Jeter: Tell Him

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AROD_JETERI wasn’t going to post about the A-Rod suspension, etc. as MillersTime is not a place that competes with the various new and old media to be on the cusp of ‘breaking’ news.

But something occurred to me last night and this morning as I thought about what is happening here and as I’ve read most of the mainstream and not so mainstream media accounts of the A-Rod situation.

The good news, from my perspective, is that a group of important players have been caught and most of them have agreed not to drag us through their phony attempts to claim innocence. Ryan Braun for example last year.

The further good news is that more and more MLB players are speaking out and saying what they previously refrained from saying: there is no place for PEDs in our game.

Even the Players Union seems to have gotten the message for the most part, tho they have slid back a few steps in their defense of A-Rod. (Yes. Due process is central to our way of life, but in cases such as these, I don’t believe the accused should be allowed to play while the appeal process takes place.)

But there is one more piece that could help nail this coffin.

Derek Jeter needs to go to A-Rod and tell him to take his punishment now and not drag this out. (A-Rod has a three-day window in which he can still agree to abide by the suspension.)

A-Rod can’t do it by himself. He cannot distinguish between what’s good for A-Rod and what’s good for baseball. Even though he says he loves the game, basically he loves himself in the game. And if he really understood what was good for A-Rod, he’d take his punishment now.

Don’t hold your breath. It looks as if he’s going to drag everyone through months of ‘torture’ so that he can “get his day in court.”

No one is fooled. A-Rod knows this might be his last chance to play for the Yankees.

It is also his last chance to save anything good that is left of his name.

Jeter can help him and help baseball.

This situation is not about having your teammate’s back. A-Rod never had anyone’s back but his own.

If rather than ask A-Rod in the clubhouse, “How’s it going man?” Jeter took him aside and said what perhaps only a friend could say. “Do what’s right. Do it for yourself. Do it for baseball.”

Then we might well be on our way to putting the PED issue behind us.

If You Love Animals…

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Blackfish, a film review by Elizabeth R. Miller

If you’re an animal lover, or even just mildly interested in one of nature’s most majestic creatures, you need to see the documentary Blackfish.

Directed by Gabriela Cowperthwaite, the film explores the treatment of captive orcas, in particular the story of the 12,000-pound Tilikum, a whale living in captivity since he was three-years old.

I first heard of movie at this year’s Miami Film Festival, and I’d followed its controversy in the mainstream press, most notably SeaWorld’s rebuttable and its plea to film critics.

So when I got an e-mail Friday afternoon from the Miami Film Festival photo that it was showing in the theater near my apartment, I figured, why not. With my fiancé ensconced in Chiefs’ training camp in St. Joseph, MO, it seemed like a good way to spend the evening. (Not to mention I’d recently checked my UP band and realized I was still short of my daily goal of walking 10,000 steps and I knew a walk to the theater would help me reach my goal).

The movie uses the story of Tilikum, and his association with three deaths,
including the 2010 death of 40-year old SeaWorld trainer Dawn Brancheau, as a device to further explore the repercussions of orca whales in captivity.

But Blackfish does more than meticulously document the signs of mental and physical torment that whales experience in theme parks, although it does that very well. It also details SeaWorld’s decision to continue breeding Tilikum, the misinformation it spreads to park-goers about the expected life span of orcas in the wild, the truth about collapsed dorsal fins and more. An excerpt I found particularly harrowing was an interview with a former whale hunter, John Crowe, who remorsefully talks about his involvement in capturing whale calves off the coast of Seattle four decades ago.

You’ll also hear first-hand accounts from former SeaWorld trainers who share how the park kept incidents involving orca whales under wraps and lied or intentionally misled the public. Blackfish uses rarely seen footage it obtained through lawsuits and research as well as documents a series of lawsuits brought against the corporation by the Occupational Safety and Health Administration. SeaWorld, a $2.5 billion dollar company, repeatedly declined to be interviewed for the film.

Tilikum remains a performer at SeaWorld in Orlando, FL though trainers have continued a court-ordered policy forbidding them to do in-the water work with him.

Join Me

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More tickets available. Baseball and a talk. Let me know if you’re interested.

Baseball – Tho the Nats are struggling mightily, what’s better than a summer evening at the park? Final games available at no cost to you, other than perhaps buying me some peanuts and having to listen to my baseball natterings:

Wednesday, August. 7 at 7:05 vs Braves
Tuesday, August 13 at 7:05 vs Giants
Friday, September 13 at 7:05 vs Phillies
Sunday, September 15 at 1:35 vs Phillies
Tuesday, September 17 at 7:05 vs Braves
Wednesday, September 18 at 7:05 vs Braves

Sixth & I – Lee Child

If you know the name Jack Reacher and have read lots of Lee Child’s books, then you might want to join me Tuesday, September 10 to see and hear Child’s talk about his newest book, Never Go Back.

