DIE BASEBALL, DIE.
Minimal football noise today, so let’s access that spleen and talk about how much another corrupt, shitty sport blows. No particular reason.
Full of shit, but will get you laid: Baudrillard.We’re big Jean Baudrillard fans, and not because we’re some organic tea-sipping grad student getting wood to the concept of actually writing crap bollocks about art, meaning, and dissecting meaning without having to actually come up with any ourselves. You’re out there, we know who you are, and we will refrain from making the Starbucks serve-us-our-latte professor joke, because many of you do indeed go on to do terrible things like teach Lacan and Derrida to smartstruck private school kids cowed by your ability to string together three sentences together and use the phrase “late-stage capitalism” without shitting yourself from shame.
Plus, when you can quote shit like this pants just fly off smart ladies not quite smart enough to realize just how full of shit you really are:
Like dreams, statistics are a form of wish fulfillment.
That’s Baudrillard, who rules like Motorhead because he’s totally quotable, completely full of shit, and sold tons of books in France despite the fact that he, himself, would remind anyone he was brimming with intellectual fecal matter. He insisted, in fact, on most everything being fake and shitty–simulacra–mere imitations of things that once existed, and that most culture was just growing like the fingernails and hair on a corpse.
Drop that at a cocktail party, and someone will probably either pose thoughtfully or call you a homosexual. Either way you’re going for the bullshit gold, since it’s English major bongwater primo stuff. However, it may rightfully describe the EDSBS official Most Despised Game, not a sport, but a game, the hypertrophied croquet match that is baseball, and the fact that old incontinent people care enough about it to waste an ex-Senator’s time on whether or nor its players are taking illegal supplements.
(Let us clarify that we don’t care whether baseball players are injecting mule piss into their veins or eating the live, still-beating hearts of polar bears in order to gain a competitive edge. This is because we don’t care about baseball outside of a lingering affection for fat players like John Kruk from our youth and good hooker stories involving profligate man-whores like Mickey Mantle, who once answered an ex-Yankee survey with a rambling account of a blowjob he received under the bleachers. He concluded with this quote, paraphrased as best we can remember:
She asked me what to do with the come, and I said, “Don’t ask me, I’m no cocksucker.”
See? Baseball’s not all bad! Except for the game, the management of the sport, and evidently the whole collection of cheating bastards who made up its elite players in the 1990s/2000s)
Things die, clothes fray, computers crash, and species extinctify, and sometimes, the nails growing on a corpse simulate life. In fact, this is what baseball’s done, buffeted by four or five huge major franchises while dragging the whole bleeding cripple party of other franchises along with them. Record profits! Bullshit, as exemplified by the large franchises who skew the curve. Bentonville, Arkansas, the whole thing: a little town whose average income is swelled by the immense wealth of the handful of franchises raking money in hand over fist, millionaires surrounded by the squalor of their neighbors.
And the sport itself lurches along like a reanimated corpse. After three solid years of intense football watching, we went to a Braves game this past season, and we’d say the entire exercise was an extravagant waste of time if we hadn’t had Lexus level access and thus a intravenous mainline of beer and popcorn. And even after 14 beers, the game was like watching at tribe of macaques pick nits off each other: stasis periodically interrupted when, at a gusty 25% of the time clip, someone hit a tiny ball a sniper could barely pick up at one of the bored, improbably huge macaques. Then everyone settled down and began drinking again and talking on their cell phones.
Even when completely drunk, it sucked with the force of ten thousand Reggie Balls rolling downhill in a big gremlin-ball of suck. No contact, no passion, no energy, and as much strategy as a game of horse-shoes. Wait, that’s a disservice to horseshoes. None. If someone preens on one more time about the strategy involved in baseball, we will drop a safe on you from a great height, because there’s simply nothing going on out there. At least the British admit the whole thing is a front for beer-drinking and lolling around outside for a few days. We’d like it if baseball games lasted three days like cricket test-matches, if only because the epic drunk you’d get on would likely get Viking war songs written about you, your friends, and the time you each drank a 24-pack before noon without dying.
