The blog formerly about a daily dose of mostly Minnesota sports rants and raves with a sprinkling of general sports commentary and a pinch of jaded-malaise regarding the world around us

January 26, 2012

Page 4 RTS Tix


Today's offering is a potpourri of tickets. Again kind of hard to read so here they are in order starting in the bottom left:

American Gladiators
Shedd Aquarium
Blue Man Group
Degas
Minnesota State Fair
Mud Racing and Hot Rod Truck Pull
Rock and Roll Hall of Fame
Fosse
Chicago
Blue Man Group

The gem here is the American Gladiator's ticket. Talk about a moment in time. The Blake Fun Club went to the event at the Target Center. It very well might have been organized by DTK. Zap, Nitro, Laser and the rest of the gladiators were all there. Someone in our group had a sign that read "I want Lace on my face." A local fireman won the Eliminator at the end.

If you notice the date on the tractor pull it is from 1984. I went to a couple of these things over the years. Big Foot and USA 1 were the big draws with their car crushing power. Truckasaurus of Simpson's fame was not present.

I am not sure if the State Fair ticket is from THE TRIP to the fair with Jan. I am guessing some cheese curds were eaten that day whenever it may have been.

These hodge podge tickets are what I am missing the most of as it does not always occur to me to save the stubs. I guess in my youth, tickets to the Gophers counted but tickets to the Guthrie or Children's Theater did not. Furthermore, I have no explanation why I saved the Rock N Roll Hall of Fame stub but failed to save the Football Hall of Fame one. For the record, we saw Chicago before there was a movie. I feel the need to point that out as the few art and theater tickets I have are as mainstream and mass marketed as one can get.

January 24, 2012

FTLOSBW Goes Politco - The Newt Gingrich Files

On a non-Sports Talkin' Tuesday (and this should be more of a Holy Bejebus) but watched the Daily Show last night (at least the first 8 minutes) and thought it worth your attention (yes there is an annoying ad, get through it.)

The Gingrich Who Stole South Carolina

Also, by linking to this am I violating copyright law? Someone? MCA? I don't want to end up like that fat ass from megaupload.

January 16, 2012

Now back to our regularly scheduled schadenfreude


Or, as Jan called it in a text to me yesterday, "extreme schadenfreude." This weekend could not have gone better for me, short of the Vikings actually playing in one of the playoff games. The two teams I was rooting against (and rooting against pretty vociferously), were the Saints and, duh, the packers.

Side note: I've never had a real problem with the 49ers. Class organization and they haven't won anything in long enough that the fans are hungry and humble again (for now). Plus, since I live here, it makes for conversation at the water-cooler and around my neighborhood. Also, Alex Smith has taken an enormous beating here for the past 7 years...it'd be good to see him shove it back at the media.

1) Saints - I have disliked the Saints for quite a while, dating back to before they beat the Vikes two years ago. That game simply cemented my hatred, as their defense basically admitted to being told to try and hurt Favre, which they did, but weren't called for a penalty. Combined with the way in which we gave the game away...ugh. I can't talk about it. But, what really annoys me about the Saints is that over the past five years, the media has begun saying things like: "No team's fans are more loyal than the Saints'". And, "no team means more to its city than the Saints." Really? Pre-Katrina I seem to remember a team whose games were regularly blacked out?! I get it...their role in the psyche of a devastated post-Katrina city was integral, but since when are their fans so awesome? I also seem to recall that Tom Benson (the owner) was about a millisecond away from moving the team to San Antonio before Katrina leveled the city, at which point he had no choice but to stay, for fear of being killed if he ever appeared in public.

2) This one shouldn't need an explanation, but I feel the need to do so anyway. On an irrational level, the packers are the Vikings' biggest rival, so I hate them by default. It's not just that, though. Part of the hatred is because they are everything the Vikings are not...stable, never a threat to relocate, outdoor stadium, multiple Super Bowls, etc. But it's not jealousy that fuels my fire. It's the arrogance of their fans, who think they are the greatest on earth and that they invented things like the forward pass, tailgates and facepaint. They also act like it's their birth right to have a competitive team. Guess what, dickheads, your team sucked for 20 years after all of your mythical championships in the days when there were 12 teams in the league (does the name Lynn Dickey ring a bell?). I also despise how much the media slurps up the whole small town, publicly-owned, season-ticket waiting list story. Look, it's a fluke that this team ended up in a small town...and because there isn't SHIT to do in this one-horse town, the team became a bit of a religion. Over the years, this stuff gets passed down from father to son, and to his son, etc. At the end of the day, the packers are like Nebraska football, or Kentucky basketball, or whatever. It's the only game in town (Brewers? Puh-lease...until this year, they had sucked for years. Bucks? Less buzz than the T-Wolves). packer fans are the guys who wear packer gear in the crowd at another sporting event, just to make sure everyone knows that they aren't [insert name of team playing here] fans. Losers. They also buy worthless shares of stock in the team. WHY? Go buy a poster or a fathead or something...it's actually probably worth more than a piece of paper and your mythical ownership.