For those of you who haven’t had the good fortune to read any of Child’s thrillers, he’s a British writer named Jim Grant (Lee Child is his pen name). His 16 or 17 books all (?) featuring the ‘detective’ Jack Reacher are some of the best escapist books I know. Grant/Child’s books have won numerous awards, beginning with his first one, Killing Floor, which won a best first novel award in 1997, and on to his 2012 A Wanted Man which won a National Book Award for Thriller/Crime Novel of the Year.

First to let me know via email (Samesty84@gmail.com) or by leaving a note in the Comment section of this post, gets the ticket(s).

At This Rate…

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Judging from what the Sox have done on August first, won two games in walk off fashion, one in the 15th and one in the bottom of the 9th (that one they were behind by five runs), the Sox could win 62 games in August alone. At least if they had two games a day scheduled.

I know. I know. Won’t happen. But maybe the usual August swoon won’t happen either. Enough players are healthy, there are some back up players available, they seem to have a good balance in their pitching-hitting-fielding, and the management and team chemistry, if those are factors, seem quite good. At their current winning percentage of .600, they would end up winning about 97 games. If they simply break even in their final 52 games, then they’ll end up with 92 wins.

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A ‘Two-Fer’ and Another Reason to Love #15

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Whenever I attend a baseball game or watch one via the various electronic mediums, I’m always looking for something I’ve never seen before. My ‘baseball bucket list’ is down to five: I want to see, live, a no-hitter, a perfect game, a triple play, an unassisted triple play, and a successful suicide squeeze play. (I may have witnessed a no-hitter, but I can’t swear to it.)

Last night, which actually includes this morning, I saw two ‘events’ I’d never seen before, ones that were not on my must see list.

My wife Ellen was out of town working (if you call being at Google-Land working), which meant I could watch the Red Sox-Mariner game with no fear of disparaging remarks or ‘that look’ that wives give when they suppress the urge to tell you what an idiot you really are.

I settled into a comfortable chair, and when in the bottom of the first, the Sox loaded the bases, I think with no outs, and then failed to score, I knew it was going to be a long and difficult night.

But I had no idea how long and how difficult.

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MLB: Discipline Ortiz

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David Ortiz, the best Designated Hitter in baseball, deserves to be disciplined.

Ortiz simply lost control the other night in Baltimore and had a tantrum that fortunately did not result in any damage, other than to the bullpen phone box and to his own reputation.

He should be fined or suspended, whatever MLB determines is proper for similar, previous situations.

Apparently, Ortiz was most incensed by the umpire’s unwillingness to admit he had made a mistake in the call and is reported to have said something like, “we all make mistakes, but we need to admit when we do. That’s all.”

Will Ortiz apply that to himself?

I hope so.

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The Death of a Parent

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Update: 7/29/8:52 PM:  See below Scott Simon’s last four tweets about his mother’s death.

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I suspect most readers of MillersTime are not ‘on’ Twitter, do not know much about it, or perhaps are disdainful of what they might believe is a waste of time or of a self-indulgence in which they do not wish to participate.

Perhaps.

But I have been drawn to something on Twitter over the past few days that I want to mention and that reminds me of something from my own recent life, experience, and learning.

Scott Simon, journalist and host of NPR’s Saturday’s Weekend Edition, has been live tweeting the last days of his mother’s life. He is doing so from her ICU hospital room (see pix above).

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A MillersTime Baseball Contest Winner

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-AP Photo/Matt Slocum

AL Wins 2013 All Star Game, 3-0                  (AP Photo/Matt Slocum)

As I posted earlier, no one correctly chose the answers to all three questions in the MillersTime Baseball Contest #3 (Winner of All Star Game, Score, MVP). In fact, no one even predicted two of the three correctly.

There were a few creative suggestions on what I should do to choose from those who had some of the answers and/or were close on some of the questions.

Previous multiple winner Tiffany Lopez had a terrific suggestion, saying  I resort to the time tested ‘rock-paper-scissor’ means of dispute resolution. Tim Malieckal suggested I chose the person who had Cabrera as the MVP because he scored the first run in the 3-0 AL win. And several contestants said I should choose the person who was closest to the final score since no one correctly got the Rivera as the MVP.

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Buchholz: What Gives?

