Yes, I know none of it makes any sense. We leave in a few
days for what we are calling our Lone Star Summer. After years of silly summer trips
to silly places, wasting a bunch of money, we purchased a second home in
Austin, Texas. We leave this Wednesday (July 2) and are driving to Austin for
an unspecified amount of time.I know it
makes little sense to go from one hot place to another (especially since Austin
is both hot & humid), but to us it makes sense.
We’ll be driving via El Paso figuring we’ll make it there in
one day and then reach Austin on day two. That gets us there in time for July 4th.
It will be a mix of work and fun for the summer including trips to South Padre
Island, Corpus Christi and perhaps even San Antonio for a AA Texas League
baseball game.
It will be an adventure filled with food, fun, new places
and a lot of video. I am hopeful our Lone Star Summer invigorates my video
activity which has been light for quite a while.
Wednesday nights are kinda slow in downtown Austin (relatively speaking) with music
really hitting its stride Thursday night through Saturday. Along 6th
(North of Congress), we stopped into a few places and happened upon a band
called Wilsonplaying at the open air venue of The Belmont restaurant. Here’s their rendition
of “We Won’t Get Fooled Again.”
Since the day we moved here, I have wanted to walk up 6th Street
to Whole Foods (about one mile) and look at all the restaurants along the way—and
there are many. The one I have been dying to stop in to try is Hut’s
Hamburgers, one of those places heralded by Jane and Michael Stern in their
Roadfood site and books. To say the least, we were not disappointed.
We walked out the front door and headed two blocks down Colorado and there on the right side is Antone’s, the
legendary Austin
music venue. It was a quiet Monday night and it was Super Soul Monday,
featuring Flyjack and Uncle Bruno. These two local bands were just fantastic as
they played for close to three hours wit ha few songs in which members of one
band jammed with the other. This was truly one of the great reasons we moved to
Austin.
Having owned a second home before, we quickly learned that
transportation costs can get out of hand. For starters, our new place is in the
middle of everything in Austin—food,
music, etc…--so we can either walk everywhere or take Capital Metro, a great
local public transit system.
Where you can really rack up the expense is in getting to
and from the airport. In Austin,
however, for 50 cents, you can take the Airport Flyer (Capital Metro 100) from
ABIA and you whisked into downtown or the UT campus in minutes.
Been a while since I have been at the video switch. Our
first day in our new second home in Austin
included visits to the two Saturday farmers markets, one down the street at 4th
and Guadalupe and the other out in SunsetValley. And if you are
the live music capital of the world, there would have to be music at the
markets. At the Downtown Market there’s Brian Byrne and Borrowed Time; out in SunsetValley,
it was a fill in for one of the regulars, so I didn’t catch his name
Sorry sports fans, it's be a while since I have posted any videos. It's been a rugged few months with work travel but I will be posting more videos shortly.
We missed them at SXSW and are kicking ourselves of not seeing thm live at Stubbs. Anyway, the first song for the new album, Accelerate, is Supernatural Superserious. It will be song of the year.
Spring training came to an end with all the Arizona games
starting an hour earlier to allow teams to make a quick get-away. It seemed like
a good idea at the time, but the 10-10 tie between the Cubs and Brewers
seemingly went on forever. Because the teams play each other early in the
season, neither used any of their regular pitchers (for the most part), so
naturally it was a high-scoring affair.
A few notes: it was really cool seeing George Foster before
the game, signing autographs alongside Fergie Jenkins. He looks as mean as the
day he smacked more than 50 homers in a season (back went it meant something). Also,
I will tell you that Kosuke Fukudome is the real deal. He has an arm like Ichiro and
looks like he may have the pop of Matsui. The Cubs may have themselves a right fielder. (The best once since Jim
Hickman).
Sad to say Cubs fans, I think the Brewers are better than
your boys this year. If the Brewers get any pitching, they will win the NL
Central. They can mash.
Andruw Jonesis now patrolling
center field for the Dodgers after playing his first 1,761 games with the
Braves. He might be a solid addition, but he looks beefy in his Dodger Blues.
ESPN says he’s 210—now way, he’s easy 225-240.
I think about the first time I saw Larry Bowa:he was a good field, no hit shortstop coming
up through the Phillies ranks in the ‘70s. In the minors, we was teamed with Denny Doyle
and later found his calling when he was paired with Dave Cash as the Phillies
double-play combo. Bowa, a former manager and coach, now is the third base
coach with the Dodgers and is a true testament to what hard work can do for
your career in baseball.