Instead, in baseball, you get this alleged psychodrama between batter and pitcher, who in the minds of most everyone are fighting a mental swordfight while tiptoeing on water like the assassins in Hero. In reality, baseball players are among the stupidest athletes we’ve ever seen–at least football players, big, lummoxy football players, may have been to college. Baseball players are recruited straight from high school, meaning they dive straight from being a high-school manchild to being million-dollar bonus babies at the age of nineteen, meaning that like the horde of Genghis Khan, the future inhabitants of the world may be by percentage all related to some baseball player, since rich nineteen year olds are only interested in pillaging the Hooters and strip clubs of this nation. Unlike you, though, they don’t wear condoms and have the money to do the whole thing properly, which explains how even white bread Steve Garvey ended up spurting out a whole flock of milquetoast lustspawn intent on making him a merely affluent man.
Really, batter and pitcher are just trading ones and zeros, and doing so poorly in most instances in between all the jock-adjusting, spitting, and stepping out of the box to twitch and scope trim in the stands. (Read Ball Four. We’re not making this up.) The rest of the time, everyone else just….stands around scoping trim in the stands.
Oh, but the romance! The history! It’s our national pastime, hearkening back to a SAHAHAKEREEGGHGHHKKKFJDmakdfadfkjg. Apologies. That noise was us garroting George Will, W.P. Kinsella, and any of the other bullshit geysers who’ve built up the myth that for some reason, merely because it’s very old and has been around a long time, that there’s some kind of moral or cultural onus to like baseball. (God, that felt good.) No one’s better at pulling a phantom peanut of sublimity from steaming turd of reality than a writer, and in baseball they’ve had a whole open sewer to browse in their quest to make shinola from shit. (Do you even know what shinola is? It’s shoe polish, which normal people use to shine shoes, and baseball players try to eat spread on crackers before spitting it out and saying “BOOO YUCKY” and impregnating a stripper.)
There’s a whole heap of turdulent literature just collecting flies out there, all of it devoted to baseball. Most of it should be burned and scattered to the winds, excepting Ball Four, which is about what rat bastard life as a player is really like, and that awesome book about how the 1986 Mets were all on cocaine, because books about people doing cocaine in the 1980s are the highest form of literature and fuck your mother if you don’t agree.
The sport should have been dead for years, and if the Mitchell report surprises anyone, then you, anyone, should be relegated to the salt mines along with people who like Family Guy and those who don’t use their turn signals in traffic. OMG, people are suddenly just so much bigger now in like a year! If this shocked anyone after years of stats and norms being established with interminable death-march 162 game seasons…we mean, it would have marked a spurt not just in baseball’s evolution, but humanity’s. Sammy Sosa should have had Waterworld gills. Mark McGwire should have been telekinetic, and Albert Pujols should have had the ability to levitate (over the border! To Mexico! For illegal steroids!).
In conclusion, we were going to say die, baseball, die, but considering it’s been dead for decades anyway, there’s no reason to send a duplicate death certificate around. Instead: Baudrillard, fingernails, corpse. There’s your snapshot there. No one mourns the moa, no one misses the Edsel, and when we’re eighty or so, no one will really mourn football since by then it’ll all be flying robots with chainsaws farting balls out of their shiny titanium rectums and sodomizing each other after whatever constitutes a goal occurs while the crowd roars for Beef Supreme to enter the arena. (Personally, we can’t wait for this. If brains in jars are involved, we’re already looking forward to it, and it doesn’t even exist yet.)
Cricket’s huge in India we hear. Going offshore may be the best decision, especially with all those lax overseas pharma rules. You’ll be able to inject whatever you want, and the only real threat to the sport will be nuclear war between Pakistan and India. And with that much nandralone coursing through your system, players might just breathe deep and exhale fire without harm in the face of it all.
Postscript: Yeah? But what about football problems steroids corruption blah blah blah. Ooooh, diversion! Someone graduated from the Playskool Institute of Fucktard rhetoric! Let us restate: this is about baseball, which we hate for all of the reasons stated above. Not about football, a sport crippled in its own special way. We’re not arguing about which one’s better. That’s obvious: football, which trounces pantywaisted baseball in a street fight and smashes its face into a bus stop sign with ease. Even pro football’s better than baseball. Dammit, we’ll go there: Golf’s better than baseball, because there’s a chance we can listen to David Feherty and marvel at John Daly’s ability to not die and have the DTs on air. We’d rather tie our balls to a 747 and give the clearance from the tower ourselves than watch golf, but that’s the truth.









