"The Halloween Grinch"


Republished from three years ago, when my oldest boy Tommy was only 14. He's 17 now and still hates Halloween...





Everyone loves Halloween. Everyone you’ve met. Everyone you’ve seen.

But not in our house high above Booville. The Halloween Grinch (my oldest son Tommy) is living there still.

He won’t wear a costume. He won’t trick or treat. He won’t even hand out candy to people he meets.

The Grinch hates Halloween - the whole Halloween season. Now, please don't ask why; no one quite knows the reason.

I’ve given up trying to figure it out. I’ve given up asking him what it’s about.

For though I’m the Grinch’s father, I have two more boys. They both love Halloween candy, and they both love Halloween toys.

They love wearing the costumes, and ringing the bell. And I always love going along as well. I love watching their joy as the candy goes plop, from the first house we visit until we finally stop. But because the Halloween Grinch is the one left at home, he won’t answer the door when he’s all alone. So we end up with candy that isn’t given away, and the next day I’m home with a candy buffet.

Last year I decided to put an end to that. There’s no need for Dad to get doughy and fat.

So I sent the Halloween Grinch to his room, and I manned the door beginning at noon. I was determined to hand out every Twix and KitKat, and I didn’t care what the Grinch said about that.

I sent the two younger boys out all alone, but before they left our little home, I made sure they knew to watch out for each other, as they trick or treated dressed as the Mario Brothers.

“OK, who can tell me what the buddy system is?”

Sean raised his hand. He was ready for this quiz.

“We have to stick together,” he said. His big brother nodded, and both of them fled.

“It will never work,” said the Grinch from his room. “Those two will just fight wearing those costumes.”

But for fifteen great minutes I handed out Twix, to all the Boos who wanted treats and tricks. Until one little boy dressed up as a Q-tip, had a paper mustache attached to his lip.

It looked very much like the ones I made that day, for the two little boys that I just sent away.

He told me he got it just down the street. It was lying on a driveway, on the concrete. Mario and Luigi had ripped off their stashes, in between punches, and lunges, and smashes. They were fighting over who got to ring the doorbell, and needless to say, it didn’t turn out too well.

I marched out to the sidewalk, and what did I see? Mario and Luigi coming home to me.

The two crying boys running on the asphalt, both were screaming “It was all his fault!”

While I broke up the fight happening on my front lawn, I looked at the window, and you know who I saw?

The Halloween Grinch.

In Booville they say that the Grinch's Halloween smile grew three sizes that day. With that smile on his face, he wandered our way, and he had a few things that he wanted to say.

“Next year, I volunteer to supervise, but I won’t wear a costume or a silly disguise. I still hate the concept of Halloween, but next year I’ll be over fourteen. That’s old enough not to have to participate, and as long as I don’t have to, everything will be great.”

I made the deal, and I’m looking forward to that.

It'll keep me away from the candy, so Dad won’t get fat.

Jersey Shore

My wife Bridget and I were watching the storm coverage yesterday, and she jokingly said, "But what does the cast of Jersey Shore say?"

They have now released statements.

For real. Oy.

The Mustache Bet

I love this bet on Morning Joe today. David Axelrod said he would shave off his mustache live on the show if Obama lost Michigan, Pennsylvania or Minnesota.

Joe Scarborough said he would grow a mustache if Romney lost Virginia or Florida.

The MSNBC website has done a mockup of how both would look.

Today's Best Tweets


I've begun to spend a few minutes every day reading my twitter feed. Here are some that caught my eye today...



Slate ‏@Slate
Paul McCartney on Yoko Ono: "I Don't Think You Can Blame Her for Anything." http://slate.me/T2cyBK

Adam Franklin ‏@radstarr
Rod Stewart Put Cocaine Up His Butt, Did Not Service a Bar Full of Sailors http://www.spin.com/articles/rod-stewart-memoir-cocaine-sailors-autobiography?utm_source=newsletter&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=103012 …

Doug Bensing ‏@dougbensing
The next "Star Wars" film won't include Jar-Jar Binks, but will feature Goofy. #whatsthedifference

Brian Stelter ‏@brianstelter
RT @jonathanwald: The last time Today cancelled its celebration of Halloween? 10/31/11 in the wake of 9/11. Right call then and now.

Ray Stevens ‏@RamblinRay995
The big lake is kickin' pic.twitter.com/IBRqAmAI

Paul Konrad ‏@PaulKonrad
Late Afternoon/Evening Halloween Forecast.. 4pm: 47 NW Wind: 18mph Wind Chill: 40 8pm: 41 NW Wind 13mph... http://fb.me/25o9855fU

Tony Lossano ‏@LOSSANO
NORM!!! RT @WGNNews George Wendt hospitalized in Chicago-area with chest pains http://bit.ly/SiaXIb

jason alexander ‏@IJasonAlexander
http://www.stumbleupon.com/su/3iVWA0/:KD_POkPE:PfESAKn0/athomewithbooks.net/wp-content/uploads/2012/10/JeffersonQuote.png/ … The brilliance of T. Jefferson. Scalia take note.

Albert Brooks ‏@AlbertBrooks
Romney now says he believes in FEMA when the life of the mother is in danger.

Funny One Liners ‏@funnyoneliners
The first time I ever saw a doctor, he grabbed my leg and hit me so hard I cried, so no, I don't trust doctors.

Darwin Barney

Barney wins the Gold Glove!

"I'm extremely thrilled," said Barney, who beat out two worthy nominees, three-time winner Brandon Phillips of the Reds and Aaron Hill of the D-backs. "It's something you came into the season working toward but it's not something where I thought the results would be there as quickly as they were. I'm extremely happy about it. There's a lot of good competition. I'm really surprised it ended up happening for me. It's an exciting night for me."