Anyway, before I get too disjointed, I just wanted to conclude by saying that it was fantastic and awesome to see them choke yesterday. 15-1 regular season? Sound familiar? At least the '98 Vikes made the NFC title game. The packers just became the FIRST TEAM EVER to win 15+ games and lose their first playoff game. Their defense also surrendered the most passing yards in a season in league history! Oh, and their postseason record at Lambeau since 2001? 2-4. Looks like that mystique is gone...suggit.

On a lighter note:
1) Gophers just one two road games in a row for the first time since 2007
2) Ricky Rubio appears to be good...and exciting.
3) The Twins just signed Joel Zumaya (former Tiger), who always scared me because he throws 100 mph.


January 13, 2012

The Worst/Overplayed Classic Rock Songs



There is no caption spot, so here is the caption: I hope I am not giving anything away.

RTS: Jan, your little post about the Stones prompted me to place Exile on Main Street in my car CD player. Quite a feat since my CD player is in the trunk (really) and the rotation does not change all that often. I am sure I do not need to go through the merits of the album or the songs. However, as I rocked out to the singles Tumbling Dice and Happy, I wondered if die-hards would make fun of a casual listener like myself for still loving songs that classic rock stations have done their best to kill. I began googling to find where these songs stood in comparisons to other Stones songs. Neither was that far up there on any list, which made me Happy (da dum dum). As so often happens with the internet, one thing lead to another and I began to wonder what are the 10 worst/overplayed songs on classic rock stations? Jan are you up for taking a cooperative stab at it?

Jan: Yes and yes. Funny thing, Mrs. Jan and I play a game with KQRS: we choose 3 bands and then turn to the station to see what's playing. Something like: "Van Halen, Cheap Trick, Boston"

RTS: That must be like shooting fish in a barrel. I have not listened to KQ in 10 years and I bet I could nail it: Steely Dan, Eric Clapton, Thin Lizzy.

Jan: Why don't you go first.

RTS: You just want the #1 spot, but ok...

#10 Jump- Van Halen. I loved the original lineup of Van Halen as much as anyone during my HS years. I even used Van Halen lyrics in yearbook signings (what a tool I was), BUT this song has got to go. It seems to have become the representative song for the album and the band as a whole. It is not hard rockin' like other Van Halen songs, it highlights Eddie on keyboards giving it a defining 80s sound. When I hear it, I picture the crappy video where they are playing on a sound stage. In it's place radio stations could play Beautiful Girls (more) or Light Up the Sky from Van Halen II. Even a David Lee Roth solo song would be better than Jump.

Jan: #9. "Oye Como Va" - Santana. In college some older brothers in my fraternity played Santana on a semi-regular rotation. I found a lot to like by Carlos, this song was not one of them. It's a song you are suppose to want to like because it's Santana but it's more like when you get a box delivered to your house and you open it up and there is another box inside and a ton of styrofoam peanuts are now spilled all over your floor. This song is the styrofoam peanuts.

RTS: I am right there with you Oye Como Va definitely makes me jump to another station. See how I tied the two together, brilliant. Time to get the Led out...

#8 and 8a (I learned this trick betting on the ponies) Black Dog and Rock and Roll- Led Zeppelin. Again, I am making this selection with love. Great band, overplayed album, way over played songs. I have heard these so many times they blend together and I have to think for a minute which one is which. If I had to choose a song from Zepplin IV that needs more airtime to fill the gaping void that removing Black Dog and Rock and Roll would leave, I go with Four Sticks. Besides being a quality song, Four Sticks was not on the first box set and was thus not played all those nights I threw the box set on in a 4 disc shuffle. I do hear it every now and then on the radio. Here is an idea that would never fly, how about cut out the whole 3 song getting the led out session and just once the stations play all 8:28 of How Many More Times. I know that is just crazy talk.