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(AP Photo/Ted S. Warren)
(AP Photo/Ted S. Warren)

(AP Photo/Ted S. Warren)

I’m generally critical of Boston sports’ writers who ‘go after’ Sox players, but I’ve been wondering about something for several weeks now.

Let me start with the admission that I do not know the details of the issue I’m about to discuss. Other than what I read in the media, which includes various blogs and social media outlets, I have no inside knowledge.

Nevertheless, to me, something seems wrong with the Clay Buchholz, “I won’t pitch until I’m 100%.”

For those of you who may not be as obsessed as I about the Red Sox, a quick update. Buchholz started the season going 9-0 with an ERA of 1.71. He was as good as any pitcher in the Majors, probably the best.

Then around June 8, Buchholz apparently felt stiffness in his neck area and shut himself down, saying he didn’t want to risk more serious damage. That seemed to make sense.

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Grilled Avocado? Try It

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Usually, when I post about anything food related, i write about a restaurant or some place we’ve been on one of our trips. And if I’ve written about a place in DC or say Scotland, I know many of you will never have a chance to see if I know what I’m talking about.

So today, something a bit different, something you can try yourself and see if I’m ‘food reliable’ – one dish: Grilled Avocados.

When Ellen said yesterday she was going to grill avocados, I was skeptical. Hot avocados? Aren’t they always supposed to be cold or at least at room temp?

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“Fruitvale Station” – A Very Good Film

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Fruitvale Station **** 1/2

If you are a frequent reader of MillersTime, it may seem that I like every film I see.

Not so.

Usually, I only post about films (and books too) that I have particularly enjoyed and rated 4-4 ½-5 stars. The films that don’t fall into that category, I simply refrain from reviewing here.

Also, you may have noticed that I am partial to small films, documentaries, and particularly ones that are often based upon ‘true stories,’ tho that phrase leaves a lot of room for abuse. It’s probably something about my lack of imagination and more about my interest in what has actually occurred. (I made a rough calculation this morning of the books in my wonderful library and at least half of them are non-fiction.)  So there is some consistency in my approach to literature and film.

Anyway, my wife and I recently saw Fruitvale Station, a recounting of a particularly tragic day in the life of Oscar Grant, a young black man, in Oakland, a mostly accurate one from what I have been able to discover.

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JK Rowling – Now a Writer of Detective Novel(s)

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Reuters

(Reuters photo)

If you haven’t heard, JK Rowling, of Harry Potter fame, has been ‘outed’ (see details) as the author of a new book, The Cuckoo’s Calling, a mystery about a private detective’s investigation of a supposed suicide.

Publish in April 2013 under the pseudonym Robert Galbraith, Rowling apparently hoped to have the book evaluated on its merits and not because of her fame.

Indeed, those who reviewed it believing it was a first book by Galbraith gave it quite positive reviews. But The Cuckoo’s Calling only sold between 500-1500 copies (exact number is unclear) until last week when The Sunday Times revealed that Rowlings was the author.

9780316206846_custom-011797377029ae073fad95dcd2116402cac33bf0-s2The book immediately became an Amazon’s best seller (via its Kindle sales) and is now undergoing new printings. It will be at the top of all the fiction best seller lists shortly, if it has not already there.

My wife Ellen ordered it under my account (“by mistake,” she said), and in my on going efforts to keep MillersTime readers well informed, I read it immediately.

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The All Star’s All Star, (Plus Who Deserves to Win the MillersTime Baseball Contest #3?)

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MARIANO RIVERA

MVP

SHANNON STAPLETON/Reuters

Shannon Stapleton/Reuters

 No matter your team loyalty, you’ve gotta respect this guy and what he’s done.

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No one in the 2013 MillersTime Baseball Contests got all the correct answers to Question #3 (Who will win the All Star game, what will the score be, and who will be the MVP).

Overall, however, a majority of you picked the AL to win (56-44%), tho no one got even close on the score.

And no one foresaw Rivera being named the MVP.

So what to do?

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“The Attack”

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The Attack ****

It’s difficult to review a film after one has read the book first.

Or maybe it’s more accurate to say that I have a hard time doing so.

Know that my prejudice is that most often a book is better than a movie taken from the book. I can’t think of more than a handful of movies that I thought were equal to or better than the book.

Probably reading a book first significantly changes how one experiences the film. Not only does one know how the book presented its story and its outcome, but the viewer is also constantly comparing the two, rather than approaching the movie with an open mind.

Thus, my conundrum in discussing Ziad Doueiri’s film, The Attack.

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