One small sliver of good news in an otherwise horrible Cubs year.

Family Dinners

Eckhartz Press author David Stern and his family are featured in today's Tribune, in this article about family dinners.

I'm not a Tribune subscriber (paywall!), so I can't read the article--but Dave gave me the link in case anyone was interested. His "The Balding Handbook" officially becomes available for pre-order tomorrow, by the way.

Cubs 365, October 31

On Halloween 1963, future Cub Fred McGriff was born. He was nicknamed the Crime Dog because of his last name's similarity to the "actual" crime dog McGruff.

Our crime dog, it's safe to say, was at best a reluctant Cub. He refused to be traded to the Cubs at first, and then when he finally agreed to the trade, he seemed to be a bad luck charm as the surging Cubs faded out of contention shortly after he arrived in 2001. He had a great season in 2002 (30 HR, 103 RBI), but that team was headed nowhere.

He played two more seasons after he left Chicago, and ended his career with 493 home runs. During his big league career he was one of the premier sluggers in the game.

One Winner During Storm


The Weather Channel. Ratings are up 500%.

Record Low World Series ratings

My brother, the Sox fan and Detroit-area resident, pointed this out to me over the weekend. My buddy Dave, the Sox fan and spawn of Satan, pointed it out to me this morning, with this message: "Hi, now shut up."

It appears that the White Sox no longer have the lowest rated World Series in television history, because this year's World Series had even fewer viewers.

That's not nearly as satisfying.

Today's Best Tweets


I've begun to spend a few minutes every day reading my twitter feed. Here are some that caught my eye today...



David Roberts ‏@drgrist
Lots of government bureaucrats and moochers wading around NYC tonight, saving people's lives.

Glenn Thrush ‏@GlennThrush
We interrupt 18 months of BS, vitriol and partisan re-packaging to bring you a few days of Americans acting like Americans...

daveweigel ‏@daveweigel
RT @tedfrank: A half hour of CNN watching provides less information than reading a good set of Twitter feeds for 5 minutes.

Barack Obama ‏@BarackObama
Our thoughts and prayers go out to everyone affected by the storm. Support Red Cross relief efforts here: http://OFA.BO/2iMcEV -bo

Mike Flannery ‏@PoliticalEditor
mt "@GovChristie: I want to thank the President personally for all his assistance as we recover from the storm."

Governor Christie ‏@GovChristie
The surge was so strong we have rail cars on the Jersey Turnpike this morning. #Sandy.

Huffington Post ‏@HuffingtonPost
"The New York City subway system is 108 years old, but it has never faced a disaster as devastating as..last night." -MTA Chairman Lhota

Nicholas Kristof ‏@NickKristof
I'm hoping that Sandy will help turn the conversation from weather to climate. This should remind us of the stakes, no?

Lizz Winstead ‏@lizzwinstead
Hey Super Pacs. How about spending money on disaster relief this week. #DeafEarsSuggestion

Steve Martin ‏@SteveMartinToGo
Trump Tower still standing due to last minute, multi-layer coating of hair spray!

Paul Konrad ‏@PaulKonrad
Michigan City Buoy just reported at 59mph sustained wind and a 67mph gust.

Lou Brutus ‏@LouBrutus
How will New Jersey get back at Hurricane Sandy? My guess is she'll be found w two bullets in her head in the trunk of a late model Buick.

And here's one non-storm one that made me chuckle...

steve rosenbloom ‏@steverosenbloom
The Cardinals last year, the Giants this year --- everywhere Ryan Theriot goes, World Series follow. No, wait . . .

More Sandy Photos

When the biggest story in the country is happening in the biggest media center, it will be one of the most chronicled events of all time. Some incredible photos...

350+ photos from ABC News

A shark in a front yard in New Jersey.

Sand buries street sign in New Jersey, hundreds of feet away from beach.

Before and After NYC blackout

Svengoolie's New Coffin

Gotta love Svengoolie.

Didn't know he had been working with the same coffin for 40 years. Happy to hear that he got a fancy new one in time for Halloween.

Robert Feder has the details.

Sandy's Damage

These pictures from Manhattan are unbelievable.

I can't believe this is happening to New York. It's like a scene out of Al Gore's movie "An Inconvenient Truth". Manhattan really is being flooded, just as he predicted.

The number of deaths caused by this storm are already in the double digits. This is horrible.

A Publishing Mega-Merger

Two of the huge publishing companies just got huger: Random House merged with Penguin.

The linked article examines the effects this will have on the publishing business. Needless to say, this isn't a good thing for editors, agents, and authors (although maybe Random House will give me the rights back to the Radio Producer's Handbook!). But according to the article, it could also pose a legitimate competitor to amazon, which I have to say, is quickly becoming a monopoly (and is acting like it).

Not sure who to root for here. It's like watching a White Sox-Cardinals World Series. Can I root for them both to lose?

Cubs 365, October 30

On this day in 1897, future Cub Kettle Wirts was born. He joined the team in 1922. The Cubs had three catchers on the roster; starter Bob O'Farrell and two young backups with awesome nicknames, Gabby Hartnett and Kettle Wirts. Wirts and Hartnett both caught 27 games that season for the Cubs, but their careers would go in very different directions. Hartnett would develop into such a force that the Cubs would find O'Farrell expendable. (They traded him to the St. Louis Cardinals, and he led them to their first World Series title in 1926.) Wirts, on the other hand, drifted off into obscurity. He played his last major league game in 1924.