51
Allen says:
And here I thought nothing of literary value could ever come from an English major. That sir, is a masterpiece.
December 13th, 2007 at 5:02 pm
52
NDTom says:
@49
That one’s going to be easy, I’ve got an advanced copy of that list: “Everyone.*”
*no, seriously everyone.
December 13th, 2007 at 5:05 pm
53
Orson Swindle says:
Anyway, you kids these days need to learn a little respect for our national pasttime . . .
Not my national pasttime, and never will be.
December 13th, 2007 at 5:15 pm
54
Mr Pelican Pants says:
Orson,
I have to agree whole heartedly….but a guy I used to work with at UPS while I was in college , had a plan…it involved building a batting cage for his 8yr old son to learn to hit and pitch…fast forward 18yrs later…his son just signed a $53 million dollar deal after winning the Cy Young award…that son grew up to be Jake Peavey…and his dad is actually freakin nuts, but his genius cant be denied…..and he loves football, but fiquered baseball is a “career” sport..his attitude?
Baseball is safer….which means =easy money…his son was too short for Basketball, too little for football, put had a cannon for an arm, boring or not, baseball pays stupid money, even if no one shows up to watch it…..but Soccer is a communist plot from Communist countries trying to weasel there way in, like Dora the Explorer, trying to brainwash spanish and soccer at the same time on our kids…..
December 13th, 2007 at 5:15 pm
55
doctorevil says:
Haven’t read Bill Lee’s “The Wrong Stuff”, have you? Far more drugs, groupies and sex with drugs while on groupies (or whatever) than Jim Bouton and the ‘86 Mets combined.
It’s what America is all about.
December 13th, 2007 at 5:16 pm
56
Mr Pelican Pants says:
In lieu of the baseball scandal, EDSBS will be having mandatory drug test to all the posters….The blogosphere has no room for perfomance enhancing drugs….so if mine comes up positive for Dianabol, Winstrol V, Deca-Durabolin, Cytomel,Viagra,Propecia,Clomid,Clenbuterol, Lor Tabs,Primobolan,Somotropin,Anadrol 50….and random fish paralyzers….I hurt my shoulder helping an elderly lady move….these keep the inflammation down…plus I play in a pretty competitive Cricket League when I am not playing Australian Rules football….I think the announcers should be able to take steroids, especially the women…..
December 13th, 2007 at 5:28 pm
57
fattus says:
former baseball player, fan, enthusiast, basically live-and-breathe-baseball-man here……..but no longer.
there is no strategy in baseball anymore. there once was, but now it is only about home runs and strikeouts. i still play in summer leagues because i love to play. but i rarely watch it anymore and even when i do go to the park it is for the whole ballpark experience (like yelling at bullpen pitchers and winning money from high school kids at the radar gun toss). i only really watch a few innings and wander around the rest.
everything wrong with baseball starts and ends with the owners. that cartel is worse than the BCS. they didn’t give a shit about players injecting themselves because it led to more home runs, more strikeouts and, thus, more butts in seats.
baseball needs mark cuban owning the cubs, but that will never happen because of the shithead owners.
December 13th, 2007 at 5:28 pm
58
sandman227 says:
Question for baseball fans:
If the sport is so much better in person than on TV, then why does every ballpark have bars, restaurants, acrcades, Ferris Wheels, etc?
December 13th, 2007 at 5:34 pm
59
Mr Pelican Pants says:
I will say this…..Baseball is painful for anyone with ADD or ADHD to have to watch, live or at home….
at least with football you have constant action and drama….I only tune into baseball to watch the last 2 innings or last 1/2 of the 9th when the home team is behind…it just takes too long to get there, the pitcher gets too much time to shake off pitches, the batter has a choice whether he wants to wait on the pitcher, you could literally watch someone bat for 5 goddamn minutes….I say you get up there, ya get penalized if ya step out that box, or the pitcher can bean ya if ya step out of the batters box, just to be a dick…you get in the batters box, the pitcher steps on the mound and has like 3 secs to bring it, every time…a “pitch clock” if you will…..something, hell make the ball explode every once in a while
December 13th, 2007 at 5:40 pm
60
hunglikehussain says:
# 47
On some of these points I agree with you. If baseball is a thinking man’s sport, football is a drinking man’s sport.
