Last week, the UW football squad won its first game in more than a year. Today, it won its first important game in an even longer time.
And what a game it was.
The dreaded USC, longtime 500-lb. gorilla of the Pac-10 Conference and current #3-ranked team in the nation, was expected to trounce the lowly Huskies. Instead, a last-second field goal created one of the biggest upsets in Husky history.
I love it, I love it, I love it. (Did I tell you I love it?)
…and best wishes to top local music producer Conrad Uno (Young Fresh Fellows, PUSA, and more). He and his lovely bride Emily Bishton renewed their wedding vows at Safeco Field on Sunday. The here-linked Seattle Times article mentions almost nothing about Uno’s musical career.
…just where Link light rail will take us starting next month, I found myself directed to a Google Maps page that still includes the Longacres horse racing track. Alas, Longacres disappeared in 1992, when the World Wide Web was little more than a glint in Tim Berners-Lee’s eyes.
By the way: The light rail’s initial southern terminus, the “Tukwila-International Boulevard Station,” is smack dab in the middle of nothing but Sea-Tac Airport’s outer sprawl. There will be a shuttle bus from there to the airport terminal until December, when Link’s own airport stop’s ready. I’ve found no official word on whether any other Metro routes will be revised to stop anywhere near the TIB. Right now, none do, except for a couple of commute-only express runs.
But I’ve a less hectic day-work schedule this week, so let’s try to catch up on the recent news:
IT’S MID-APRIL, and that means two topics are filling the op-ed sections across America’s newspapers:
(1) Calls for income tax “reform” (i.e., commentators wishing lower taxes for members of their particular favorite subcultures, and higher taxes for members of other subcultures); and
(2) Conservatives (plus a few highbrow-academic liberals) pontificating prosaically about baseball as The Most Perfect Thing On Earth.
I happen to like baseball. I just don’t like most of the people who write about it as some secular/sacred rite.
Herewith, some of the real resons folks such as George Will love the sport:
TOMORROW: James Twitchell, an academic author who (hearts) the culture of marketing.
ELSEWHERE:
I keep wanting to know what Go2Guy thought of the Huskies’, Zags’, and Sounders’ spectacular wins. He’s not there. What entertainments do Gene Stout and William Arnold want me to feel guilty about missing this weekend? No way to know. Tomorrow, the Sunday preview paper will bear only the Seattle Times name. Which, if any, P-I comics will be carried over into it?
…for the know-nothing videophobes in our audience (ignorance of your culture is NOT considered cool):
Bonneville International, which just regained ownership of KIRO Radio last year, will switch KIRO-AM to all sports talk next April. KIRO-AM’s news and news-talk fare will move exclusively to 97.3 FM.
Thus will end more than 35 years of what was successively billed as “KIRO Newsradio 7,” then “KIRO Newsradio 71,” then “710 KIRO.” (Each more precise frequency reference responded to the prevalence of more precise tuning displays on car radios.)
KIRO-AM is one of the city’s oldest stations. It goes back to the Old Time Radio golden age, during which it amassed a larger collection of CBS Radio network recordings than CBS itself had (a collection of phonograph records that’s now owned by the UW). It eased into a middle-of-the-road music and news format by the early 1960s.
In the early 1970s, Bonneville spent its way to the top of the local ratings by ditching the DJs (except on weekends) and hiring a full news reporting staff.
I heard Nixon’s resignation speech on KIRO. I heard the start of the first Gulf War on KIRO. The voices of Bill Yeend, Dave Ross, Jim French, the late Wayne Cody, et al. are permanently etched in my brain’s ROM.
It was weird, on Election Night, to bring a cheap, FM-only portable radio to my temp office site and try to listen (during a dinner break) to NPR’s blathering “analysis” of returns that hadn’t come in yet. KIRO had already begun simulcasting its news-talk on FM, but I couldn’t pull in that signal from where I was.
But that’s one reason why they’re doing this. The public now associates AM talk with looney right-wing demagogues. FM is now where the targeted demographic audience segments go for everything except sports (with a few notable exceptions such as KIXI and KPTK).
LET ME BE the first to bestow the most freakin’-obvious nickname onto the Mariners’ new manager: The Intentional Wakamatsu. Thank you, really.
SOME 3,000 WAMU HEADQUARTERS STAFFERS could lose their jobs in the next few months. Three thousand bankers hitting the pavement at once won’t be a good thing for all the local consumer industries (from real estate on down to doggie daycare) that have staked their futures on catering to the upper professional caste.
And where are we gonna place all these idled IT techs, comptrollers, paper pushers, junior flunkies, second-tier poobahs, and adjustable-rate adjusters? Michael Moore, on Larry King Live, suggested any automaker bailout be predicated on making the automakers start making what we need to have made (public transit infrastructure, post-petroleum vehicles). But what kind of make-work project can we create for bankers? Can we (and by “we,” I really mean Gates and Allen) launch a massive startup employing hundreds upon hundreds of bureaucrats to create an eco-friendly actuarial table? Or will we see panhandlers outside the WaMu Center tower holding professionally designed signs reading WILL WOO-HOO FOR FOOD?
The Beijing Olympic opening ceremony is the most yin/yang-y spectacle of opposites ever created outside of Hollywood (or the Lucasfilm compound in NoCal).
It’s military/industrial regimentation on a mega-massive scale, put into the service of harmony, humanity, and beauty.
It’s a cross between Busby Berkeley and Bollywood, achieved with a brutal precision that counteracts all the romanticism.
It’s both amazingly beautiful and ultimately scary.