In parts of four big league seasons, Elwood Vernon Wirts managed to get only 86 at bats. Although he accumulated a total of only three extra base hits (two doubles and one home run) in those at bats, he also acquired a great nickname. Unfortunately, the origin of that nickname has disappeared into the ether like Kettle himself. Wirts died in Sacramento California in 1968 at the age of 71.

Sandy

I drove home yesterday from Atlanta through the beginning of Hurricane Sandy. The wind was fierce. In Indiana I barely managed to maintain control of my car as it whipped from side to side. My arms still hurt from holding onto the steering wheel so tight for so many hours.

And this is obviously just the outskirts of the storm. Any storm that can make 30 foot waves in Lake Michigan--more than a thousand miles away from the eye of the storm--is terrifying.

Praying for the people on the East Coast today.

Back on Tuesday

Sorry all. I was out of town these past few days attending my uncle's funeral in Atlanta.

I'll be back blogging tomorrow.

And thanks for the well-wishing inquiries, by the way. I didn't know I'd be missed.

Today's Best Tweets


I've begun to spend a few minutes every day reading my twitter feed. Here are ten that caught my eye today...



Richard Roeper ‏@richardroeper
Even for Trump, that was embarrassing. He literally doesn't understand the difference between "news" and "publicity stunt."

John Berman ‏@johnsberman
On a day like today, I long for the contents of Al Capone's vault.

CollegeHumor ‏@CollegeHumor
Donald Trump is quickly becoming the least entertaining Bond villain ever.

Andy Borowitz ‏@BorowitzReport
Attention parents: if you give your children even the tiniest bit of attention now, maybe they won't grow up to be Donald Trump.

davidfrum ‏@davidfrum
Trump's genius plan. Trap Obama into releasing his transcripts. Then blast him as an "elitist" when he is shown to have earned straight As.

SportsPickle ‏@sportspickle
Warren Moon Says Criticism of Blaine Gabbert is Not Racially Motivated: "He just sucks" - http://su.pr/2XSa81

Eric & Kathy ‏@EricandKathy
Survey Show: 28% of men truly believe that they have the knowledge to write a manual on how to "do it" with a lady... #MIXMindBender

Melissa Clouthier ‏@MelissaTweets
Woman gets plastic surgery, doesn't tell future hub, they get married and have an ugly baby: http://bit.ly/RilJ2C Divorce ensues.

The Daily Beast ‏@thedailybeast
Powell Endorses Obama http://thebea.st/S8iiwj #cheatsheet

Greg Sargent ‏@ThePlumLineGS
RT @fivethirtyeight: Obama up to 71% in our forecast, his highest since Oct. 9, on favorable trend in nat'l trackers. http://fivethirtyeight.blogs.nytimes.com

Is Howard Leaving Next?


Now that Mel Karmazin is leaving XM/Sirius, is Howard leaving next?

It sure sounds like it.

iPad Backlash

It turns out that iPad customers are a little ticked off that Apple came out with a brand new iPad model only seven months after the previous iPad model. They are starting to feel like Apple is taking advantage of them.

AMEN! I mean, let's get serious here. Can we at least keep it down to once a year? I don't even own one. I'm just trying to keep my pictures of iPads from being obsolete.

Obama Explains Trump's Obsession

Nicely done, Mr. President.

Cubs 365, October 25

On this day in 1923, future Cub Russ Meyer was born. He was known as Mad Monk because he had a vicious temper and didn't take to coaching. He pitched for the Cubs from 1946-1948, and then returned to the team for one season at the end of his career (1956).

One night he ran into an old girlfriend at a bar the players frequented. They began to argue and she got so mad at him that she bit off the tip of his nose. It was still hanging there, but he had to have it stitched back together. The next day he had to sneak into the clubhouse, but he couldn't hide his face forever. It was all bandaged up and he had two black eyes. The woman claimed she was retaliating for being bitten on the nose herself, and filed suit. It was quietly settled out of court near the end of the 1947 season. Shortly after that he was traded to Philadelphia (1948).

Mad Monk frequently angered his teammates, opponents, and the umpires, often to his own detriment. He would lose his cool on the mound after a base hit or an infielder's error. Once, with the Phillies, after being knocked out of a game, he took off his spikes and hurled them into the shower ceiling, where they stuck. He won 17 games for the Phillies in 1949, and helped the Braves win the pennant in 1953. He returned to the Cubs only after he was washed up. While he was away from the Cubs he went 24-3 against them. Those 24 wins were almost one third of this 79 overall wins.

Trump's Surprise

Here's the video.

As I suspected, it's a complete non-story. He's offering to donate to a charity if Obama releases his college transcripts and passport application. Wow. Burn.

Why do I suspect that wherever Mitt Romney is right now, he's saying: "Why in the world is he bringing up not releasing records? People have completely forgotten about my tax returns."

What music do you listen to during sex?

That's not my question (please don't tell me), it's USA Today's question. The answers to the question in USA Today's article are putting visuals in my head that will disturb me the rest of the day.

#1 on the list is the soundtrack to Dirty Dancing, which I suppose I understand, but check out some of the others in the top twenty.

#13: "The Sound of Music" soundtrack
("Honey, seriously, your hills are alive with the sound of music, and I'm not just saying that because we're listening to this incredibly erotic soundtrack.")

#15: "Grease", the soundtrack
("I'm so sorry, honey. Summer lovin' happened so fast. It won't happen again.")

#20: The Star Wars soundtrack
("Use the force, honey. Please, use the force.")

Next time you're in the mood, put on one of those soundtracks and raise your eyebrows at your significant other. See if it's more likely to garner a returned raised eyebrow or a snorting laugh.

The Richest Person in Each State

ABC News has a story on their website about the richest person in each state. Care to guess who the richest person in Illinois is?

