* Baseball theater

Baseball movies

Channel surfing over the weekend. Found a few baseball flicks of varying quality. Don’t Look Back: The Story of Leroy “Satchel” Paige, a 1981 biopic starring Lou Gossett, Jr. as Paige, Cleavon Little as some annoying sidekick named “Rabbit,” and Clifton Davis as Cool Papa Bell. Came in on a scene where Paige is auditioning […]

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* Baseball in current periodicals

Magazines

The Sporting News (cover date July 6) has a nice piece on ballparks, picking three reasos for loving the top 5 fields (Fenway, PNC, Wrigley, Camden, and AT&T), plus one for the rest of them, ranked in order. Bad news for the Mets, whose costly domicile ranks # 18 our of 30. The other top […]

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* The latest Wait Wait baseball moment

Baseball humor

This week’s episode of my favorite NPR program featuerd Jimmy Fallon on the “Not my job” segment. Since we just celebrated the 30th anniversary of Disco Demolition Night, the topic was bad baseball promotions. Fallon should be an expert since he made a bad baseball movie (Fever Pitch).

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* Bits and pieces

"Ripped from today's headlines..."

Trying to play catch-up once again: From SlidingintoHome, a Yankees-centric blog, a couple of new titles about the Bronx Bombers. Boogiedownbaseball, another blog about the Yankees, is one of several outlets that profile the new Marty Appel biography on Thurman Munson. For more, check out BaseballHotCorner. The JorgeSayNo blog features an interview with the author […]

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* An Overviews of Annuals

2009 title

Been meaning to do this since the beginning of the season. The best laid plans, and all that. Anyway, the missus has been complaining that she keeps tripping over these (mostly) thick volumes, so here goes. The volumes share a theme: analyzing the previous year. For some, however, this is only done as a predictor […]

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* Now hear this: Allen Barra

2009 title

That’s Barra, not Berra, although the confusion would be easy to understand. Barra is the author, Berra is the subject of this new biography of the Yankees’ Hall of Fame catcher. The writer — whose work has appeared in such publications as The Wall Street Journal and on-line on Salon.com, crafted this serious-yet-entertaining profile on […]

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* Lest we forget: Walter Cronkite

"Ripped from today's headlines..."

I looked for some connection here, perhaps he recorded a rendition of “Casey at the Bat” but te best I could come up with was this. Nevertheless, Cronkite was one-of-a kind in the industry. The videos of him reporting the eeath of JFK have been looping since last night and the tributes continue to pour […]

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* Lest we forget: Paul Hemphill

"Ripped from today's headlines..."

The author of Long Gone: A Novel passed away Saturday, Jul 11, at the age of 73. Written in 1979, Long Gone doesn’t get as much praise as other titles; Some say was it was too cliched, with stock characters, but I thought it was a good ‘un, dealing with minor league baseball in the […]

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* Just call me "Kap"

"Oddballs"

and I’ll be grateful for about 2 1/2 extra years, according to this piece from The Wall Street Journal. … researchers at Wayne State University, major-league players who have nicknames live 2½ years longer, on average, than those without them. On the other hand, I can absolutely refute further findings that “players whose first or […]

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* TWIBB — July 17

2008 title

This week in baseball books, featuring the best-sellers according to Amazon.com on Friday, July 17. Title Rank General Satchel: The Life and Times of an American Legend, Tye 1 Munson: The Life and Death of a Yankee Captain, Appel 2 Moneyball: The Art of Winning an Unfair Game, Lewis 3 The Yankee Years, Torre and […]

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* "How do you like me now?"

Commentary

We might hate the man, for what he did to himself and what he did to besmirch the (relative) cleanliness of the game, but give Jose Canseco his due. He was right about about a lot of things, including players who used. Jonathan Eig, author of a biography of Lou Gehrig — the anti-Canseco — […]

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* National Pastime Radio

"Oddballs"

In honor of All-Star week, NPR carried a few baseball-related items on WNYC this week. July 13 was a good day for Jewish sports authors. Both Howard Megdal (The Baseball Talmud) and Lee Lowenfish (Branch Rickey: Baseball’s Ferocious Gentleman) were interviewed on The Leonard Lopate Show. You can listen to the Megdal segment here: and […]

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* Please, no more

Because I can...

Chris Berman on Home Run Derby. How many times can you listen to “Back, back, back!!!”?

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* Editor interview: Paul Dickson

Academic/scholarly journals

From the Visual Thesaurus website, comes the first of a two-part Q&A with the editor of The Dickson Baseball Dictionary. Thanks to Abby Meth Kantor, managing editor of the New jersey Jewish News, for the heads-up. * * * The Bountiful Lexicon of Baseball As Major League Baseball heads into the All-Star break, we’re taking […]

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* Here come de judge?

"Ripped from today's headlines..."

Bruce Weber, author of As They See ‘Em: A Fan’s Travels in the Land of Umpires (one of my top three books of the year), published this piece in The New York Times’ Week in review section, comapring the roles of arbiters in the legal system and on the baseball diamond. “Have you read Roe v. […]

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* Spooky stuff

"Ripped from today's headlines..."

From the NY Times, this piece on Milwaukee’s Pfister Hotel and some potentially unexpect (and univited) guests. Sounds like somebody’s been reading Haunted Baseball past his bedtime. .

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* Redford having a Neyer moment?

Because I can...

Apropos to the previous entry, we might have a Rob Neyer moment here. In the snippet, Redford claims to have been in New York where he attended a Yankees-Red Sox game. He mentions that Maris and Mantle were in the lineup, but not Williams. He doesn’t give a  date, but it had to have been […]

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* HBO airs ted Williams documentary

"Ripped from today's headlines..."

We won’t be done with the All-Star break until Thursday, so if your baseball Jones gets too strong, watch HBO’s documentary about the Splendid Splinter in Ted Williams: There Goes the Greatest Hitter That Ever Lived. The special premiers Wednesday at 9:30 p.m. EST. Here’s a review from Newsday. You can read Williams’ ESPN obituary […]

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* The magazine industry's decline has a long reach

"Ripped from today's headlines..."

Just ask Lenny Dykstra, according to this article from Folio, an industry publication. Many of Dykstra’s financial woes stem from the failed launch of the Player’s Club, a monthly magazine for professional athletes he published in partnership with Doubledown Media—a publisher of magazines aimed at the Wall Street elite—which went out of business earlier this […]

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* "He's not dead; he's just resting…."

"Ripped from today's headlines..."

From the famous Monty Python “Parrot Sketch.” Why do I bring this up? because Moneyball, the movie, may not be dead after all. Sony Pictures Entertainment has quietly moved to salvage its troubled movie project “Moneyball” by hiring the prominent screenwriter Aaron Sorkin for a quick rewrite, while looking to add Scott Rudin, known for […]

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