Friday, April 28, 2023

Limerick Friday #582: Yes, I'll Have Another Draft, Pour Favor-- Day 1,140

 
Another quiet first round
From the 'Fins, not a sound
Cuz of tampering and trades
Every pick fades
At least bust stress is not to be found

What makes him tick?
Why's he act like a prick?
A douche for a boss
But no big loss
I spot frauds quick

No good does this portend
So on drinks I shall spend
While others do foment
Just live in the moment
In this week that won't end

Examine the whole season, lets
Don't place your bets
Slumps take place
And injuries apace
Assume that time'll help the Mets

Find the friends
On whom you can depend
Ignore the rest
Rely on the best
And trust in what karma will send


Thursday, April 27, 2023

Tuesday, April 25, 2023

Day 1,137, Quasi-Quarantine: This Sounds Quite Nice -- Can I Give You A Strong "Maybe"?

 

This job description looks way more appealing today than it did a couple of days ago.

Monday, April 24, 2023

Day 1,136, Quasi-Quarantine: Who Ordered Layoffs On Their Cake?

 

I couldn't go to the "Not great, Bob!" gif again here, but the sentiment persists.

Sigh.

Friday, April 21, 2023

Limerick Friday #581: "The Mandalorian" Salvages The Tone At Season 3's End -- Day 1,133


The Mandalorians did rally
For an uplifting finale
Now "Ahsoka"'s on deck
Should be intense as heck
More "Star Wars" storylines to tally

Worthless replies
Plus dead eyes
Promises broken
Grudges awoken
A culture built on lies

Spiritual and brave
One of my faves
But intense and ominous
Like the ocean's promise
Welcome back, "100 Foot Wave"

Trying to get on a heater
Then they called Scherzer a cheater
Injuries linger
Umpires get the finger
Mets fans need Tito's by the liter 

Things are gettin' harry
And more than a bit scary
Shit's escalatin'
And I ain't hatin'
This final direction of "Barry"


Thursday, April 20, 2023

Day 1,132, Quasi-Quarantine: Near-Overwhelming "The Deluge" Straddles Fiction And Non-Fiction In Look At Our Climate Future


"We protest, invest, divest, blockade, persuade, disobey, make nonviolent trouble, and most importantly, we vote, every race, no matter what. And if there's no one worth voting for, bitch, get yourself a clipboard, get your signatures, and get yourself on that motherfucking ballot."

A meticulously realized tale of climate fiction, "The Deluge" is staggeringly detailed and vividly rendered. Stephen Markley shields the reader from absolutely nothing, painting a picture of a world 15 years from now that is wracked by extensions of today's political divisions and extreme weather.

The imagery can be flat-out overwhelming, challenging the audience to embrace the potential of horrors to come. Markley asks you to keep a litany of characters straight and to pull for unlikeable ones at times, but the result is three-dimensional presences to carry the story along.

"The unnerving truth is that you and I, we don't have identity anymore. We vote, value, verify, vaccinate, and venerate based on the machine learning behind our many screens."

"The Deluge" is eminently accessible -- partially due to references to both Raleigh and Stephen King -- to readers of all types. A weighty and stunning work, and should be required reading for anyone seeking a realistic portrayal of what climate change can wrought on the world ... and on us.

"I could believe we would free ourselves of these mournful histories, that all our tears and sorrow would be given back to us, and though we walked these ruins now, we would begin again, and carry across impossible time the glory of this ancient and magnificent world."

Wednesday, April 19, 2023

Day 1,131, Quasi-Quarantine: Important Work-Related, Floor-Adjacent Afternoon Activities

 

I'm fine.
It's fine.
The team's fine.
Everything is fine. 

How are you?

Tuesday, April 18, 2023

Day 1,130, Quasi-Quarantine: Capturing The Jazz-Hip Hop Legacy Of Tribe Called Quest

 

To celebrate the 30th anniversary of the "The Low End Theory" (can that be right?!), Tribe Called Quest released a box set to celebrate one of the greatest hip-hop albums ever made.

