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Tuesday, November 14, 2006

What’s Korean for “‘Let’s Go Mets’?”

Happily, one does not need to understand Korean to enjoy this comic strip:

playoffs


(I particularly would love to know what the cartoon has Mr. Reyes saying.)

You can find the entire series here. Don’t skip the strip that compares and contrasts the two New York teams.

And if anyone out there is fluent in Korean and can translate, drop us a line at metsgrrl at gmail dot com.

[Thanks to Bat Girl.]

Posted by metsgrrl at 10:05 AM | Permalink


Monday, November 13, 2006

ground breaking



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It looks like D.Wright is throwing dirt in Bloomberg’s face.

Hey, a girl can dream, can’t she?

==

So I understand that there is all this outrage, and no, I cannot compare the outrage at the naming rights to what happened to almost every music venue in the country. Great Woods became the Tweeter Center, Brendan Byrne became the Continental Airlines Arena, and I don’t even know the corporate name for the Garden State Arts Center - the “opera on the turnpike” referenced by Bruce Springsteen in “Jungleland” - but I know there is one.

It can be a cold sterile lifeless place like the Nokia Theater, or it can be CBGB’s, which has all the heart and soul in the world, but ran itself into the ground because of years of bad business practices. 

I really only care what happens inside the place.

Would everyone be thrilled if the naming rights had not been sold but ticket prices went up $20 per seat?

Would everyone be thrilled if the ballpark stayed Shea Stadium but we couldn’t afford the kick-ass pitcher we need for next year? As TBF astutely pointed out, $20 million pays for Carlos Beltran and pocket change.

This isn’t what happened with Safeco Field, when Seattle was told that the citizenry was supposed to have input into the name, and we woke up one day and the place was named and that was it. They told everyone that they would be selling the naming rights. They didn’t even have to do that.

If you’re going to be upset about the naming rights, then you should be upset about the entire commercialization of baseball, and that train left the station years ago, didn’t it? I’m not trying to be flippant or irreverant, but I’m just not so sure what it matters what it’s called as long as what happens inside the place is what you come there for. Yes, baseball is commercialized. Even I wish I had experiened baseball when every between-inning interval wasn’t jam-packed with commercial sponsorship; that must’ve been awfully nice. I appreciate all of that.

But isn’t what matters what happens on the field, and not what the field is called?

Posted by metsgrrl at 03:45 PM | Permalink


Monday, November 06, 2006

marathon sunday and the mets

On Marathon Sunday, we are virtual prisoners of Greenpoint, as we live between the marathon route and the river. There are some ways around it but it’s such a bother and Greenpoint is so ebullient that there’s no point in going anywhere. Last year I watched the marathon on Bedford Ave., which is slighly cool in that every band in the zip code sets up to play along the route. I mentioned this to TBF, and his horrified response was, “If i was a marathon runner, I would be all, ‘Dude, I do not want to hear your sad bastard music. Play ‘Eye Of The Tiger.’”

TBF was very into the marathon this year and was full of maps and time points and was awake at 9:15 so we could go watch the wheelchairs come through right before mile 12. This a stretch of the course where the runners turn off Bedford Ave. in Williamsburg and head into Greenpoint. Aside from the water/medical tent/bathroom stop, it’s not a particularly populated section of the route, which is what we like about it.

I am struggling into polar fleece and warm socks while TBF purposefully dons his Mets sweatshirt and the traditional hat, pointing out that he was wearing those particular items of clothing because many out of towners participate in the marathon. I wanted to hug him for being so adorable.

So we spent three hours cheering ourselves hoarse and having a great time. And, we did, in fact, see about half a dozen runners wearing Mets paraphernalia, who earned a hearty “Let’s Go Mets!” cheer from us. We also got some independent chants aimed at TBF’s sweatshirt from runners sans team shirt but avec team spirit.

However, I had to admonish TBF several times from being slightly less polite to anyone wearing paraphernalia from the other New York team.
The section of course we were standing at was a corner bordering a park, and as there were no spectators, hundreds of runners decided this was the place to shave the course down from 26.2 miles to 26.1. Hundreds, of course, did not, and there were cries of “Cheaters!” from the runners.
“Wow, look at the guy with the Yankees jersey - he’s CHEATING, what a surprise,” TBF felt the need to broadcast.
*kick*
“No, look.”
*kick*

As for me, I modified my comments to “Yankees suck - but you’re beautiful, keep running!” which got a smile and a thumbs-up from the woman wearing the Jeter t-shirt.

===
I know things have been quiet around here. A little bit of a breather as I ease into the new job. Not going anywhere, I promise. And I am planning on a massive redesign this winter.

