Monday, December 30, 2013

“Doc” Lacks The Transparency Expected Of A Tell-All Tale Of Wasted Phenom Dwight Gooden


“The same guy who went to the World Series and the White House also found himself in housing project apartments with lowlife moochers, risking his talent and trashing his life for the fleeting pleasure of getting high.”

“You’d have to look hard to find another young athlete in any sport who had risen so high so quickly and then fallen so hard. Too much, too fast, too young, my life was spinning wildly, and I was the one who didn’t have a clue.”

Growing up a Mets fan, Dwight “Dr. K” Gooden was a larger-than-life figure, a flame-throwing pitcher who, as I matured, grew to represent the lost potential and abuse of the ‘80s in many ways. Having distanced myself from baseball for a number of reasons over the years, I was thrilled to return to some of those days with “Doc: A Memoir,” written by Gooden and Ellis Henican.

The story takes little time to develop. The opening scene certainly grabs you from the jump, depicting a coked-out Gooden (just 21 at the time!) have to watch his teammates in the ticker-tape parade through Manhattan celebrating the 1986 World Series championship.

This book was a relatively quick and easy read, although some of the subject matter is difficult to digest (or comprehend). Unfortunately, the work was littered with issues that made it problematic to read. There were some grammatical concerns, sure; there were some characters (such as ex-girlfriend Carlene) who are presented without introduction. Also, the years fly past in the telling, making it difficult to get centered chronologically, with confusion surrounding timelines.

The descriptions of some of the key characters here are difficult to reconcile with depictions of their actions as well. His mother, for instance, he describes as religious and “upstanding,” yet in the next breath he details her attempt to murder his father in a tone that includes impossible humor. His father is described as attentive and available, but he borders on the domineering in his over-training of his son, and even brings his young son with him to rendevouz with other women. Gooden writes about an upbringing that is idyllic and pastoral in some ways, yet punctuated with indescribable violence and craziness.

“And the whole idea of good, loving people sometimes doing reckless, self-destructive things—that was business as usual for the Goodens.”

“Yes, I’d achieved the dream my Dad had for me. I’d achieved the dream he had for himself. But what was the cost?”

“I was confused. How did my father, who had a third-grade education and had worked his whole life at a chemical plant, know what should be in a major-league baseball contract? It was the same as the way I wondered how he learned all those pitching drills he put me through. Dad just knew stuff. I had my concerns, but I didn’t say anything.”

Perhaps most challenging, however, is that for a supposed tell-all, this book was written in a passive voice, with Gooden serving almost as an observer to his own life and decisions; in my estimation, this is not a fair or particularly well-chosen approach for a piece of this ilk. Some intense scenes (such as an encounter with the urine tester) suffer some in the telling of them as though they are happening to someone else.

“But who was Dwight Gooden? ... It was almost like I was two people in one. That both those people could inhabit the same body was a conflict that wouldn’t end quickly or well.”

Gooden is certainly good at blame-shifting and circular logic. At one point, he essentially blames his wife’s pain about his constant relapses for the rocky state of their marriage that then leads him to be an adulterer. For the reader, the only impression we are left with is that his wife stuck with him through everything—serving pretty much as a single parent—and she is repaid with suggestions that he had an affair because of her?

He’d like you to believe that he found cocaine mostly because he was bored, which obviously feels a bit simplistic considering the 20-something-year hold it had on him.

“Cocaine was a jet, and beer was a rickety trolley. Coke gave me a feeling I’d always wanted but didn’t know how to find it. It convinced me immediately that nothing else mattered at all ... This is how I wanted to feel.”

On the plus side, the circumstances surrounding his late-career no-hitter with the Yankees—with his father clinging to life—are pretty remarkable. However, even that celebratory moment must be examined in the context of Gooden deciding not to board a flight to see his father for perhaps the last time. Within the backdrop of the book, this chapter does redeem the entire book in some ways.