Hint: He used to own the Chicago Tribune.

Today's Best Tweets


I've begun to spend a few minutes every day reading my twitter feed. Here are ten that caught my eye today...




Roger Simon ‏@politicoroger
I don't want to be too judgmental, but Donald Trump couldn't be dumber if you cut his head off.

Jeff Greenfield ‏@greenfield64
That DirecTV ad with bickering spouses in bathroom--ran endlessly during MLB playlets--may be the most sexually hostile ad ever.

Matt Spiegel ‏@MattSpiegel670
Jimmie Walker deserves more than 207 followers. I mean, what sitcoms have you been on? What catchphrases have you rocked? @DynomiteJJHere

Amy Guth ‏@amyguth
Today's forecast: sunny with a high near 80. Yes, 80. http://trib.in/RguCdc

Rich Samuels ‏@rsamuels
"'God's will"? Indiana Senate candidate criticized over rape, pregnancy comments http://www.chicagotribune.com/news/local/breaking/chi-indiana-senate-candidate-criticized-over-rape-pregnancy-comments-20121024,0,2063075.story

Steve Bertrand ‏@SteveBertrand
You're kidding. RT @PublishersWkly: Santa's pipe put out in new edition of 'Twas the Night Before Christmas | Guardian http://pwne.ws/RgtcPH

Rob Hart ‏@RobHart1980
Bruce Jenner was in "Can't Stop the Music." Hard to believe that's not the least dignified thing he's ever done.

Eric & Kathy ‏@EricandKathy
Study Shows: People with a large nose are more likely to have a one night stand. #MIXMindBender

Carole Radziwill ‏@CaroleRadziwill
I miss *69. I used to catch bf's in all sorts of lies. It was amazing. Why doesn't *69 work on cell phones?

Josh Gerstein ‏@joshgerstein
Both Mitt's 5-point plan and Obama's 20-page plan too superficial for me. Anyway, back to writing my 5-things-to-watch in the election story

The President on MTV

This is the venue that brought us the famous "boxers or briefs" question for President Clinton, but when you're going for the youth vote, you still need to make an appearance. Obama discovered in 2008 just how non-threatening this venue is.

MTV is taking questions for the president on Facebook, and will interview him on Friday. Romney has been invited too, but declined--just as he declined to be interviewed for Nickelodeon. McCain also declined in 2008.

I think it's safe to say that the Republicans are writing off the youth vote.

Mel is outta here

The most anticipated departure in the media is finally happening.

"SiriusXM Radio CEO Mel Karmazin has informed the satcaster's board of directors that he will be leaving the company on February 1, 2013, following the expiration of his current deal and a transition period. Karmazin will also leave the board of directors, which has formed a search committee, chaired by Greg Maffei, to consider both internal and external candidates for the company's next CEO."

And Mel will leave millions and millions and millions of dollars in his pocket. I seriously doubt he'll retire. He lives for making money, and when that's what you live for, you can never ever have enough.

Cubs 365, October 24

On this day in 1857, Ned Williamson was born. He was Chicago's star shortstop/third baseman during the 1880s. He thrilled the fans with his home runs, and was arguably the game's first home run hero. In 1884 he hit 27 in one 112 game season. That was the record for 35 years. It wasn't broken until 1919 by a little known slugger/pitcher named Babe Ruth.

Of course, Ned's record came with an asterisk. During the 19th century the ground rules were made by each home team. Ned's manager Cap Anson declared that balls hit over a certain part of his field were to be declared homers. That just happened to be where Ned hit 25 of his 27 homers that season. The next season the team moved to West Side Grounds and Ned's power suddenly disappeared.

On the other hand, Ned was no fluke. He also set the record for doubles with 49 in 1883, and was a key member of the Chicago team that won five championships that decade.

His baseball career was still going strong until Albert Spalding organized a world tour to promote the game in 1889. While the team played in Paris, Ned injured his knee. He was never the same after that.

Just four years after his playing career ended, Williamson contracted tuberculosis and died at age 36. He is buried in an unmarked grave in Rosehill Cemetery in Chicago.

Germans & Beer

For a German, I apparently don't drink much beer. Not too long ago, it wasn't unusual for Germans to drink 50 beers a day.

Saving this article for my intervention.

Lou Rawls

I didn't even realize that I witnessed Lou Rawls' final performance (on this day seven years ago). From Bob Dearborn's The Olde Disc Jockey's Almanac...

October 23, 2005…At U.S. Cellular Field in Chicago, Lou Rawls gave his last public performance when he sang the U.S. national anthem before Game 2 of the 2005 World Series between the Houston Astros and the Chicago White Sox. The Sox won the game, 7-6, and went on to take the Series, 4 games to none. Rawls died of lung and brain cancer 2½ months later.

I was at that (painful) game, wearing a Kerry Wood Cubs jersey under about seven layers of clothes. It was a miserable night--cold, wet, and Soxy. It would have been a little more bearable if Lou did this song...


The World Series

It's going to be the Giants vs. the Tigers.

Both teams have been around for over a hundred years, and both teams have been in the World Series many times, but incredibly, they've never played against each other in the World Series before.

If it had been the Tigers-Cardinals, that would have been a rematch of 1934 and 1968.

Today's Best Tweets


I've begun to spend a few minutes every day reading my twitter feed. Here are ten that caught my eye today...