Well, it was history in the making when the Los Angeles
Dodgers hosted the Los Angeles Angles in a stadium outside of Southern
California. After 55 years in Vero Beach, Florida, the Dodgers are moving their
spring training home to Arizona next year. As a warm-up, the Dodgers played the
Angels in a game at the spring training home of the A’s who are in Japan
getting ready to be slaughtered by the Bosox to open the season.
It was a huge crowd mostly filled with Dodgers fans who have
been longing to see their team in spring training. A seven-hour drive versus a
flight to Florida…you do the math.
It was semi-surrealistic to see the blue uniforms on a
spring training field, and LA started most of their regulars except for the
handful who are hurt. It was also really odd to see Joe Torre in an LA uniform wearing
Steve Garvey’s old number.
The Angels look fairly formidable even without Vlad in the
lineup. Torii Hunter is a huge addition to the team, and speaking of huge,
Andruw Jones, the new centerfielder for the Dodgers, looks like he spent the
offseason exercising the knife and fork.
Ah, one more note: with Nomar and Andy LaRoche on the
disabled list, Blake DeWitt, one of the Dodgers top prospects is filling in at
third base. He is a native of Sikeston, Missouri, the home of Lambert's, the top place to
pig out in America (according to the Travel Channel).
You have to hand it to the folks in Austin; they can make a
horrible flight delay enjoyable. Austin-Bergstrom International Airport has a
program called “Music in the Air” at various locations throughout the terminal.
While we waited for some nasty weather to blow through (which shut down DFW),
we saw Michael Bellew perform at Highlands Lakes Bar by Gate 9.
This is the life: sunny afternoon, A’s hosting the
Diamondbacks in front of a full house at Phoenix Muni. Doug Davis (the most
deliberate pitcher on earth) facing Dana Eveland whom the A’s got from the
D-backs in the Haren deal. The A’s won 2-1 in awell-played effort that is typical of the later stages of Spring
Training. Emilio Bonafacio on the D-backs looks impressive and gives Arizona
hope if they (foolishly) pass on signing Orlando Hudson to a deal; this is his
walk year.
These clearly are teams headed in opposite directions. It’s
odd to see the Diamondbacks roll out a lineup that looks solid from 1-7/8
depending on who’s in the rotation. Good drafting and a few smart trades (like
the ones for Chris Young and Hudson) go a long way to building a winner.
Lots of featured players: Upton, Drew, Keith Foulke (he’s
back in an A’s uni) and a hard-throwing young lefty on the A’s, Blevins, who is
so skinny… well, add your own joke here.
The calendar said March, so it’s time for another season on
baseball. Our first Cactus League game took us to Phoenix Muni to see the
Oakland A’s host the Milwaukee Brewers. Both teams started some of their regulars, but
the game quickly turned into a showcase for the group of players hoping to make
the final, 40-man roster.
These clearly are teams going in opposite directions: the A’s
are totally rebuilding while the Brew Crew are hoping to win the National
League Central.Featured in this video
are a handful of players including Ryan Braun, Matt LaPorta (#1 Brewers prospect),
Carlos Gonzalez (who came from the D-backs in the trade for Dan Haren),
personal favorite Huston Street and former (emphasis on former) great closer
Eric Gagne. To say Gagne looked awful is an understatement.
Jack Cust, a one-dimensional slugger on the A’s hit two
homers. Interesting in light of the fact he was mentioned in the steroids
report.
After a few lousy weather days, the sun was out on a beautiful Sunday morning in Austin for the AT&T Austin Marathon. It ran along Congress heading south and then wound around the city before ending back on Congress a few blocks south of the Capital Building. As possible newcomers to the area, we were taken with the spirit of those who not only ran but came to enjoy the scene.
Yes, it’s the first week of February and baseball is back.
Here in Arizona, after a long cold period (40 is cold here), the sun is out, it’s
70 and baseball is in the air. Down by Chase Field, the Arizona Diamondbacks hob-knobbed
with the fans in their annual fan fest. This year, it was a better organized
event than last year with player autograph tables set up inside the park with a
few interactive stands outside. Maybe I am sounding like a “homer,” but the
Diamondback players seem to be a fairly nice group of guys that are patient
with their adoring fans.