The collection is comprised of eight 7" 45s with custom sleeves, all housed in a fabric-wrapped singles carrying case. It's a unique way to experience "Verses from the Abstract," "Check the Rhime," "Scenario," and other classics.

Each record has a distinct color scheme, marked by galaxy, splatter, and other effects. This box set is a keeper, and among the finest ways possible to honor Q-Tip, Phife Dawg, Ali Shaheed Muhammad, and Jarobi White.

Can you kick it?

Monday, April 17, 2023

Day 1,129, Quasi-Quarantine: Season Four of "Barry" Is Upon Us As The Countdown To Saying Goodbye Begins


If the first two episodes were any indication, the final season of the best show on television is going to be, as the kids say, a banger.

The deftness of how the balancing act between tragedy and comedy is handled in "Barry" is equaled perhaps only by "Better Call Saul." I both eagerly await and desperately do not want to see how the series ends.

Final episode watch party at Dave & Buster's?

Limerick Friday #580: Raise Your Blue Milk To Paz Vizsla -- Day 1,126

 
Action that wouldn't cease
Warriors combining on lease
Tried to unite Mandalore
But now what's in store?
Paz Vizsla, rest in peace

The trip started kinda shitty
Cancelled tix to the Windy City
To Virginia in lieu
Roller-coasters and baseball, too
Rescuing spring break from pity

Din Djarin kidnapped
The Mandalorian fleet scrapped
The return of Moff Gideon
With a Dark Saber of obsidian
How will the season finale get wrapped?!

Pitch clocks and steals
Plus failed trade deals
Toss in injuries
And you can see the hurries
To ensure every hurt Met heals

As our ocean dies
We poison the skies
As we stand by, livid
The future is vivid
"Extrapolations" surfaces the lies


Thursday, April 13, 2023

Day 1,125, Quasi-Quarantine: Sally O'Malley Brings The "I'm 50!" Vibe


Molly Shannon evokes simpler days -- in so many ways.

Wednesday, April 12, 2023

Day 1,124, Quasi-Quarantine: Aristocratic Subversive Turns House Arrest Into Beautiful Gift In "A Gentleman In Moscow"

 

"For as it turns out, one can revisit the past quite pleasantly, as long as one does so expecting nearly every aspect of it to have changed."

Based on a poem of questionable meaning and authorship, Count Alexander Rostov is branded a subversive and a Former Person in Moscow and relegated to house arrest in a dingy storage area in the Metropol Hotel. This is where Amor Towles's "A Gentleman in Moscow" begins, with unfathomable adventures following anon.

"Vyshinsky: Why did you write the poem?
"Rostov: It demanded to be written. I simply happened to be sitting at the particular desk on the particular morning when it chose to make its demands."

Leaning into his situation despite his aristocratic upbringing, Rostov fashions a new world within the walls of the hotel, forging unlikely friendships and unexpected occupations. Towles is careful to show -- with subtlety and nuance -- the erudite Rostov's maturation as he learns about himself, his country, and his society.

"For what matters in life is not whether we receive a round  of applause; what matters is whether we have the courage to venture forth despite the uncertainty of acclaim."

"History is the business of identifying momentous events from the comfort of a high-back chair."

In a word, "A Gentleman in Moscow" is a delight, spanning time, genre, and classes in an intricate design that is a credit to Towles's talent for structure. I could have lived with and listened to Rostov's escapades and adventures in the Metropol forever, making this a novel deserving of the highest reader compliment:

I did not want it to end.

"'Who would have imagined,' he said, 'when you were sentenced to life in the Metropol all those years ago, that you had just become the luckiest man in all of Russia.'"

Tuesday, April 11, 2023

Monday, April 10, 2023

Day 1,122, Quasi-Quarantine: That Post-Spring Break Vibe

 

It just me looking at work chats and emails after a week off.