Baseball is a sport you can take your elderly grandmother to see, football it’s the Romans vs. Jews part II.
Tailgating in baseball is…..to tell you the truth I have never seen it. Tailgating in football involves mounds of red meat, tribal cries and a certain alpha male type sexuality.
Baseball is General Omar Bradly. Football is General George Patton.
Baseball is Benjamin Disraeli. Football is Huey “Kingfish” Long.
In conclusion, different strokes for different folks. I hope this doesn’t make you feel like a wienie.
December 13th, 2007 at 5:46 pm
61
Stacy Keibler Luvs Me says:
Baseball Is Like Smooching Dept:
Grew up in Southern California, where playing baseball almost everyday was a whole lot of fun. Also enjoyed playing football, basketball and other sports.
But, watching baseball on TV, or even at Dodger Stadium or The Big “A”_hole, where the Los Angeles Angeles of Whiney-Heim play, when I get free tickets… man, I must agree with #55 (Fattus), it is pure torture.
Baseball reminds me of smooching…I like doing it myself, but do not care to see others do it one iota (whatever ‘iota’ means)…..
December 13th, 2007 at 5:53 pm
62
Palouse says:
Baseball is watching a game with your father. Having a cold beer and hot dog on a warm day in the summer at the ball park. Baseball is arguing statistics and salaries. Some of the best memories I have with my father were going to the ball park. We went to football games too, but baseball games were just more laid back and we talked more (I guess there’s alot more breaks and yes, less action, to talk).
I would never argue that baseball is more exciting or a better sport than football. But it is a nice diversion on a summer day, especially if you have a great ballpark in your city to go to.
I played for about 10 years until a motorcycle injury ended any aspirations of playing in college. But as Pelican Pants suggested, as soon as my son can throw a ball or hold a bat, I’ll teach him how to play.
December 13th, 2007 at 5:54 pm
63
Mat says:
I love baseball, but I think this is hilarious stuff. Good work.
Sidenote regarding one of the comments: The constant action argument is pretty weak given that in the 3.5 hours of watching a football game you get about 10 minutes of actual “action” in between the quarterback standing around hunched over men making signals with his hands and yelling about, watching the referees dawdle over to the replay cam or slow drawl the official verdict on a penalty we already knew about, etc etc etc. Sports are boring except when their not. Every sport has downtime.
December 13th, 2007 at 5:54 pm
64
hunglikehussain says:
Mr. Pelican Pants, no more cocktails for you!
December 13th, 2007 at 5:56 pm
65
fattus says:
#58
people go for the ballpark experience, not to watch the game.
December 13th, 2007 at 5:56 pm
66
Mr. Wrong says:
Can’t add much… baseball does suck. But, I did like Less Than Zero (book only). Of course I was one of those real people doing blow in the eighties, so I feel okay about that.
December 13th, 2007 at 5:58 pm
67
Big Ten Joe says:
Orson:
So you got cut from Little League . . . time to get over it, my friend!
Still, an enjoyable read, and I happen to agree with you on The Family Guy.
In my view:
College football and college basketball (and most other college sports) > Pro Tennis > Major League Baseball > all other pro sports
December 13th, 2007 at 5:58 pm
68
Mr. Wrong says:
SKLM-
Not even if it’s two beautiful girls?
December 13th, 2007 at 6:01 pm
69
KenyonBuck says:
I am an English grad student. I came here to take a break from writing a final in which I talk about Baudrillard. And there he is staring me in the face.
Thank you for making life just that much more absurd. And wrathful.
December 13th, 2007 at 6:07 pm
70
Reasonable_Bama_Fan says:
I don’t hate baseball like Orson does, but it’s not something you can watch straight through. Ok to have a game as a backup while you avoid commercials from your main shows.