Featured here are a host of players: Conor Jackson, Chad
Tracy, Orlando Hudson, Mark Reynolds, Chris Young, Stephen Drew, etc…
The day before the big game, the Valley (of the Sun) is full
of events related to Super Bowl 42. There are parties (to which we are not
invited), private functions (such as one hosted by Chris Berman) and events
such as two flag football games for charity. We went to the Celebrity Flag
Football Challenge which was hosted by former NFL star, Doug Flutie (on behalf
of his charity). For some unknown reason, the game was out in Surprise at the
spring training home of the Royals and Rangers.
The game was really fun with DMC performing at halftime. We
actually arrived at halftime and missed the Flutie Brothers Band but saw the
second half which featured Flutie, Chad Johnson, Willis McGahee, A.J. Feeley
and others…
I am truly impressed with how the NFL players handle themselves
with the fans. They are far more cordial and natural and don’t seemed annoyed
by the fan worship. Cardinals kicker Neil Rackers stood in the concourse and
chatted with fans for 10-15 minutes just having a good time.
We finally got into the Super Bowl 42 mix by attending the
NFL Experience down by the University of Phoenix Stadium, site of the big game.
It was a long, and I mean long walk from the parking lot
adjacent to the event and the line for folks waiting to buy tickets was outrageous
and wouldn’t be surprised if it was a 90 minute wait, and this was late in the
afternoon. We had to wait in a short
line for will call tickets.
Once inside, it was crowded, but well organized. The “Experience”
included a number of interactive events
(kicking, throwing, running, catching) that also had long lines, exhibits of
such things as uniforms throughout the years and sponsored booths featuring
current and former NFL players. That was our main focus.
This video includes: Chad Johnson, Brayon Edwards, Reggie
Wayne, Antonio Gates, Marc Bulger, Alex Smith and a host of others. The players
were all friendly and some even talked on fans’ cell phones, saying their
hellos to jealous friends “back home.”
The NFL Experience is still going today, but it would not be
someplace I’d want to be near given the traffic, crowds, etc.. We’re off to
another SB 42 event.
Our last encounter with the RedBall Project came as part of
the Super Bowl 42 festivities. Well, maybe not exactly, but we saw it about a
block from the ESPN stage at the Scottsdale Waterfront and in the middle of
SB42 Party Central. The ball was outside the Bentley Gallery as part of the
Thursday night “artwalk” which is different than the Super Bowl Artwalk
scheduled for Feb 2.
We missed a few of the Red Ball’s stops in Scottsdale this
past week—a combination of bad planning and misreading of its schedule. We
would have loved to have seen it at the Arabian Library, a cool new library
that has an odd entry-way that would be perfect for the Red Ball.
We caught up with the Red Ball as it sat (was perched?) in a
Ramada at Pinnacle Peak Park. The park was busy with hikers and climbers
wanting to make their way up the mountain. Yes, we have mountains in the
desert. Next stop will be at a senior
center in Scottsdale (which we will miss) with other stops in Downtown/Old
Scottsdale later in the week as it gets closer to Super Bowl 42.
The first stop in Scottsdale for The RedBall Project was The
Marshall Way Trolley Bridge. In the background is the Scottsdale Waterfront (I
kid you not). We really do have a waterfront.
Circled in red on our calendars was our first Big Event of
2008: The RedBall Project. The RedBall is a large red ball (obviously) made of
PVC that moves from city to city (and in Scottsdale within the city) and sits
in various locations awaiting interaction. Or not. The Red Ball is public art
and an experiment in human interaction. From what we read, as the ball has visited
such ports of call as Portland, Sydney and Barcelona, some folks gently touch
it while others try and pound on it. Part of the fun over the next few days
will be observing the Red Ball locally (and how folks in these parts interact
with it) as it moves from downtown Scottsdale to a skate park up near our part
of the city to a new library to … well, you will have to tune in later to see
where it’s headed next and how it fared.
We were lucky enough to meet Kurt Perschke, the artist
behind the RedBall Project.This first
clip has some thoughts from Perschke on the RedBall Project.
As we work on getting our land legs back from a week at sea,
one of the highlights of our Mexican Riviera Cruise was a serenade by a
mariachi group while we ate lunch at The Shrimp Factory in Cabo San Lucas.
Back in March, I created a video that has sparked some controversy.
It was called “Barry Bonds is the Greatest.” I endured a lot of negative comments and stood
hopeful. I had hoped that the 2007 season would be one in which he not only
broke the home run record (which he did), but one in which he came clean with
the baseball world and especially the fans. So, he’s dropped by the Giants,
indicated on perjury charges and has become a pariah.
