Friday, August 30, 2002

Play ball


A baseball strike has been averted, thus negating the need for direct action by the masses to help the blue collar professional Major League ballplayer.

Even so, we know you were ready to help, so we'll just tuck the following public appeal away for use four years from now, when labor strife will once again threaten the National Past-time.

To wit:



Since September 11, 2001, Americans have come together as never before in
our generation. We have banded together to overcome tremendous adversity.
We have weathered direct attacks on our own soil, wars overseas, corporate
scandal, layoffs, unemployment, stock price plunges, droughts, fires, and
a myriad of economic and physical disasters both great and small.

But now, we must come together once again to overcome our greatest
challenge yet. Hundreds of Major League Baseball players in our very own
nation are living at, just below, or in most cases far above the
seven-figure salary level. And as if that weren't bad enough they could be
deprived of their life-giving pay for several months, possibly longer, as a
result of the upcoming strike situation.

But you can help!

For only $20,835 a month, about $694.50 a day (that's less than the cost
of a large-screen projection TV) you can help a MLB player remain
economically viable during his time of need. This contribution by no means
solves the problem as it barely covers the annual minimum salary, but it's
a start, and every little bit will help!

Although $700 may not seem like a lot of money to you, to a baseball
player it could mean the difference between spending the strike golfing in
Florida or on a Mediterranean cruise. For you, seven hundred dollars is
nothing more than a month's rent, half a mortgage payment, two unemployment
checks, or a month of medical insurance with COBRA. But to a baseball
player, $700 will partially replace his daily salary.

Your commitment of less than $700 a day will enable a player to buy that
home entertainment center, trade in the year-old Lexus for a new Ferrari,
or enjoy a weekend in Rio.

HOW WILL I KNOW I'M HELPING?

Each month, you will receive a complete financial report on the player you
sponsor. Detailed information about his stocks, bonds, 401(k), real
estate, and other investment holdings will be mailed to your home. Plus,
upon signing up for this program, you will receive an unsigned photo of the
player lounging during the strike on a beach somewhere in the Caribbean
for a signed photo, please include an additional $150). Put the photo on
your refrigerator to remind you of other peoples' suffering.

HOW WILL HE KNOW I'M HELPING?

Your MLB player will be told that he has a SPECIAL FRIEND who just wants
to help in a time of need. Although the player won't know your name, he will
be able to make collect calls to your home via a special operator in case
additional funds are needed for unforeseen expenses.

YES, I WANT TO HELP!

I would like to sponsor a striking MLB player. My preference is checked
below:

[ ] Infielder
[ ] Outfielder
[ ] Starting Pitcher
[ ] Ace Pitcher
[ ] Entire team
(Please call our 900 number to ask for the cost of a specific team - $10
per minute)
[ ] Alex Rodriguez (Higher cost: $60,000 per day)

Please charge the account listed below $694.50 per day for the player for
the duration of the strike. Please send me a picture of the player I have
sponsored, along with an Alex Rodriguez 2001 Income Statement and my very
own Donald Fehr MLB Players Union pin to wear proudly on my hat (include
$80 for hat).

Your Name: _______________________
Telephone Number: ____________________
Account Number: _____________________ Exp.Date:_______
[ ] MasterCard [ ] Visa [ ] American Express
[ ] Discover
Signature: _______________________

Alternate card (when the primary card exceeds its credit limit):
Account Number: _____________________Exp.Date:_______
[ ] MasterCard [ ] Visa [ ] American Express
[ ] Discover
Signature: _______________________

Mail completed form to MLB Players Union or call 1-900-SCREW-THE-FANS now
to enroll by phone ($10 per minute).

Disclaimer: Sponsors are not permitted to contact the player they have
sponsored, either in person or by other means including, but not limited
to, telephone calls, letters, e-mail, or third parties. Contributions are
not tax-deductible.


Wednesday, August 28, 2002


MAKES YA'WONDER





1. Ever wonder about those people who spend $2.00 apiece on those little

bottles of Evian water? Try spelling Evian backwards - NAIVE.



2. Isn't making a smoking section in a restaurant like making a peeing

section in a swimming pool?



3. If 4 out of 5 people SUFFER from diarrhea does that mean that one enjoys

it?



4. There are three religious truths: Jews do not recognize Jesus as the

Messiah, Protestants do not recognize the Pope as the leader of the

Christian faith, and Baptists do not recognize each other in the liquor

store or at Hooters.