He also shares some amusing anecdotes throughout, and there were also some somewhat-unexpected, behind-the-scenes insights and tales-out-of-school revelations. Gooden is somewhat polite—yet clear—in maintaining that Darryl Strawberry (who he calls a “phony”) is not, and never was, a friend, and is, in fact, a two-faced, hypocritical snitch.

Gooden implies that N.A. meetings saved his life and health.* And from a purely comedic standpoint, there was a Red Lobster reference (below) that registered a rough 12 on the Unintentional Comedy Scale (apologies to Isaiah Thomas).

“Now I’d had some rough days back at the Comfort Inn. But I promise you, it was no fleabag [hotel], unless fleabags have started offering Jacuzzis and flat-screen TVs and Red Lobsters next door.”

At the end of the day, it’s difficult to read this book without muttering the words “fucking loser” in your mind at each individual anecdote. Yes, he tells a sad tale, but he’s a sad person, too. I was admittedly unaware that many of these struggles are ongoing with Gooden, and I didn’t know of his affiliation with the “Celebrity Rehab” reality show.

There is certainly a degree of admirable bravery involved in reliving your sins in such a manner, to go with situations such as sharing a jail with your son, faking at religion and dwindling near death. And admittedly, the book does get very emotional and earnest at the end, but is all feels a bit too late by that point, and difficult to juxtapose with the tone of the rest of the book.

“I let them know just how powerful and destructive drugs can be, how they can take you away from everything you love until the drugs are all that you love. Then I talk about where I am now. I tell the story, which is my favorite, of being in the hotel room and hearing that gospel song. Even today, that story gives me goosebumps. Sometimes I tear up. I recognize that moment as the blessing it was. It was kind of magical, and it was real.
“Then I tell them about my road back.”



*Editor’s Note: Googling “Fat Dwight Gooden” brings up some rather awful pictures.

Monday, December 23, 2013

Get Your Festivus On ...


I've got a lot of problems with you people ...

Friday, December 20, 2013

Limerick Friday LXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXVII: Fast-Fading “Homeland” Mercifully Ends Season 3, Plus 2014 Is Fast Approaching



“Homeland” wasn’t exactly a snore
But become an implausible bore
Brody stuck his neck out
Left Carrie to cry and shout
Best news? No Dana in Season 4

Six Ws in a row for the Pack
Looking ahead and never back
A road win at Tennessee
Looks good to beat the SEC
Finding an identity and getting on track

With promise it once swole
Now the tumbleweeds roll
The vision of Mr. Magoo
Nepotism everywhere, it’s true
Staying afloat is the only goal

An outcry for Hairston, P.J.
From a fanbase that says it’s OK
Looks like a bottom-feeder
Just the latest UNC-Cheater
Ain’t that just the Carolina Way
 
A year that included more grieving
In family I kept believing
Was confused at times
‘Til I ran outta rhymes
A great story for 2014 we’re weaving



Tuesday, December 17, 2013

Deep Thoughts By No-Look McFadden: Episode 70



#1
When intellectual graffiti makes you stop and think.

#2
Offered without comment:

“One reasons for the Republicans’ ferocity is their sense that their time is inexorably running out.” ~Sean Wilenz, Rolling Stone

#3
Has anyone gone from “Hope” to “Nope” faster than RGIII (rd-string)?

#4
Sticking a knife in a toaster will never not make me think of my Mom. She was forwarded this one in fractions of a second.

#5
In a league facing many challenges and scandals these days, one of the most dangerous in terms of precedent is the NFL becoming more and more like the NBA in terms of favorable calls going toward star players.

#6
One time I almost bought a Ryan Adams album. Then I realized I would have to begin bullying myself.

#7
Nothing less than a truly incredible picture as a young Bill Clinton meets JFK (#30 here). Wow.

#8
From the Question That Sounds Dirty Like It’s For A Hooker But It’s Not category: Is the Super 8 the top or the bottom?