Jan: #7 "I've See All Good People" - Yes. Songs that repeat annoying refrains make for annoying songs and "I've seen all good people turn their heads each day so satisfied I'm on my way" is an annoying refrain, ergo - I don't even have to finish the sentence. Apparently the song is suppose to be about Alice in Wonderland which adds to the annoyance in it's unoriginality (note: only Tom Petty is allowed to have a song(video) that has to do with Alice in Wonderland) not to mention the fact that the band is named "Yes" which, one could argue, is about as original as naming your album "The White Album" except for the fact that "The White Album" kicked ass.

RTS: Hmmmm, I did not know that was the name of that song, but it seems so obvious now. That one would not have made my top 10, however I am not about to make an argument in favor of it being removed from the list. The hard part of this list is not finding songs but separating out the 5 star candidates from the 3 star. It is like finding the largest pile of shit in the pig barn. Has anyone ever met a Yes fan? I owned one CD because I forgot to mail back the BMG card and then failed to mail back the CD. Maybe that is their niche. I think I abdondoneed it with several other crappy CDs (Ugky Kid Joe anyone) when I left for college. Anyway on to...

#6 Money for Nothing- Dire Straights. The gloves are coming off now, there are no more picks of love coming out my camp. It is my belief that 50% of all migraines would not occur if this song were to be removed from the radio. Even writing about this song I feel a headache coming on. This song belongs on a station where it can be followed by Billy Ocean. It is that soft semi rock crap that permeated the 80s. Not being a fan of Dire Straights, I can not offer a suitable replacement by them so I offer up George Harrison's What is Life. Conjuring up images of the helicopter scene in Goodfellas is a whole lot better than cruddy 80s graphics and MTV.

Jan: Are you saying my pick sucks? Thanks, thanks a lot.

#5 American Woman - The Guess Who. You're suppose to like this song because it sounds so "protest-y," like 1967 and 1968 banged and had a baby, that baby would be this song. For me, it's like a Steppenwolf and The Who banged and had a baby they gave up for adoption. I don't know what that means. Anyway, lyrics like "I don’t need your war machines, I don’t need your ghetto scenes, Colored lights can hypnotize, Sparkle someone else’s eyes" feel like something Dylan wrote inside the womb. I think part of the problem with the song is the band's name (I know, I hated "Yes" too but I think it's relevant.) "The Guess Who"? It's like in Spinal Tap when they first called their band "The Originals" and then when they found out there was another band with that same name they changed their name to "The New Originals."

RTS: You totally nailed the Guess Who name. Lenny Kravitz certainly did not do anything to help that song. That cover blows. Yes, I am saying your picks suck. Isn't that the point or would that be like a double negative meaning that the songs were good but the picks themselves suck? No, Yes really is terrible. I am totally confused and am just going to move onto...

#4 Bohemian Rhapsody- Queen. This song may have been huge in the 70s prior to Wayne's World in the early 90s, but I had not heard it and if I did it was not played like it is now. Catch phases "Party time excellent" and "We're not worthy" from Wayne's World have faded and so should this song. I know it is not a story song but with no chorus and several distinct different parts it plays like one and thus got worn out like one. Plus after the initial "oh isn't that so clever moment" wore off, it is just annoying and long. In it's place how about something else from T.Rex besides Get It On. I like that song and do not know of any other T. Rex songs that receive airplay. Again, it would just be too crazy to deviate from the norm.

Jan: #3a #3b - Fly Like an Eagle and Jungle Love - Steve Miller. Unlike everyone I know, The Steve Miller Band was not the first concert I went to so they (he) hold no place in my cupboard of nostalgia. Fly like an Eagle wants to really test the bounds of music and make you feel like you're living in the future but every time I hear this song I feel like I'm right there in 1976. It's like a less imaginative Peter Frampton; I think that's an insult. Jungle Love starts out with "I met you on somebody's island, You thought you had known me before, I brought you a crate of papaya" - it's like Steve Miller went through Jimmy Buffet's garbage and pulled out that gem. The chord's themselves seem catchy and timeless but listen again and they're now off-putting and annoying.

RTS: Personally, I think all Steve Miller songs sound the same adding to the overplayed feeling of any individual song. I see you prefer to use the exit ramp version of pairing up picks instead of the ponies.

#2 Old Time Rock N Roll- Bob Seger. This song makes me feel like I got shot in the head with a nail gun and dropped a wrench on my foot at the same time. This is what non-hip old people get fired up about while playing pool. Certainly, having the jackass Tom Cruise dancing around in his tighty whities run through my head every time I hear it does not help either. What would be better, pretty much anything including all the songs on this list.