The Balding Handbook ‏@BaldingHandbook
He should have bought The Balding Handbook instead...Propecia turned me into a woman, http://news.yahoo.com/blogs/sideshow/propecia-turned-woman-man-claims-235329178.html … via http://www.baldinghandbook.com

Huffington Post ‏@HuffingtonPost
British housewife claims she was raised by monkeys in Colombian jungle http://huff.to/QC3tQ8

Good Morning America ‏@GMA
Most tweeted moment of last night's debate? When Obama said "we have fewer horses and bayonets"

Buster Olney ‏@Buster_ESPN
Not sure how asking Republican and Democratic party reps their take on the debates represents analysis. You already know what they'll say.

Andy Borowitz ‏@BorowitzReport
BREAKING: Romney Foreign Policy Endorsed By Colonial Williamsburg

Conn Carroll ‏@conncarroll
Armstrong gets to keep his victory over cancer right?

Joe Campagna ‏@chifoodsnob
Lance's 7 Tour titles can't be given to anyone else because 20 of 21 top 3 finishers have all doped. #justoneoftheguys #fb

Eddie Volkman ‏@EddieVolkman
Hey, "DonkeyKong Suh"... Your cheap shot didn't work, @ChicagoBears win, and you're still in last place. @nfl

Adam Oestmann ‏@adamspeaks
After his performance on #MNF, Jay Cutler now has 10,618 career passing yards for the Chicago #Bears, 4th most in franchise history.

Jennifer Jarke ‏@JJarke
@WaddleandSilvy dropping off my daughter this 4th grade boy says "Bears suck" i almost said "your mom sucks" then i remembered Im the adult.

Enough about the candidates...

How did the moderator do?

TV Newser says: "Light Hand lets candidates go at it as much as possible"

I think that's about right, although I admit I didn't see the whole thing because I was also watching the Bears game.

Langmyer is out

This is a shocker. WGN Radio's General Manager was forced out yesterday. He's being replaced (on an interim basis) by a former colleague of mine, WGN's director of sales Jeff Hill.

Not sure exactly what happened there. According to Feder, this is the message he left his staff...

“I can't tell you how much I have appreciated the privilege of working with you,” he wrote in an email to his staff. “WGN is a very special place, and I’m very lucky to have spent nearly eight years as part of it! . . . Looking forward to new challenges ahead!”

Does this mean that big changes are in store for the station? I'm going to say yes. The biggest potential change, of course, is a change in ownership. Now that the Tribune has emerged from bankruptcy, anything can go. Even one of radio's crown jewels.

Cubs 365, October 23

On this day in 1886, the Cubs finished up the World Series. The 1886 National League team from Chicago was known as the White Stockings--it would be another fifteen years before the Cubs name emerged. But they were a powerhouse team; the defending champions.

Led by their first baseman/manager Cap Anson (photo), and their colorful utility man King Kelly (who played every day, but all over the field--every position except pitcher), Chicago was one of the biggest draws in the league. Anson led the league in runs batted in, Kelly led the league in batting average, on-base percentage and runs, and lead off man George Gore was walked more often than any other player.

Chicago was a wide open town in 1886; not to mention the epicenter of the increasingly violent labor movement. On May 4, the Haymarket Riot took place, which took the lives of eleven Chicagoans including seven police officers.

But while Chicago was a violent, scary, and decadent city, it had also fallen in love with it's baseball team.

When they played Detroit with first place at stake, 12,000+ fans came out to see the game (a HUGE crowd in those days). Both teams arrived in spectacular fashion--with a police and fire escort in their horse-drawn carriages. Chicago won the game and moved into first place.

The White Stockings sure loved the spotlight, and they may have loved the nightlife even more. King Kelly in particular was a notorious drunk, and he liked to drag his teammates into the gutter with him. Chicago had one of the most notorious red-light districts in the world at the time (it was the Las Vegas of the 19th century), and that certainly didn't help. One night on the town, a backup outfielder named Billy Sunday could take the debauchery no more, and found the Lord. It got so bad that Chicago owner Albert Spalding hired detectives to follow the players around and began fining them for their drinking. Seven different players were fined $25 each.

But despite their partying ways, Chicago was still the best team in baseball. The regular season came down to the final day. When Chicago beat Boston 12-3, they won the pennant.

They did play in the World Series against the St. Louis Browns after the regular season, but the World Series was really just an exhibition in those days. Nevertheless, it was a high stakes exhibition. It was winner-take-all with the winner getting $14,000.

Because of their powerful offense, and the fact that they had two 30 game winners (John Clarkson and Jim McCormick) and another rookie ace (Jocko Flynn--who won 23--including 14 in a row), Chicago was the clear favorite. They were probably spending their money before the series even began.

In true Cubs fashion, they choked when it counted. With Future Hall of Famer John Clarkson on the mound, and future Hall of Famer King Kelly behind the plate, the winning run was scored by the Browns in Game 6...when a player stole home.

The White Stockings got exactly zero dollars for their effort.

Cleavon Little

He died twenty years ago today, but he'll live on forever in "Blazing Saddles"...

Most Expensive Show for Advertisers?

It used to be "American Idol".

Now it's Sunday Night Football on NBC.

Another German translation

Below I pointed out that "schief" means "crooked or slanted" in German. One of my twitter followers pointed out another famous German translation moment...

Worst Job Ever: Debate Moderator

Tonight's victim is Bob Schieffer.

Am I the only German speaking person to point out that "schief" means "crooked or slanted" in German? I'm on to you, Bob Schieffer.

Let the conspiracy talk begin.

Today's Best Tweets


I've begun to spend a few minutes every day reading my twitter feed. Here are ten that caught my eye today...




Chris Rock ‏@chrisrockoz
Guys communicate by insulting each other, but don't really mean it. Girls communicate by complimenting each other, but don't really mean it.

