. Given that Minnesota has a lot of holes to fill, they'll do fine whether they trade up or keep those picks for themselves.
 
Regarding what the Warriors do with the 7th pick, it's really a crap shoot at this point. Some boards are projecting that the W's get Brandon Jennings or Jonny Flynn or Stephen Curry or Jrue Holiday while some see Jordan Hill falling to them. Personally, I would go for a point guard over a big man given that the W's could slot Anthony Randolph or Brandan Wright at the 4. Both seem a little underweight to play the position but there are rumors that Randolph grew an extra inch and added 20 pounds since the end of the season. That's just crazy talk. Randolph definitely has more upside than Wright and should eventually be a starter, whether at 4 or 3. I think adding Jordan Hill would mean reduced playing time for Wright and after watching him play in the Pac-10, I'm not 100% convinced he won't be just an average NBA player. If there was any depth in this draft, it seems to be at the point guard position. Jonny Flynn has the maturity and polish at PG, Stephen Curry has the jump shot, but Brandon Jennings and Jrue Holiday have the upside. Holiday has fallen as of late and Jennings definitely has maturity issues but they both are considered long term projects. I'd rather opt for the upside versus the "NBA ready" players like Flynn and Curry because I don't see either of them ever being any better than what the W's have now in CJ Watson (who's actually an above average back up PG). Why not roll the dice and go for someone who might become a Rajon Rondo? Regardless of who they get, there's not much downside. The 7th pick is far enough down that even if the player turned out to be a bust, it's not like wasting a #3 on Mike Dunleavy, Jr.

Filed under: bill simmons

tuyenvo says...

To put the following quote in context, Bill Simmons of ESPN is writing about the Cavaliers-Clippers game yesterday.  This is a hillarious quote about the final shot of the game by Zach Randolph.

The fans are in disbelief. Randolph's teammates are in disbelief. Dunleavy is making a face that my friend Sal later describes as a face I have never seen a human being make before. What ensued in the next 20 seconds could best be described like this: Imagine being trapped in one of those big hospital elevators with eight other people. One of them pulls his pants down and just starts going to the bathroom -- not No. 1 but No. 2. At that specific moment, the doors open for the next floor. How fast would everyone else in the elevator flee for the door? Lightning-fast, right? Like, Usain Bolt-level fast, right? That was the entire stadium after Z-Bo's air ball. He basically took a dump on the 3-point line.

The entire article is a nice microcosm of what I think is probably one of the worst run franchises in the NBA (Golden State used to hold that title).  A great read for all basketball enthusiasts.

Filed under: bill simmons