5. If you take an Oriental person and spin him around several times, does he

become disoriented?



6. If people from Poland are called Poles, why aren't people from Holland

called Holes?



7. Why do we say something is out of whack? What's a whack?



8. Do infants enjoy infancy as much as adults enjoy adultery?



9. If a pig loses its voice, is it disgruntled?



10. If love is blind, why is lingerie so popular?



11. When someone asks you, "A penny for your thoughts" and you put your two

cents in, what happens to the other penny?



12. Why is the man who invests all your money called a broker?



13. Why do croutons come in airtight packages? Aren't they just stale bread

to begin with?



14. When cheese gets its picture taken, what does it say?



15. Why is a person who plays the piano called a pianist but a person who

drives a race car not called a racist?



16. Why isn't the number 11 pronounced onety one?



17. "I am" is reportedly the shortest sentence in the English language.

Could it be that "I do" is the longest sentence?



18. If lawyers are disbarred and clergymen defrocked, doesn't it follow that

electricians can be delighted, musicians denoted, cowboys deranged, models

deposed, tree surgeons debarked, and dry cleaners depressed?



19. If Fed Ex and UPS were to merge, would they call it Fed UP?



20. Do Lipton Tea employees take coffee breaks?



21. What hair color do they put on the driver's licenses of bald men?





22. I was thinking about how people seem to read the Bible a whole lot more

as they get older; then it dawned on me. They're cramming for their final

exam.



23. I thought about how mothers feed their babies with tiny little spoons

and forks so I wondered what do Chinese mothers use, Toothpicks?



24. Why do they put pictures of criminals up in the Post Office? What are we

supposed to do, write to them? Why don't they just put their pictures on the

postage stamps so the mailmen can look for them while they deliver the mail?





25. If it's true that we are here to help others, then what exactly are the

others here for?



26. You never really learn to swear until you learn to drive.



(Submitted by a reader in California)

Friday, August 23, 2002

News & notes...


It was bound to happen ... The New York Times called to ask about the recent hubbub surrounding this weblog ... The writer, a self-described "tech freelancer," said his story would appear a week from this Monday ... He asked the usual questions, seemed like a nice fellow, and chuckled at the appropriate times ... What inquiring journalists want to know, which we can't answer, is why a so-called "newsmaker" whose anonymity remains shielded by the local Clute-based daily would go to the trouble of digging up a 10-month old obituary and comparing it to a weblog three months later ...


Randall's is putting in a Wells Fargo bank branch in the place where other Randall's grocery stores put in a trendy Starbucks...It's over where the videos used to be ... What gives, we asked the nearest employee ... "Hey, this is Lake Jackson," said the sacker kid, which was his way of saying, we live in a one-horse town ... Speaking of one-horse towns, We received a missive from a former employee of the late A Curious Place coffee joint, which has closed down, which is no longer news ... The former employee was talking about what a special place it was, so we sort of felt bad about our choice of words (ie., "coffee snobs") that we once used to describe the clientele ... "I grew up in the Brazosport area and for me, Lake Jackson was like the movie, Stepford (sic) Wives. But, when I stepped out of Stepford ,(sic) & into A Curious Place, (it) is was an awakening of my spirit," writes Mary, the former asst. mgr... Now we're not entirely sure they were drinking just coffee in that place ....

We had been waiting for some wiseacre columnist to address the David Carr-God angle, and Houston Press media critic Richard "News Hostage" Connelly finally came through this week... Take that, Leon Hale! ... We simply couldn't bring ourselves to poke fun at the Houston Texans QB and his Dudley Do-rightness ... Still, it would kinda be nice this year if Carr would take the time to point skyward when SOMETHING BAD HAPPENS instead of saving those special spiritual gestures for the good plays ... And Lord knows, all the plays this season won't be winning ones ... Ya know, it's late in the game, the Texans have a chance to win, it's 4th and short at midfield, Carr takes the snap from center, he's fading back to pass, he has a man open, oh no, HE TRIPS!! Flat on his butt!!! But look at this folks, he's pointing to the sky, praising the Lord just for giving him this chance to fail....Hey, football fans, just kidding! GO TEXANS!! YEA GOD!!!



Saturday, August 17, 2002

Code Red (faced)


This summer I have accidentally-on-purpose smuggled a pocket knife on to four different airlines.