#9
*** “Person of Interest” Spoiler Alert ***
The first episode following the shocking death of Detective Jocelyn Carter was going to be emotional no matter what. But the opening to “The Devil’s Share”—set to the Johnny Cash cover of “Hurt”—was both insanely powerful and perfectly rendered.

#10
And because it ‘tis the season, how about a 10-month-old’s wish list for Christmas being pretty humorous and spot on ...


Monday, December 16, 2013

No One Pokes Fun At Themselves Like Superchunk



Pretty damn funny.

Friday, December 13, 2013

Limerick Friday LXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXVI: A Difficult Farewell to Richard Harrow, Plus Gemma Teller Is Turning Into Jason Voorhees


A serene goodbye
To a complex guy
Saddened me to my marrow
The death of Richard Harrow
“Boardwalk Empire,” my oh my

A success by any measure
The Scooters, a scoring treasure
‘Til along came Josh McNown
And the Bucs D came to town
Losing to them, a confusing pleasure

For some there’s no pleasin’
Mad for no rhyme or reason
For me, it’s a time to try
And remember all of why
Welcome to the holiday season

Progress has been pretty slow
But onward Miami does go
Have got themselves off the ropes
Now clinging to playoff hopes
Who knew Dolphins could swim in the snow?
 
A series finale full of death and life
“Sons of Anarchy” showed Jax’s strife
Tara died, was hard to look
But then they let Gemma off the hook
Guess Sutter can’t kill off his wife



Thursday, December 12, 2013

Dapper Dan's Football Army



Maybe there is a generation with some potential after all ...

Monday, December 09, 2013

Duke Hospital Tackles Jimmy V's Speech



I love this.

That is all.


Friday, December 06, 2013

Limerick Friday LXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXV: A True Visionary Leaves Our World, Plus “Sons Of Anarchy” Happened



A legend on the planet, indeed
Saved a country by planting freedom’s seed
Imprisoned for much of his life
Then took on bigotry and strife
Nelson Mandela, godspeed

A season for the ages
Has brought out Pack fan rages
No talent left behind
Must recruit and grind
A bounceback must come in stages

The fantasy Final Four
Luck determines the score
Lineup picks a struggle
Flex spots to juggle
Always left yearning for more

A magical season for lowly Duke
Whether legitimate or a fluke
Doesn’t matter, I guess
And you know the rest
The ‘Noles will treat ‘em like puke
 
From hero to villain
He really needed killin’
For the demise of Clay Morrow
Had very little sorrow
But now some plotlines need fillin’



Wednesday, December 04, 2013

Demonic, Drunk Or Dauntless Dan Torrance? King’s “Doctor Sleep” Emerges As Worthy Sequel To “The Shining”



“He had come to believe that life was a series of ironic ambushes.”

“He paused. ‘There are other worlds than these.’”

“Life was a wheel, its only job was to turn, and it always came back to where it had started.”

One of Stephen King’s most beloved novels is “The Shining,” so his decision to write, in effect, a sequel to it was met with confusion and doubt in many quarters. King’s latest, “Doctor Sleep” flashes forward some quarter-century to envision creepy-kid Danny Torrance as struggling-blackout-drunk Dan Torrance—and what happens when he’s given something to truly live for and pass on.

The latest vivid, compelling read from King is a fan-fiction dream come true, though the author admitted to having trepidations about writing such a sequel, but draws from “Firestarter” and “Green Mile” themes here to pull it off rather seamlessly.

We are presented with a rather startling introduction to adult Danny, who seems to have developed a rather understandable—if largely unmanageable—drinking problem as a result of an unsettling upbringing filled with REDRUM and imaginary twin girls. The mentor from his years at the Overlook Hotel, Dick Halloran (“The world has a way of keeping things in balance. I believe that. There’s a saying: When the pupil is ready, the teacher will appear. I was your teacher,” he tells Dan), plays a bit role as a sometimes-mentor, but even he can’t veer Dan away from a life spent drifting from fight to bar to liquor store.