Jan: FYI - I have turned the reigns of #1 over to DTK.

RTS: Nice.

Jan: Can u guess #1?

RTS: Doobie Brothers? Steely Dan? Don't leave me hanging.

Jan: #1 is gong to be *



* insert scene from Holy Grail where writer has a heart attack and dies and the story doesn't really finish.

RTS: Jerk.

Hours pass...

DTK: Number one: "Life in the Fastlane"

This song was on heavy KQ repeat - I think in those early days of KQ highlighting when a song was on "compact digital disc", they only had like three discs. The Eagles greatest hits, Steely Dan, and Steppenwolf. This meant heavy rotation of this meant to be pick me up but cautionary tale. I thought I had purged this from my memory of the 80's and 90's. Now this blog has peeled back a layer of the onion from my past, like some black magic hypnotist, and let me say, there is not one great memory associated with this song.

It's hard to have any list of classic rock (s)hits without mentioning the Eagles. I don't know which God's dick these guys sucked, or whose soul got sold to the Devil for them to have 5 Billboard hits, but I don't like it. These guys have date raped us for 25 years - they got us in bed with Hotel California and then when they started in with "Desperado" we begged them to stop, but they just kept going and going.

Let's face it, remove Hotel California from the Eagles catalogue and you know what would happen if Steely Dan teamed up with Hall and Oates.

The Eagles are one of those bands that seem oddly obsessed with writing songs about the crazy rock star lives they lead - like every song was a sad announcement to the world that they are, in fact, rockstars. Perhaps an overbearing cover for the fact that if you look at their old band promo shots, it's like a skinny Meatloaf impersonator walked into a gay jesus convention. Trust me, if facebook had been around then, these guys would be friend requesting every cool kid they knew from high school.

The problem is, nobody wants to hear about Don Henley having sex or doing coke. We get it. You are rock stars. You buy drugs and fuck and shit, but keep it out of my face you gross, creepy guy. These guys were singing "Witchy Woman" while the Who was jumping off roofs into pools and breaking bones and the Stones were destroying entire floors of hotel rooms. Clearly, these social B-teamers want to tell you how they were throwing crazy parties too. The problem is, Eagles band members, everyone knows the only reason anyone came to your parties was to take advantage of your low self esteem driven need to be liked so they could trash your house, steal your booze, and eat everything in your fridge. And then in the morning the only people still there are the foreign exchange students who got left there by the cool kids they lived with - who were going back to their cool kid houses to bang their hot girlfriends. I promise you, nobody from high school wants to hear me, Jan and RTS sing about doing coke off a strippers tit in some Tijuana hump barn. We'd sing it, it'd become a hit, and then people would send emails saying "So, you guys still filming each other making those fake "COPS" videos?" We got it, Don. You're not a virgin. You had a substantial coke problem that you could afford. Just say it in Rolling Stone and stop begging us to watch your homemade snuff film.

You also feel like they may have written this ode to fast living so somebody would use it in a car commercial in the future. I've always suspected Queen did the same thing with "We Are the Champions". They must have sat around and said "let's write a song that someday everyone will play after they win a championship and have to pay us a royalty". Which is odd, because it's not clear they were actually the champions of anything, and because I just don't think Freddie Mercury was a huge sports fan. (footnote-- I don't know this for sure and it's not because he was gay. It was because he was SOOOOOOO gay.) In fairness, not even they could have imagined it being the glue that held Revenge of the Nerds together, but when you shit a seed, sometimes it grows into a tree. Also, they went ahead and added "We will Rock You" on the B side which I believe was their attempt to answer the, at the time omnipresent, Reese's peanut butter cup commercial's "you put your peanut butter in my chocolate" craze. Ram two good things together and then shove them right down people's throats.

But back to "Life in the Fastlane": The opening guitar rift feels like a sad attempt to musically answer Layla. But you give it a chance, and it almost makes you think something exciting is going to happen. Like walking into a cool new place. You want to order a drink and give it a chance. Then Don Henley starts singing, "He was brutally handsome, and she was terminally pretty". What? Fuck you, Don Henley. Now you're starting to wonder if you're at the wrong bar. Then that fucking "Life in the Fastlane" chorus hits you, and you're like "Yep. This was a mistake." What's especially irritating about this piece of shit, is that about halfway through the song they start inexplicably jamming, but in a way that makes you think that maybe besides joe walsh, they just aren't very good and they want you to know it.

I know people say the Eagles are a piece of rock and roll history, and I concede the point. But history is riddled with mostly garbage. I'm not trying to compare the Eagles to say, Hitler, but in many ways they are worse.