Baseball is long periods of boredom followed by short periods of intense action.
Football is short periods of boredom followed by short periods of intense action.
Basketball is almost continuous action, but not very intense.
Hockey is complete continuous action, overwhelming and impossible to translate to TV.
I’ll say this for baseball, though, it can be hela good to listen to on the radio. Much better than football, the announcers just don’t have enough time to describe everything.
December 13th, 2007 at 6:15 pm
71
NRBQ says:
After reading this, yea, even as a baseball fan, I am left to gasp in rapt amazatation.
A batting helmet filled with potent cocktails to you, sir.
December 13th, 2007 at 6:18 pm
72
elwoodGT says:
Ladies and gentlemen, Orson Swindle is BACK!
December 13th, 2007 at 6:21 pm
73
Wippuh says:
Baseball will always trump football in my book! As for the no tailgating comment, just go a see game at Wrigley. It’s 81 games of pure tailgating gold in Wrigleyville.
And lets be honest, that loser doing the imitations of Madden doesn’t even come close to the pure awesomeness of Farrell doing Harry!
December 13th, 2007 at 6:22 pm
74
Stacy Keibler Luvs Me says:
My Bad Dept:
# 66 Mr. Wrong asks: “Not even if it’s two beautiful girls?”
Mr Wrong: I was wrong there….that would be cool! But, both babes have to be hot. I remember seeing Madonna and Brittney Spears kiss a while back on TV. It looked like someone kissing their aunt on the lips. Kind of wierd.
December 13th, 2007 at 6:24 pm
75
Mr Pelican Pants says:
#64
I was just making a point…I was actually pretty good at baseball…played baseball/football since I was 5, and many of my friends went onto pro baseball out of high school…I just hated catching unless I got to hit somebody at home plate…and thats why I loved football, some one talks smack, and its legal to knock their heads off when you catch em on a reverse or interception when they dont see it comin…plus baseball at the park ball level usually means getting home at 11pm or later depending on the game schedule, then getting up at 6am for school when your 7-8-9-10-11-12yrs old, plus playing doubleheaders on Saturdays got to be like a job with all the hrs and schoolwork….had to pick one to drop and I gladly picked baseball on time consumption alone
December 13th, 2007 at 6:24 pm
76
Tater Salad says:
To each his own, but I love it.
Tailgating in baseball = Wrigleyville or Yawkey Way. If you haven’t done it, you should.
And while a previous poster noted the home run dominance of this era, it’s so much fun to watch teams with payrolls under 50 mill play small ball, even if Billy Bean thinks it doesn’t work.
In my opinion, hitting a baseball is the hardest thing to do in sports. Couple that with the mental games between pitcher/batter, double switches (managing in the AL is shit), pinch runners, Jake Peavy pinch hitting in the 13th because he is literally the only player left, Glove Gems, spikes high, high and tight, Old Style, summer… rambling. I love it.
And the best part about baseball, ever? Thirsty Thursday at a AA stadium.
December 13th, 2007 at 6:26 pm
77
WDBill says:
I have to agree with most of the recent comments. As an English major myself, I applaud your commentary. However, one of the first things you learn is that this world is one full of “both/and”s instead of “either/or”s.
College football has an unrivaled atmosphere, and I have some of my greatest childhood memories going to AU games. Those experiences continued through college and into today.
The atmosphere with baseball is different, but in a different way. As compared ot football, in my opinion, the landscape of baseball has changed less drastically over time than has football. When watching a baseball game, I can’t help but think that I am participating in the same experience that generations upon generations of Americans have experienced.
As for being a Southerner, the tilt in the “tailgating” or social experience/atmosphere category definately tilts in favor of football. In the south we never had a major league baseball franchise until the Braves moved to ATL. As everyone knows, this is why college sports are more important in the south than up north; we didn’t have any professional teams to get behind.
There is nothing like a cool saturday with a cooler full of cocktails tailgating for a football game though.