The knife is no Jim Bowie-sized blade. Just a pearl-handled antique job, a keepsake from my late father, who seemed to always have it with him. So I carry it around. Even, unwittingly, to the airport.

This inadvertant test of the nation's high-alert, beefed-up, airport security machine began with a 7 a.m. flight out of Bush to Baltimore via Atlanta.

The airport was deserted and we were sleepy, as were, apparently the guardians of our nation's airliners.

Approaching the first x-ray checkpoint, I reached into my pocket and pulled out a handful of coinage, a tin of Altoids, a pack of chewing gum and -- Oh My God -- the knife.

The car was miles away. The plane awaited. Confess? And have the beloved keepsake consigned to the Department of Transportation's Confiscated Weapons Smelter?

So I stuck the knife into the little plastic tray, along with the rest of my pockets' contents, and held my breathe as it traveled on the conveyor belt under the all-seeing eye of the x-ray machine.

Nobody said a word.

Minutes later, waiting at the gate, I confided to Scooter, my wife and assistant, of the illegal contraband.

Here, I said, put it in YOUR bag. It's got more stuff in it than mine. They'll be less likely to find it in yours.

Thanks a lot, she said.

At the gate, security picked all three of us out, me, Scooter and daughter Scout, for a more thorough once-over.

We took off our shoes. We opened our bags. We lifted our arms for the hand-held metal detector. We answered who won the World Series in 1989. (Just kidding).

Nothing was found to be amiss.

No problem in Atlanta, either.

Weeks later, again we're flying, this time out of Hobby, on the way to South Florida.

In a rush, per usual.

At the airport, I peek into the side pocket of my carry-on.

THE KNIFE!

It has been sitting in the side pocket of my bag since the last trip!

Again, the car was too far away.

And I couldn't pull the give-it-to-the-wife gambit again. She'd never let me forget it.

In my bag it stayed.

And it sailed through x-ray, then survived a cursory look-see into the bag by a female security guard.

But hold everything.

Scooter's been detained. They've taken an intense interest in her carry-on.

The security lady is really pawing through it, like a dog who smells varmint.

Then she finds it.

Out of the bag she pulls ... nail nippers!

She pulls them out of the bag and holds them up with thumb and forefinger, as if to announce, "A-HA!"

"You can't have these."

"Anything for the cause," Scooter says, raising her eyebrows.

Scooter collects her bag and walks through security.

"Do you feel safer?" she asks.

Hell, yeah, I say to myself. I have a freakin' knife!

Returning from Fort Lauderdale, we decide to check our bags this time. No way I'm going to risk the family heirloom by carrying a prohibited lethal weapon in my carry-on luggage.

If they got the nail nippers in Houston, surely the knife wouldn't survive another run through the heightened airport security apparatus of the nation's most powerful country.

But we got a little lost on the way to the airport.

No time to stand in line to check bags.

No choice but to carry our stuff on, knife included.

The initial pass through the x-ray machine occurs without incident. The knife remains nestled in a side pocket of the carry-on, amid a mound of coins, a telephone cord, an electric razor, a cell phone charger, and a half dozen packages of unopened Southwest Airlines peanuts, expiration dates unknown.

Not so fast.

They pull me out of line.

We can't tell what some of these items are, sir. We have to check the bag.

He begins pulling stuff out. A cell phone charger, a telephone wire, some socks...

My heartrate quickens.

I'm gonna lose the knife. The knife my Old Man carried in his pocket for years and years.

What a dope I am.

Jeeezuu...

"OK, sir, have a good trip."

"OK?"

"Yes, sir."

"Well, OK then."

"Have a good flight, sir."

"Well, O-Kay."

The flight went well, which is to say we didn't crash or get hijacked.

The illegally smuggled knife was ready to be wielded at any moment should someone, anyone, try to storm the cockpit.

No one did, but you never know what some bad guy may have smuggled on board.

Tuesday, August 13, 2002

The Lost Archives


The old postings on the first incarnation of The Brazosport News were zapped when the site was taken down. That doesn't mean they're necessarily gone. They've been saved on a disk. Maybe we'll post them again on the site, or maybe we'll just say fuhgetaboutit. It's all so complicated.

Scooter and I are writing a romance novel. So far, our characters are a big city newspaper editor, who has that lean and hungry look in his eye, a small-town newspaper managing editor afflicted with a Napoleon complex, a local back-slapping legislator who plays both ends against the middle and a couple who decides to start a Website under fictitious names. Send in any plot ideas you feel worthy of consideration.