The New Yorker ‏@NewYorker
The magazine’s endorsement of Barack Obama describes his first-term achievements and vision for America’s future: http://nyr.kr/QC0sx5

Josh Liss ‏@JoshLissSports
All the @cbschicago "experts" are picking Bears over the Lions, but I'm the only one thinking low scoring game. http://chicago.cbslocal.com/2012/10/19/expert-picks-bears-wont-have-problem-with-lions/ …

Eddie Volkman ‏@EddieVolkman
My wife tried my #DrPepper10 and didn't like it. Umm, didn't their marketing department sufficiently warn you?

Jim Gaffigan ‏@JimGaffigan
This is getting ridiculous. At what point does a newborn learn to change their own diaper?

Judd Apatow ‏@JuddApatow
Do you ever wake up and it feels like the night before when you went to sleep you were ten years old?

Sports Illustrated ‏@SInow
"Lance Armstrong has no place in cycling and he deserves to be forgotten in cycling.'' - ICU President Pat McQuaid http://on.si.com/SdDhg9

Andy Borowitz ‏@BorowitzReport
By far, Lance Armstrong's darkest legacy will be that he convinced millions of men it was okay to wear bike shorts.

karl ravech ‏@karlravechespn
Cards won 6 straight winner take all games, giants have won 5 elimination games this post season..it's a horror movie, monsters won't die

Josh Marshall ‏@joshtpm
TPM Electoral Scoreboard moves to Obama: 271, Romney: 199 as Ohio moves from Toss Up to Lean Obama http://core.talkingpointsmemo.com/election/scoreboard …

Television Choices Tonight

I'm not an undecided voter. I won't be watching the debate.

Not with Bears-Lions on Monday Night Football.

Not with Game 7 of the NLCS on Fox.

I'm predicting record-low debate ratings in Detroit, Chicago, St. Louis, and San Francisco. Not that any of them are in swing states anyway.

Cubs 365, October 22

On this day in 1974, Pat Pieper passed away. He was the PA announcer for the Cubs, known for his trademark opener..."Tention! Attention Please! Get your pencils and scorecards ready and I will give you the correct lineups for today's game."

He got the job in 1916 when the Cubs first started playing in what is now known as Wrigley Field, and he kept the job until his death--an incredible streak of 59 years.

When he first began, he had to do his job with a gigantic megaphone (this was before a public address system had been invented.) He said the starting lineups to the crowd from third base, and then did the same thing on the other side of the field from first base.

In 1932, the Cubs finally installed a public address system. Pieper sat next to the wall separating the field from the stands, between home plate and third base. He was responsible for picking up the straw hats that fans threw onto the field, but he was also there to shake the hands of Cubs players as they crossed home plate. He was sitting in that seat when Babe Ruth came up to bat in 1932, and Pieper is one of the few people who swore that Babe actually did call the shot.

"Don't let anybody tell you differently. Babe definitely pointed," he told Tribune columnist David Condon in 1966. Condon told the story in his column. "Pat remembers sitting on the third base side and hearing [Cubs' pitcher] Guy Bush chide Ruth, who had taken two strikes. According to Pat, Ruth told Bush: 'That's strike two, all right. But watch this.' 'Then Ruth pointed to center field, and hit his homer."

Pieper was the PA for 6 World Series, but he also handled those chores for the twenty consecutive seasons the Cubs finished in the bottom half of the league (1946-1966). When he died shortly after the 1974 season (October 22nd), the Cubs had just finished their most successful stretch since their World Series days.

He was inducted into the Chicago Cubs Walk of Fame in 1996, and a banner with his name still hangs in the Wrigley Field concourse.

The Balding Handbook has a website




And it's a pretty good one too.

It includes a preview, a link to social media, a blog, and all the latest information from a totally bald-centric point of view.

Click here to see it.

Today's Best Tweets


I've begun to spend a few minutes every day reading my twitter feed. Here are ten that caught my eye today...



Huffington Post ‏@HuffingtonPost
'Alcoholic' sells wife for $110 to buy booze http://huff.to/QsrNUD

Carol Riha ‏@carol_riha
http://bitly.xaijo.com/hInkCnS i made the starbucks guy say large instead of venti I HAVE ALREADY CONQUERED WEDNESDAY, WHAT NOW?

Harry Shearer ‏@theharryshearer
Newsweek helped teach me, when I briefly worked there, about one of the central problems of modern journalism: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MMPbbagKFsw

Julius Sharpe ‏@juliussharpe
My plan to reduce the deficit would involve taking the middle piece of bread out of every club sandwich. It doesn't need to be there.

The Associated Press ‏@AP
Out of left field: Country star Jason Aldean announces shows at Wrigley, Fenway, and UGA: http://apne.ws/RZjD5I -RAS

Doug Glanville ‏@dougglanville
One thing I know for sure. Bob Brenly will not miss my 7th inning stretch singing! #Cubs

ABC 7 Chicago ‏@abc7chicago
Today marks the 25th anniversary of the 1987 Black Monday stock market crash http://abc7.ws/Ue362r #stocks #dowjones #wallstreet

Paul M. Banks ‏@Paul_M_BanksTSB
Jenny McCarthy gets columnist, blogger gig with Chicago Sun-Times: This is certainly a new low for the Chicago Sun Times... http://bit.ly/QAKy6c

Rob Hart ‏@RobHart1980
The glee directed at the failures of the Yankees and Albert Pujols tells me that class warfare is a winning strategy.

Ari Berman ‏@AriBerman
GOP operative arrested for trashing voter registration forms in Virginia. This is starting to sound familiar http://bit.ly/Th09hD

Obama and Romney jokes

They were both pretty funny last night...

