Close enough for jazz. I’m for anything that brings family and friends together for a good time, so here’s a new outdoor game from the mind of Richie Chille, my Brooklyn landsman. Rather than my trying to describe it, here’s the designer himself explaining his creation. Here’s a link to the Indigogo page and the […]
Dan Schlossberg has written thousands of articles and a number of books on the national pastime, including a couple of my personal favorites on which he collaborated as co-author, Al Clark‘s Called Out but Safe: A Baseball Umpire’s Journey and Designated Hebrew: The Ron Blomberg Story. Schlossberg’s latest is also one of his oldest. He […]
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Al Clark,
Dan Schlossberg,
Ron Blomberg
I am working on a “Bookshelf Conversation” podcast with Heather Quinlan, producer of a new documentary about the 1986 New York Mets. Quinlan is trying to raise $50,000 for her project via Kickstarter. (There are similar sites , but who has time to go through them all? Perhaps this will motivate you to investigate further.) […]
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baseball app,
baseball documentary,
baseball news,
Kickstarter,
New York Mets
Thanks to KoolKat_1960, who suggested this as one of the classic baseball vidgame adverts following yesterday’s post on the subject: Which led me to a few more, featuring Dustin Pedroia, that should go into whatever Baseball (Video Game) Hall of Fame there might be (or should be, if such an entity does not yet exist).
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Dustin Pedroia,
Joe Mauer,
Playstation
A couple of years ago, I received a “review copy” of one of the major baseball games for Wii. Quite frankly, I never got the hang of it and the instructions were not very good. Maybe it’s a generational thing. Some it was with some amusement that I came across this nostalgic piece about the […]
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baseball video games,
Playstation,
Tim Lincecum
Actually, I found this on the top shelf of the linen closest but the principle is the same. This comes from the era when Trivial Pursuit was a big hit: Typical card: (Note the typo in the last question. See? It’s not just me.) Reminds me of a fold-out I recently tossed out (believe it […]
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New York Mets
All I know about Yankton, South Dakota, was that it was an element in one of my all-time favorite TV shows, Deadwood. Al Swearengen: Bloodletting on my premises that I ain’t approved I take as a f***ing affront. It puts me off my feed. Hearst:How do we know when you are off your feed? Al […]
To be honest, I’m not much of a gamer. I tried a previous version of MLB for the Wii, but the instructions were sparse. I guess the younger generation just has the gene for these things, so they don’t need a manual.
Hal Richman didn’t waste any time when I asked him if he could have envisioned celebrating the 50th anniversary of his iconic baseball game, Strat-O-Matic. “Absolutely not,” he said, after some initial laughter over the absurdity of the situation. Hundreds of the game’s fans from across the country will participate in tomorrow’s “2011 Strat-O Opening […]
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Hal Richman,
Strat-O-Matic
Read the story from HomeRunDerby.com here, with another piece about baseball stadiums made from Legos, here.
Tagged as:
baseball toys