Result: I think he’s a bum. Good riddance. Henry Aaron is
the home run king.
Our 2007 season baseball season, which started off in Spring
Training and includes stops in Memphis, Cleveland and Albuquerque, ended with
the 2007 Arizona Fall League Championship. The game featured the Surprise
Rafters against the Phoenix Desert Dogs, perennial league champs. The game was
close until the late innings when the Dogs pulled away and won 7-2. The crowd
was a very disappointing 1,200 or so which, I think, is the lowest attendance
for the finals in recent memory. There were no Diamondbacks or Giants on either
of the teams, and that’s generally a crowd-drawing factor.
Among the future stars who truly shined were: from the Dogs,
Andrew McCutchen (Pirates); Pirate teammate Nyjer Morgan; Ryan Sweeny (White
Sox); pitchers Nick Blackburn (starter, Twins) and bullet-throwing reliever Bob
McCrory. From the Rafters, John Mayberry Jr. (Rangers), whose father was in the
stands; Elvis Andrus (Rangers) and Sean Rodriguez (Angels), who homered for one
of the two Rafter runs.
It was a great AFL season. I just wish more fans knew about
the league and came to the games. It’s truly more fun that Spring Training. If
only they had decent souvenirs.
Team USA, our nation’s effort to compete on the global stage
in The Olympics and other tournaments, is participating in a week’s worth of Arizona
Fall League games as a tune up for the IBAF World Cup in Taiwan. Team USA
hosted the Phoenix Desert Dogs, and walked away with a 3-2 win with Dodgers’ prospect
Andy LaRoche the hero with the glove and bat. He drove in the winning run with
a double in the bottom of the 8th, with Nationals reliever Chris
Booker coming in for the save.
This lengthy game clip features LaRoche and other 2008
Rookie of the Year hopefuls. Included in that mix are Colby Rasmis (Cadinals),
Evan Longoria (D-Rays), Delwyn Young (Dodgers) and Andrew McCutchen (Pirates).
Other players in the clip include a pair of Phillies prospects, Josh Outman
(what a perfect name for a pitcher) and Jason Jamarillo (catcher). We’ll no
doubt be seeing that pair when they play in ’08 for the Lehigh Valley Iron
Pigs.
What could be more ideal for a couple of farmers market nuts
than the ultimate market faceoff? Saturday, we did back-to-back trips to the
two top farmers markets in Austin. We started at the one downtown at 4th
and Guadalupe (reminiscent of the one in the Hillcrest area of San Diego) and
then went off to the Sunset Valley Farmers Market (we got lost on the way) for
a comparison. The Sunset Valley market, which is lite version of the Marin
County Farmers Market, is a treat in that its participants have such a passion
for their products it truly shows. It was voted by Eating Well magazine as one of the top five in the U.S.
Here’s
part two of Austin’s Make Faire. Two highlights (among many): one is the Austin
band Manager’s Choice. It would have been great to devote an entire clip to
them. Second was Purl Drums in which a drummer knit while drumming. Get it? And
what video clip would be complete without some juggling
It was totally serendipitous that the Maker Faire was
scheduled for the weekend we planned on coming to Austin. It’s a two-day event,
held at the Travis County Expo Center, a few miles outside of the city. There
was so much there, I am showing the events in multiple clips. This first clip
shows the activity inside the Center that contained all sorts of tables and
booths that celebrated al that’s wonderful about geekdom. There were robots,
innovative machines, pirate radio stations, amateur astronomy, virtual pinball
games, inflatable stereo speakers, and on and on…
There are birthday dinners, and there are birthday dinners.
For this birthday, I had the good fortune to have a meal at Salt Lick BBQ in
Driftwood, Texas. The nationally famous BBQ joint is about 20 miles outside of
Austin, and it’s worth the wait and worth the drive. Never have I had such
amazing brisket. The meals come with beans, cole slaw and a semi potato salad.
Cobbler for dessert (which we took home for later, perhaps with a candle).
New Belgium Beer asks, “Would you trade your car for a bike?”
Well, that’s the underlying theme of the Tour de Fat, a ballyhoo of bikes and
beer. Seems from what we can figure out about Austin, it’s the perfect stop on
the tour. Held in Town Lake (which I don’t
think is a real lake), the event was a gathering of bike aficionados, folks who
like beer and those just interested in a good time on an early Fall Saturday.
There were bikes, plenty of beer and music. This clip
features The Reals, from Colorado and The Story Of, a band from Austin.