Ask your question, son. I can’t stay. This world is a dream of a dream to me now.”

It seems to me you grew up fine, son, but you still owe a debt ... Pay it.”

“There came a time when you realized that moving on was pointless. That you took yourself with you wherever you went.”

Continuing his stories with connections to North Carolina, King documented Dan’s ugly misdeeds in Wilmington, highlighted lowlighted by a heartbreaking depiction of an abused toddler. Any fan of King’s is eminently aware of how deeply personal the subject matter here is to the author, who wrote an emotional prologue relating to “finding the bottom” in Alcoholics Anonymous.

“The man who wrote Doctor Sleep is very different from the well-meaning alcoholic who wrote The Shining, but both remain interested in the same thing: telling a kickass story.”

Through some combination of divine providence and fate, Dan finds himself helping elderly nursing-home patients ease into death while re-establishing his own identity in soberness. On a side note, I felt as if skipping Dan’s story ahead three or six years with little insight into his life or recovery was a bit problematic in terms of context for Dan’s turnaround.

“He thought: If I drink, the Overlook wins. Even though it burned to the ground when the boiler exploded, it wins. If I don’t drink, I go crazy.
“He thought: All that we see or seem is but a dream within a dream.”

“But when the young guy looked up at him, Kingsley saw the eyes were clear of everything but desperation. ... mostly it was the way he held the bottle, hating it and loving it and needing it all at the same time.
“At last Dan brought out the words he had been running from all his life.
“‘I need help.’”

However, when “The True Knot” and psychic-ish young girl Abra enter the story, the pace ramps up quickly and the novel absorbs you. Led by the impossibly beautiful and cruel Rose the Hat, the True is rejuvenated and made immortal via “the steam,” which is the essence of pain, death and agony. These are “the RV people,” and King’s goes to great lengths—and even greater writing—to describe them and their role in the American landscape and fabric.

“America is a living body, the highways are its arteries, and the True Knot slips along them like a silent virus.”

They eat screams and drink pain.”

The book includes a number of emotional scenes, including one where Abra is overcome with tears that are shed through Dan’s eyes. There are also some very jarring scenarios, drawing extensively on the terror of torture at times. And as usual, this story is yet another King work that lends itself quite easily to cinematic interpretation, including scenes such as seeing “REDRUM” in the mirror in quite creepy fashion.

There is a rather unexpected revelation late in the book (no spoilers here) that dramatically shifts the perspective of the events that take place near the story’s conclusion. Continuing with King’s late-career trend, “Doctor Sleep” ends on a positive note, minus the seemingly inevitable character loss that’s largely anticipated by old-school readers.

King dedicated the book to legendary musician Warren Zevon and threw Jax Teller’s (“Sons of Anarchy”) name in along the way as a cultural reference, and he does a nice job of connecting the world of the Overlook with modern-day New England. Suffice it to say that, boosted by a wink and nod to the ghost of his father Jack, Danny seems to find his role and worth in the universe, lending something beautiful to “Doctor Sleep.”

King certainly bit off plenty in electing to pursue an extension of such a landmark novel, and with a few hiccups here and there, he largely pulls it off. It’s an ambitious work that lacks some of the frantic intensity and horror of some of his earlier pieces, but he does a more-than-admirable job of tackling a monumental task in “Doctor Sleep.”


“Perhaps kids really did come into the world trailing clouds of glory, as Wordsworth had so confidently proclaimed, but they also shit in their pants until they learned better.”

“‘Don’t go.’

“‘I won’t. I’m with you.’ So he was. It was his terrible privilege.”

Monday, December 02, 2013

The Scooters Take Next Steps


Step 1: Earn a playoff bid.
Step 2: Win first-round playoff matchup.
(Step 2 Bonus Points: Beat the league douchebag in process.)
Step 3: Continue to survive and advance.