Cubs 365, October 19

On this day in 1876 (the same year the Cubs played their very first season in the National League), future Cubs pitcher Mordecai "Three Finger" Brown was born.

Three Finger probably owns one of the best nicknames in baseball history, and he earned it the hard way. As a seven-year-old boy, Mordecai caught his right hand in a corn grinder on his uncle's farm. They needed to amputate almost the entire index finger, and the middle finger was mangled and left crooked. His little finger was also stubbed. When he learned to add spin to the ball by releasing it off his stub, he became a pitcher. When he started to have success, the newspapers called him "Three-Finger" for obvious reasons.

Three Finger is one of the greatest pitchers to ever wear a Cubs uniform. In ten years with the Cubs, he won 188 games, including 29 games in 1908, and 27 games in 1909. He led the league in wins, ERA, shutouts, and even saves (in four different years).

He also pitched in four World Series for the Cubs. In seven World Series starts, he won five--pitching five complete games, and three of those were shutouts. That, sadly, is probably a Cubs record that will never be broken.

This is a very rare film of Mordecai in action.

Uncle Manny

I just got word that my Uncle Manny passed away this morning. He was 69 years old.

Ever since a very tragic few years several decades ago when we lost my grandparents, my dad, and my uncle, one after the other, back-to-back-to-back-to-back, Manny has been the man of the family; the patriarch. He hasn't lived in Chicago since the 1960s, but he still managed to be the glue that held us together.

I mentioned him on the radio many times when I was with John Landecker's show on WJMK. Manny came up to Chicago (from Atlanta) every summer and my mother, sister, aunt, and I always had honey-do-lists waiting for him when he arrived. Landecker used to make me read the lists on the air. He thought it was hilarious how clueless we all were.

I also mentioned Uncle Manny when I was interviewed about my contribution to the book "Cubbie Blues" in 2008.
A Cub fan his whole life, Rick’s attachment to his team dates back to his early childhood in Jefferson Park on the northwest side of Chicago. He and his family were German immigrants, but his Uncle Manny took a liking to this strange American sport of baseball, and went to Cubs games as often as he could. Manny passed on this Cubs-itis to his oldest nephew. They went to their first game together in 1968, and still go to games whenever Manny comes back to town. Rick doesn’t know whether to thank him or curse him for that.
When the Cubs won their division in 1984, I made exactly one phone call. I called Uncle Manny.

When I was co-writing "The Living Wills" I realized something about halfway through the writing process. We were writing a novel about a 60-something Vietnam Veteran dying of cancer. It wasn't a conscious thing, but I started to wonder if subconscious forces were directing me to confront Uncle Manny's reality (he was also a 60-something Vietnam Veteran dying of cancer).

The main character of "The Living Wills" is not based on him, but he defintely has some Manny-like characteristics, so when I had to write the eulogy chapter, it was a gut-wrenching experience for me. I knew that Manny's time was right around the corner. I knew I would more than likely have to write his eulogy too. Every word of that chapter made me think of him.

When the book came out at Christmas last year, I was afraid to send it to him, afraid that it would hit a little too close to home. So I made my mom read it first, and she gave me the go-ahead.

This is what he wrote to me after he read it...
"As you might know, I pretty much lost the use of my left eye after a retina surgery; thus the very small print makes it nearly impossible to read your book, so I brought a magnifying glass and attacked the book again. As the three different segments came together I found myself more interested in what's to come. Midway through I saw it all come together and didn't want to put it down. The latter part of the book and the ending kept me engrossed as the story became more and more touching--especially around the cancer issues. Congratulations, Uncle Manny"
This summer he made one last trip to Chicago for a wedding party (my cousin's). He knew it was his last visit. He normally never drove through the city (he drove around it) to get to us, but this time he said "Jill (his wife) insisted." At that party, and another party the next night, he got to say goodbye to his family and friends here (and there are many). And though we could tell he was suffering, he was still the same Uncle Manny--laughing and joking through his pain.

My sister, aunt, mom and I drove down to Atlanta to see him one last time about a month ago. We told stories about the good old days, and the not so good old days (in Germany after the war). We laughed and joked, played cards and argued about politics. We even got to watch one last Cubs game together.

Before we left the next day he gave me three things to take back to Chicago with me: his private stash of liverwurst, a saw blade, and a really expensive bottle of tequila. (That three-pack of gifts cracked me up). Even though he really shouldn't have been driving anymore, Uncle Manny escorted the clueless foursome back to the highway--his one last gesture of help. He pulled into the parking lot right before the exit ramp, and waved goodbye. I could see the tears in his eyes--something I had never seen before.

It was the last time I saw him.

He called my mom and aunt a few weeks ago to tell them he was in hospice. (How many patients make that call themselves?) A few days ago, I was told that the end was very near, so I wrote him an e-mail. It said simply:
"Uncle Manny, I don't know if you're checking your e-mail, but I didn't want to bother you with a phone call. You're probably getting a ton of them. I just wanted to let you know that you are constantly in our thoughts and minds up here in Chicago. All of us are wishing you well and praying for the best. I know you already knew that, but I wanted to say it anyway. Love, Rick."

Aunt Jill says it was the last e-mail he was able to read.

He died peacefully this morning with his son Eric and wife Jill each holding his hand. His daughter Kara had been there constantly for the past few days too.

You know, as you go through life there are many people that touch you, affect you, and inspire you, but there are only a small handful of people that make you who you are.

For me, Uncle Manny was one of those people.

I can't begin to express how much I will miss him.

E-mails, we get e-mails

This just arrived in my e-mail box from "BP"...

Sorry to hear of the passing of Marty "Bo" Fortson. "California Sun" is one of my favorite songs from the 60s. But, I also love the cover by the Ramones. One of the best! It's very rare that a cover lives up to the original. "Twist and Shout" by the Isley Brothers and The Beatles is another one for this very short list.