They had the bad taste to have a reunion tour.

RTS: (stunned silence). As we waited for the #1 song, I compiled the back and forth emails and I wrote the conclusion. I figured I would just add 1 or 2 sentences about the #1 song. Well I just deleted that. There is nothing more to say other than thanks to all of the cruddy and overplayed songs, but there can only be one winner.

Not You Too, John Parr from St. Elmo's Fire Fame

This is way creepier than Prince's awful Viking playoff song that jinxed us.



Holy Shit, I just listened to them both again. It's a close call.

Tix Part Trois


It is Friday and that means it is time for another edition of RTS' tix. If you are tired of this segment now, you are in trouble because I can run this for 6 months. This is the second to last page of concert tickets and the last one does not have that much. These are not in chronological order. Starting at the top left and ending with the one where the ink has completely faded:

Dylan and The Dead Dylan played with the Dead during their set making The Dead bearable.

Prince with Morris Day and the Time Great show. What helped justify a $77 ticket price? Free copies of his new CD when we went in. Nice touch.

Pixies, night 1 The only time I have seen a band both nights they were in town for a tour. Totally worth it too. I saw them a 3rd time when they came through town again.

Pixies, night 2

Soul Asylum and Gin Blossoms There was no one there, it was raining and Soul Asylum did not play an encore. It was nice to see that an encore is not obligatory. It would have been kind of sad if they had. People were clearly there to see the Gin Blossoms, who went on first. I wanted a Jagermeister Soul Asylum shirt ( To wear at Talladega not to wear in the Cul-De-Sac) but they were not selling SA shirts at all. Tommy Stinson was on bass.

Basilica Block Party, Soul Asylum was definitely there and I think Midnight Oil was the other headliner.

Bob Dylan and Phil Lesh Phil Lesh was so boring.

Bob Dylan Love and Theft Tour

Cake, Modest Mouse, The Flaming Lips and De La Soul Cake and Modest Mouse where great. The Flaming Lips played scenes from Battle Royale on the screen behind them during the show. De La Soul was disappointing, I guess they did not feel as I did that their set should be made of only songs from 1989.

January 9, 2012

We Interrupt This Walk Down Musical Memory Lane

Barry Larkin, favorite player of MCA's youth, has been elected to the baseball Hall of Fame. Way to go, 11!

Also, Brad Radke got two votes. Love it.

January 6, 2012

The Chicago Years and Return to Minneapolis


I am sitting her on my couch recovering from a vasectomy. Not as bad as one would think so far. We had a good discussion about page 1 so rather than jump to a sports page here is page 2 of my concert stubs:

The Rolling Stones with Blues Traveler opening, Beastie Boys, Jimmy Buffet, REM, Lenny Kravitz, Tim Mahoney and the Meanies (Dec 31st 1999),Red Hot Chili Peppers with opening act the Foo Fighters.

Soul Asylum (High school years), Public Enemy, R.L. Burnside, Burning Spear, Son Volt, The Samples.

There are a couple of stubs from this period on another page. The only bands really missing are for bands I saw at the Cabooze like Boogie Wonderland.

We previously touched on the Stones in Jan's post which started this whole thing. The Beastie Boys were amazing. REM was pretty lame and for the record I did not buy the tickets. Wilco opened but we did not know who they were and missed them, DOH! I was in a bar drinking and someone offered me a ticket to the Jimmy Buffet show that night. I think the tickets reflect that I was older and had a real job that put some cash in my pocket.

That is the Soul Asylum ticket Jan referred to, pre Grave Dancers Union. Can you tell FOB ER did some work for First Avenue and was getting free tickets? Pubic Enemy was a blast. Flavor Flav threw fried chicken and fruit to the crowd at the end. Chuck D is just a little guy. I was coaching football at the time and mentioned I was going to the concert. One of the kids asked if they were the group with the militant guys on the stage. I felt old because they were unsure who PE was.

January 5, 2012

Happy f'ing New Year! 5 days late

Yes, this is late but when does FTLOSBW ever do something on anyone else's clock? Never, that's when. So, some resolutions for our "flog" (a "flog" is my 2012 entry into Websters, it means "fraudulent blog" and defined as "a blog which has less than 10 people ever actually reading a post over the past 6 months let alone more than 5 unique users commenting on any one post.)

Resolution 1 - Have a good time, all the time.

Resolution 2 - Be funny.

Resolution 3 - Don't hate.

Happy 2012! Greatness to follow.