December 13th, 2007 at 6:36 pm
78
Mr Pelican Pants says:
Well its gonna be hard to convert football types to baseball when there is no Spread offense….just saying
December 13th, 2007 at 6:42 pm
79
Wippuh says:
#76
Thirsty Thursdays ROCK! I’m only missed a handful of Birmingham Baron’s Thirsty Thursdays in the last 7 years!
December 13th, 2007 at 6:47 pm
80
The Conscience of a Nation says:
I’ve told several people this before, but I think it bears mentioning again: Orson used to be the biggest baseball fan I knew. He was a stat hound, could explain the infield fly rule so that even my mom could understand it; we’d watch Baseball Tonight with Peter Gammons every evening and went to UF baseball games on dates all the time. I remember some lovely afternoons spent watching the Cardinals spring training at Al Lang Stadium (which, if you’re from St. Pete, you know is thisclose to heaven on a sunny day.)
Oh, and Big Ten Joe– he didn’t get cut from Little League; he was a volunteer umpire.
It’s not that he doesn’t get baseball. Really. He just stopped loving it, bit by bit, scandal by strike. It was sad to watch, actually, like a messy divorce between friends.
December 13th, 2007 at 6:48 pm
81
Ltrain says:
We all know the moon isn’t made of green cheese…but if it was made of pork ribs, would you eat it????
December 13th, 2007 at 6:53 pm
82
WDBill says:
Kinda like I’ve stopped loving this thread. I just don’t understand the antagonism for another American institution. Like I said earlier, save your vitriol for soccer. Most people that I have found that dislike baseball are kinda ambivilent to it.
December 13th, 2007 at 6:55 pm
83
hunglikehussain says:
#78
Mr. pelican pants, that’s spread EAGLE offense.
I meant to differentiate between that and the Las Vegas spread offense, which is a favorite of mine.
December 13th, 2007 at 6:58 pm
84
Anonymous IV says:
In my opinion there are only three sports that matter: college football, non-US futbol, and wrestling. College football is America’s pastime. More schools were playing ball when baseball was still only played in the Northeast. I also forgive Jim Thorpe for having played baseball. His biggest accomplishments were at Carlislie and the Olympics. Non-US futbal has all the passion of college football and there is no thing like the World Cup. Also I respect the hell out futbal officals since they are also running and all theletes are in insane shape. Wrestling is the real test of manhood. It is just you and the other guy going mano a mano. Boxing should also be included.
December 13th, 2007 at 7:11 pm
85
Mr Pelican Pants says:
Well I’ll say this…the best thing about Spring training in Florida….the gold diggin groupies….I was in Ft. Lauderdale in during spring training, met A-Rod in a dive bar, he had a AMEX Centurion card that the bar tender said kept getting declined…
December 13th, 2007 at 7:13 pm
86
Stacy Keibler Luvs Me says:
Soccer Dept:
#82: WDBill, You write about saving hate for soccer. But, may I ask by soccer, what do you mean? If it is the ghastly MLS, I totally agree. That is one mess on top of another mess.
But, World Cup soccer is awesome. Multiply the passion (or hate) between ‘Bama vs Auburn 100 times.
Top professional leagues, (England, Italy, Spain and some South American countries) play at great levels.
A lot of fun to watch, while drinking Irish beer, blah, blah, blah….
December 13th, 2007 at 7:19 pm
87
Land of Os(borne) says:
I just turned in a 22-page paper on Baudrillard, hyperconformity, mediation, and sports spectatorship. It was awful.
*looks over shoulder, expecting to find Orson standing there*
December 13th, 2007 at 7:41 pm
88
gerry dorsey says:
i love baseball at all levels, but purely as a specator sport it can’t carry football’s jock. i grew up playing both so i have an appreciation for the intricacies of both. football is now america’s sport, but i would say it only has been for about 15 years or so.
and don’t even fucking bring soccer into this. any activity where acting hurt is a regular occurance and even encouraged is being played a bunch of ass clowns.
December 13th, 2007 at 7:43 pm
89
sandman227 says:
Fattus:
It was a facetious question.
I’m not casting stones at anyone who loves baseball, but the talking heads repeating “record attendance” stats need to give it a rest. The fact of the matter is that no other major sport has to resort to having amusement parks in the stadium in order to drive attendance.
