Monthly Archives: May 2009

Speaking of Good Causes…

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My buddy Jack Hattaway is preparing to ride in his second Lotoja Classic, a 206-mile bicycle race that runs from Logan, Utah, to Jackson Hole, Wyoming, in September. This time, however, he’s doing it to raise funds for the important research being done high on the hill above our fair city at the Huntsman Cancer Institute. Jack was planning to ride again anyhow, but he was inspired to make this year’s race a bit more meaningful after watching a good friend battle — and defeat — melanoma. As it happens, The Girlfriend and I have recently had our own experiences with cancer and the Huntsman Institute — not us, but involving people that matter to us — so it’s a cause near to our hearts as well. If my loyal readers will forgive me, I’m again going to ask everyone reading this to consider throwing in a couple of bucks for a worthy goal.

You can learn more details about Jack and why he’s doing this at his donation page. I hope you’ll click through and at least give it some thought.

If you’re interested in the Lotoja Classic, here’s the official site for that. And lastly, here is the little blurb I wrote about Jack’s participation in the event last year.

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Amazing How Quickly It Goes By…

Chris and Dana Reeve

Fourteen years ago Wednesday, Christopher Reeve — a man I once callously dismissed as a second-rate has-been — was critically injured when the horse he was riding in competition balked at jumping over an obstacle, and Chris was thrown. It was a mundane accident; at worst, he should have suffered only some bruises and a sore ego. Unfortunately, however, his hands tangled in the reins, which changed his trajectory so that he ended up crashing down directly on his head. We all know what happened next. Chris’ neck was broken, and in a literal blink of an eye, he became the world’s most famous quadriplegic.

He also became, in the years following the accident, a much better man than he had been before: a tireless advocate for medical research and an inspiration for those with spinal-cord injuries (and for people with a lot of other problems, too, and even for people with no problems at all). Chris was no saint, a point he emphasized in both of the books he wrote after the accident. He was frequently irritated by the media’s insistence on calling him “a real-life Superman” (even though, for my money, that’s exactly what he was). But he was a man who was handed one of the biggest lemons life can give you, and somehow he found a way to turn it into something of value, not only for himself, but for the rest of the world as well.

Chris is gone now — he’s been dead nearly five years, as strange as that is to contemplate — and his beautiful and devoted wife Dana is, too. I’m not at all confident that there’s anything waiting for us beyond this life, but if there is any kind of mercy in this universe, any sense of fairness, they are together, and Chris is free of that damned chair.

I bring all this up again because the news that so many years have passed since Chris’ accident surprised me — it doesn’t seem that long — and also because I believe Chris and Dana’s lives are ones worth remembering and commemorating. So in that spirit, I going to ask everyone reading this to go visit the website for the Christopher and Dana Reeve Foundation. Learn about the good these two managed to accomplish, and what continues to be done in their names. And if you can spare a few dollars in these difficult times, make a little contribution to help carry on their work. Or better yet, make a pledge to support the efforts of Matthew Reeve, Chris’ son, as he runs in the New York Marathon on behalf of his father’s foundation.

Chris didn’t live long enough to walk again, but he was convinced that it was possible. I am, too. Let’s help make it happen.

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Facebook Movie Meme: 122 Out of 239 Films

Here’s a meme-type thing about movies that I picked up over on Facebook. It was pretty obviously assembled by someone younger than me, since most of the titles on the list came out just in the past ten years or so, and the handful of older ones date only as far back as the ’70s and ’80s. Another clue is that most of the comedies on this list come from what I think of as the “asinine” school of comedy, the lamentable modern-day idiom that seems predicated on the idea that nothing’s funnier than people uttering non-sequiturs and behaving as if they haven’t got a brain in their heads. (See Dynamite, Napoleon. Or better yet, don’t bother.) But I’m sure I’m just coming across as yet another grumpy old bastard yelling at The Damn Kids to get off my lawn. Such is life.

In any event, here’s the meme. I’ve made a few modifications (correcting film titles that I knew were incomplete or inaccurate, etc.), and added some comments in square brackets ([]).

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Meme of Eights

Hi, everyone, and welcome back to the grind. Hope you all enjoyed your holiday weekend. My own was somewhat… tumultuous, and far less recreational than I was hoping for when last we met. It’s a long story I don’t feel up to relating right now; I’ll just say that it involved medical stuff, and assure my three loyal readers that everything is fine now.

Perhaps there’s some lingering fallout from that story I don’t want to tell, or maybe it’s just because I’ve been off work for three days, but I’m having a very hard time getting my mental clutch to engage. Which means the ambitious blog entry I originally had in mind for today isn’t going to happen (nor is much of anything else, I suspect). Instead, I think I’m going to stay in the shallow end of the brain pool and play with some memes. Here’s one I picked up from Jaquandor:

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Net Crap: The Final Frontier

It’s Friday, and it’s looking like my workload today is going to be pretty light as run up to the long weekend, so you know what that means… I’m in the mood for some time-killing netcrap! In keeping with the theme that’s most preoccupied my mind (and this blog) for the last couple of weeks, I’ve put together a special all-Star Trek netcrap edition, starting with this clever little clip that points out the similarities between J.J. Abrams’ Trek movie and another well-known and much loved sci-fi flick… and I don’t mean the one that featured Ricardo Montalban:

http://www.collegehumor.com/video/4026025/deja-view-my-favorite-movie-star-trek-vs-star-wars

I found that one over at one of my regular political reads, oddly enough.

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These Are the Continuing Rants…

As previously promised — or threatened, depending on your point of view — I have more to say about that new Star Trek movie that everyone’s loving on. Before I get wound up, I’d like to reiterate again that I really did enjoy the movie, so don’t misunderstand my criticisms of it. But you know, everyone is raving about how great it was, and I, in my usual contrarian, stubborn-old-fanboy way, just can’t let that stand without argument. Because while it was better than I expected, there were a lot of not-so-great things about it.

Even though it’s been out two weeks now, I’m going to assume that spoiler protocols are still in effect for some, so exercise caution in going below the fold:

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Might As Well Jump

I encountered the following over at Scalzi’s Whatever and thought it was pretty cool. FYI, there’s no actual video here, only music played over a still image:

I normally don’t care for cover versions of songs I consider personal landmarks — which “Jump” definitely is for me; it’s an instant time portal back to one particular summer — for much the same reason that I resist movie remakes: I like what I like and, with few exceptions, I don’t think there’s anything wrong with still listening to or watching favorite older media. “Old” doesn’t equal “bad,” in my opinion. That said, a cover that’s well-done and drastically different from the original can sometimes make something that’s become intimately familiar seem exciting and fresh again. If nothing else in this case, I can finally understand all the lyrics that I’ve never managed to decipher in 25 years of listening to David Lee Roth’s slurry delivery.

Incidentally and for whatever it’s worth (not much, probably), I was really annoyed with the commenters over at the Whatever. One guy said “I didn’t think it was possible to make that song listenable,” and there were several other remarks along the lines of “lame 80s song,” “cheesy 80s song,” etc. I know I’m in the terminally unhip minority for continuing to enjoy the stuff I liked as a kid, but I just don’t understand where this kind of attitude comes from. Why does music that was once immensely popular have to be declared lame after a few years? Is it a backlash thing? Or snobby hipsters who can’t handle the idea of something appealing to a mass audience? Or is just the Damn Kids showing zero tolerance for anything that came out before they had breakfast yesterday?

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