Today's Best Tweets


I've begun to spend a few minutes every day reading my twitter feed. Here are ten that caught my eye today...



Kim Strickland ‏@acitymom
Down at the Golden Coin a "spiritual adventure" from a reviewer across the pond! http://best-book-review.co.uk/2012/10/down-at-the-golden-coin-by-kim-strickland/ …

Andy Borowitz ‏@BorowitzReport
If you're an actual slutty nurse Halloween is a very hurtful time.

Deadspin ‏@Deadspin
In need of cash, a Greek soccer team signed up a local brothel as its sponsor. http://deadsp.in/xWUlpW

Sam Stein ‏@samsteinhp
Reuters/Ipsos polling independents. predebate Romney's fav/unfav was 51/49. Post debate it was 51/49. Obama went from 53/47 to 60/40

The Onion ‏@TheOnion
"I let Ann decide everything about the kitchen. That sound like a policy from a man who doesn’t respect women?" –Romney http://onion.com/T1fdxO

Jimmy Greenfield ‏@jcgreenx
Thinking of giving "The Onion Book of Known Knowledge" to my kids without explaining what satire is. They will laugh so hard in 8 years.

Harold Ramis ‏@harold_ramis
it takes me an average of 30 minutes to find where the hell tbs is before i actually get a baseball game on. let's stick to real networks.

Len Kasper ‏@LenKasper
I wish BB the best. INCREDIBLY fortunate to have worked 8 yrs w/him. His next partner hit jackpot. Sad for us. Change is part of life/biz.

BobVorwald ‏@BobVorwald
Again, just cross out the "v" on all those yellow bracelets and you're all set.

Eckhart Tolle ‏@EckhartTolle
The significance is hiding in the insignificant. Appreciate everything.

Where does spam come from?

Not the meat-ish product, the annoying stuff that arrives in your e-mail box, and messes up your facebook page.

Would you believe it comes from India? One in every six spam e-mails comes from there. Italy is in second place (really?) and the United States is third.

Monty Python is not even in the top ten.

Candy Crowley on "The View"

Debate moderator Candy Crowley was on "The View" yesterday discussing the moment she interjected in the debate. She has been getting hammered by the right wing (cough) press because they say she is biased...even though what she said was absolutely true.

Watch her tell the View ladies why she did it.

I personally think she's being a little too defensive. You can tell she's rattled by the venom she's getting from the folks on the temple throbbing side. You did nothing wrong, Candy. You did your job. It's not your fault that Romney has no idea how to handle it when someone challenges him. He's even afraid to appear on "The View", so you're one up on him already.

Pete McMurray

The RAMP newsletter has a little more information on the departure of Pete McMurray from Merlin Media...

"Tough day around the Merlin Media radio ranch in Chicago as the company parts ways with veteran personality Pete McMurray. McMurray (pictured) had done mornings at Classic Rock WLUP (The Loop) for almost four years until this past August, when Maxwell took over the shift and McMurray crossed the hall to Adult Hits sister WIQI (i101). "I had a fantastic run at the Loop," said McMurray, whose lengthy history with The Loop dates back to 2001. "We accomplished some great ratings increases over the past couple of years," he continued. "Unfortunately you can't control the owners and what direction they want to take." No replacement has been named yet by OM Jim Richards. McMurray can be reached at pete@petemcmurray.com."

Michael Savage

Michael Savage will be back on the radio soon.

Cumulus signed him to a big deal. Cumulus owns WLS in Chicago, so don't be surprised if he turns up on the big 89.

Bummer.

Cubs 365, October 18

On this day in 1910, the Cubs played Game 2 of the World Series against the A's in Philadelphia. The team had to feel like they were snake-bitten that year.

With Johnny Evers already sidelined with a broken leg, Mordecai Brown (the scheduled starting pitcher of Game 2 and the team's best pitcher) got into an auto accident just before the game. He pitched anyway, and lost uncharacteristically 9-3.

The day before Game 3, manager/first baseman Frank Chance got into a fist fight on the streets of Chicago. A heckler was giving him a hard time as he drove by, so Chance stopped the car, jumped out, and attacked the guy. Then in Game 3, Chance became the first person ever ejected from a World Series game when he went crazy arguing a disputed ground rule double.

The A's won the Series in 5 games.

This officially ended the Cubs dynasty. In a five year stretch 1906-1910, they had won four pennants and two World Series.

In the next hundred years they would win only five more pennants, and we're still waiting for another World Series title.

Say it ain't so!



This is a bummer: Bob Brenly leaves WGN/Chicago Cubs TV booth after eight seasons.

My take on the debate...written by an actual writer

His name is Charles P. Pierce, and he writes for Esquire Magazine. He also has the added benefit of living in Massachusetts, so he knows Romney better. But wow did he nail it with his description of the debate.

I bow at his ability to put into words exactly what I was feeling watching Romney in action. He picked out the exact moment I had a visceral reaction, and why...
The one thing nobody can ever say now is that they didn't know the exact character of Willard Romney, and exactly how he feels about The Help, including that member of The Help who currently holds the job that Romney believes should have been his by virtue of his god-kissed, golden life.

"You'll get your chance in a moment. I'm still speaking."

Put all those Romneys together and that's what they sound like, even when they're talking to the president of the United States. It's the voice of the bloodless job-killer, the outsourcing Moloch of the industrial Midwest, and the guy who poses with his Wall Street cronies with dollar bills in his mouth. People who claim to be interested in "character" should remember that.
I couldn't have said it better myself. And I tried.