I can understand minor league teams having “bat night” and other events, but major league teams shouldn’t need gimmicks to draw people in.
December 13th, 2007 at 7:44 pm
90
She Blinded Me With Violence says:
And a Pulitzer in journalism for you, Mr. Swindle.
Now run tell that shit on the mountain.
December 13th, 2007 at 7:56 pm
91
Chuck says:
The Mitchell Report did not take place!
December 13th, 2007 at 8:05 pm
92
Go Blue, Eh says:
Orson, if you get run out of the country for your hatred of baseball, you are welcome in Canada. Our football is subpar but at least our national sports are hockey and lacrosse.
Baseball isn’t a sport it is a pastime like knitting or stamp collecting.
Baseball is America’s national pastime. Football is America’s national sport.
December 13th, 2007 at 8:24 pm
93
PJ from NU in SF says:
Oh, boy. Yeesh. I haven’t seen a tantrum like that since the last big family holiday with my 3-year-old niece.
But seriously, after taking note of TCOAN’s #80, I truly feel sorry for Orson. Nobody should have to go through anything that painful. But that’s what a true artist does: takes his pain and turns it into something beautiful. One hundred cocktails to you, genius. I couldn’t disagree with you more, but at least in a few respects, this is still a free country.
Some people like football, some people like baseball. Some of us swing both ways. If we had a hockey team in SF, I’d go to a few games, but that’s because I grew up where you could build your own rink for three months out of the year, if the weather held.
(My own estrangement from pro football isn’t rage-filled, just cold-blooded. The best I can do these days is muster a half-hearted yippie for the Packers, because no NFL team in Alta California is worth a damn, and the less I think about the Lions, the happier I am.)
Just my 2¢…
December 13th, 2007 at 8:27 pm
94
Chuck says:
On a separate note, I’ve never understood the whole “soccer is a commie conspiracy” meme, since professional soccer in Europe is far closer to a capitalist system than MLB, to say nothing of the parity-enforcing socialism of the NFL.
December 13th, 2007 at 8:32 pm
95
ESMjr. says:
i actually think roland barthes’ ‘mythologies’ offers a more useful model to critique the baseball phenomenon than baudrillard. plus, it’s very short.
(tries desperately to hide massive wood for this bullshit)
December 13th, 2007 at 8:36 pm
96
Biggus Rickus says:
I used to like baseball well enough. The Braves sucked, but Dale Murphy was the shit. All of a sudden the Braves started winning, and I was happy. Then, somewhere around age 26 I realized that baseball was really dull. Maybe it was the psychotropic drugs catching up with me, but it became a meandering evening of high, low, outside, linedrive, homerun(still boring), leaping catch, diving stop, pitch count, trip to the mound, and so on, and it just bloody sucked. I’ve watched football high and it was a wonderful excursion into strategy. I wondered what the guard might do on a given play. What a well designed play, I’d think as I watched an off-tackle run go for seven yards. I’ve seen baseball high and fallen asleep. I lost it or it lost me. I’m not sure which, but I agree with this entire rant by Orson.
December 13th, 2007 at 9:10 pm
97
ClydeB says:
Um……..I was a physics major
December 13th, 2007 at 9:11 pm
98
Hokie Andrew says:
Dude,
I’m only halfway through the screed and I had to stop and tell you how perfect it is. You have given written form to my total disdain for all that is baseball and for that I cannot thank you enough.
December 13th, 2007 at 9:23 pm
99
John says:
Sorry, you totally lost me after you pissed all over Motorhead. To say musicians are full of shit is like saying a baseball game is boring. While true, it is unnecessary because everyone has accepted it as fact.
December 13th, 2007 at 9:32 pm
100
Hokie Andrew says:
Also I gotta agree with SKLM. I’m not a huge fan of soccer, I played when I was younger like every kid in the burbs but it holds no interest for me now as an adult. But living in Brazil for a little while earlier this year I have to say that the atmosphere surrounding a soccer game down there is akin to any great rivalry game. It’s absolutely incredible.
And bundagaiting is just fucking awesome.
December 13th, 2007 at 9:56 pm