Friday, August 09, 2002

The Way We Was


A reporter in the United Kingdom called today to opine that Banjo Jones is “the first weblog martyr.”

What’s going on down there in Texas?

“It’s a long story,” sighed Banjo, already punchy from an afternoon chat with KNRC radio talk show host Alan Pell in Denver, who tells listeners his show teeters on “the cusp of mediocrity.”

Be careful.

One morning you might wake up and say out loud, as I did to Scooter, my wife and assistant, “It’s a lot more fun being Banjo than (name withheld by request).”

Then, a few months go by, and you really are Banjo Jones. Suddenly, people in positions of responsibility would like an explanation.

It all began with a bad dining experience at Denny’s. The pancakes were cold and the service was bad. It was comical, really. People were walking out...

Type, type, type.

Post and Publish.

Then, in the course of daily events, other observations of life’s rich pageant are offered.

A link is posted by a weekly paper’s Web site.

Words of mouth are passed.

Emails fly.

The gals in the courthouse typing pool are chattering, logging on every day.

Banjo this, Banjo that.

Hey, this ain’t such a boring burgh after all!

Didja read...?

Twang, twang, strum, strum.

The reaction on the street, by and large, to news reports about the Brazosport News and its creators is, “Hey, what about freedom of speech?”

What about freedom of the press?

This leads to a discussion. Yes, there are those freedoms, and then there is the right not to employ those who part their hair on the left.

Twang, twang, strum, strum.

“I’m proud of you, son. You’ve made my day,” telephones a reader in Alvin. “You’ve got balls, big balls.”

Balls for brains, suggests the Denver talk show host perched on the cusp of mediocrity.

“We enjoyed what you had to say!” writes a Lake Jackson businesswoman, using the quaint approach of pen and paper. “Good luck in the future. We’ll continue to search for the ‘newsmaker’ that turned you in. We’ll miss you!”

Like O.J.’s search for the real killer? OK, get back to us on that.

“The dunderhead running the Hearst seed catalogue should hire that Banjo Jones dude to replace poor (name withheld by request). After all, Banjo seemed a lot smarter than (name withheld by request),” writes manifique@hotmail.com.


“I see from Dave Winer's site that you've lost your job due to your weblog,” writes a sales manager from out of state. “ Well, keep it up. America needs more webloggers and fewer people who don't
appreciate the first amendment. Getting fired in this economic time is not conducive to a low-stress
lifestyle, I understand. I wish you all the luck in your future endeavors!”

“Say it ain't so jo-nes!” emails another fellow. “ Tell me the presses will roll again.”

Like the Warren Oates character said in The Wild Bunch, “Why not?”


Andrew Orlowski article in The Register, a UK site

Houston Press News Hostage column

Wash. Post Media Columnist Piles On (Last item)

Friday, August 02, 2002

Hawes Racking Up Kudos


By Hooterville Newswire Services
CLUTE (Tx) -- A petition campaign to honor Kelly Hawes, the Clute-based newspaper executive, has been launched to honor his recent campaign to promote higher ethical standards in the news media industry.
Velma Oleander, recording secretary of the River's End chapter of the Daughters of the Revolution Concerned About the First Amendment, said she hopes to gather enough signatures to convince Gov. Rick Perry to name the new highway overpass being constructed in Lake Jackson after the newsman.
When completed, the overpass over Farm-to-Market Road 2004 apparently will be the second highest man-made structure in Lake Jackson, the commercial hub of Southern Brazoria County.
Naming the civic improvement after Hawes is appropriate because of his recent championing of media decorum, Crane said.
"He stands for seriousness and decency," she said, moments before being escorted out of the food court at Brazos Mall, where she was soliciting signatures.
Hawes, a popular figure since he began penning newspaper columns on fatherhood, also has been nominated for this year's "Charles Colson Newsmaker of the Year" award given annually by Daddy Mag, a quarterly publication that examines the lighter side of parenthood.
Awarding of the coveted plaque will be announced at the National Rodeo Finals.
J. Patrick Buchanan received last year's award.
Announcement of the newsmaker award historically has led to lucrative product endorsements.
Dippity Do For Men Inc. LLP, the maker of men's hair care products, is a sponsor of this year's Daddy Mag awards ceremony.
Hawes was unavailable for comment this afternoon, according to a spokesman who said he "already knocked off for the day."