In the mail today: a book entitled FLORIDA SPRING TRAINING: YOUR GUIDE TO TOURING THE GRAPEFRUIT LEAGUE


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Posted by metsgrrl at 11:09 PM | Permalink

Saturday, November 04, 2006

random thoughts



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One sure way you know the Mets have achieved critical mass in NYC: When the souvenir shops at the airports have identical displays for both the Mets and the Yankees. I would have included a photo but I was at LGA on business at 5:45am and not in a picture mood. Those airport stores have very little real estate and they only stock items that are in demand. In the past, there would be either nothing or maybe a hat from the blue and orange side; now there are both, and they are identical, and were present in both stores I walked by. Did my heart good. I did move the Yankees mugs that someone at the store clearly decided should be part of the Mets display back to their correct location.

Coming home last night from the airport, that gorgeous skyline view from the BQE, but my heart breaking just a little because the Empire State is blue and orange for the marathon tomorrow, and not for other reasons.

Running into the stand-up above in a Duane Reade in midtown. I have also been trying to buy the banners off the owners of our local 99 cent stores. I sent a letter to get Glaceau Vitamin Water offering to do a promotion/contest with metsgrrl.com but they clearly have reading comprehension issues because the email back to me explained in terms better suited to a three year old that the promotional materials were not for sale. Um, right. That’s why I wanted to do a contest. FREE ADVERTISING.

I have yet to watch this week’s Mets Weekly and that will rate a separate post later if I managed to make the cut.

Posted by metsgrrl at 12:12 PM | Permalink

Friday, October 27, 2006

well, that was a mistake

When we were walking home from dinner, TBF floated the idea of checking out the game tonight. “It’s an elimination game, you know,” he helpfully provided, because I was not supposed to be paying attention to the game (and for the record, neither was he).  This seemed okay to me; I figured I was over it by now.

So I turned on the game when it was the top of the 6th inning, and turned the sound on at the top of the 9th inning. TBF is on the phone in the other room and is missing out on the festivities, as it were, and rejected my offer to put the game on pause.

I should have turned the damn tv off. Of course it was nowhere near as bad as it was that Thursday night for us, but it was some of the same feeling: pins and needles. edge of the couch. stomach hurting. whispered prayers - and they aren’t even my damn team! Knowing how it feels when you have the tying runs on base and your one last hope comes to the plate.

I am glad, though, in a way, that the baseball is over now for the year. Not glad, because I miss watching it, which is how I got roped into watching the game tonight, the rhythm of pitches and runs and hits - it felt so good to be seeing that again. But glad that the tension is over and maybe now I can get over the fact that I was supposed to be at the World Series this week.

Maybe.


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Posted by metsgrrl at 11:41 PM | Permalink

beltran at the bat

I don’t know how I found this, somewhere through the server logs, and it is so very well done (although, of course, so sad; the fact that it is so well done makes it even sadder to me); the adaptation from a science fiction writer.

Some people blog when the Mets lose, others adapt poetry.

It is funny to see in the comments people who clearly do not realize that it is a loving tribute to this work.

Posted by metsgrrl at 07:48 PM | Permalink

11/4: Mets Weekly final episode, starring…

Okay. Not starring. But I was interviewed this afternoon (along with the rest of the blogosphere), and provided I didn’t sound like a complete rambling fool, you will see yours truly on the last episode of Mets Weekly for the season, on tomorrow 11/4 [thanks, Z.] at 12:30.

How will you know it’s me? Well, they interviewed two women: myself and Zoe. Zoe is wearing a pink hat and her Cliff Floyd t-shirt. I am not. There, that should make it easy for you.

Please, be kind in your comments, that is all I ask :)

Posted by metsgrrl at 03:34 PM | Permalink

Thursday, October 26, 2006

‘stache vs. the hobbit

Yes, I know. You are a grumpy curmudgeon-type and internet polls are stupid (especially when it comes to baseball) and don’t matter (especially when it comes to baseball) and you are tired of every possible advertising-tie-in baseball poll that they are shoving down your throat (especially when it comes to baseball).

I know this full well, and I agree with you. But I also know that letting The Hobbit of St. Louis (aka David Eckstein, that nice Jewish boy [JOKE ALERT: I know he’s not]) win over our Jose (no, the OTHER Jose) is a travesty.

So vote! Vote early and vote often.

Voting for “Advertising Tie In Of The Week” aka “The Look Again Player Of The Year” is here.

[Thank you Zoe.]

Posted by metsgrrl at 05:07 PM | Permalink

Wednesday, October 25, 2006

he’s not watching, either

This was the back page of El Diario this morning, which is the newspaper most widely read on the train I take to work. It did my heart good.


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“Since 1972, Major League Baseball annually has presented an award which recognizes the player who best exemplifies the game of baseball, sportsmanship, community involvement and the individual’s contribution to his team.”

[Hey, St. Louis, take a gander. You might see something you don’t recognize.]

Childishly, I was glad to learn that, even though Delgado was in Detroit yesterday, he didn’t stay and watch the game - from Newsday: “Delgado didn’t plan on staying for the game because he found it painful to watch. ‘I think we were the best team in the National League,’ he said. “We just didn’t win the series that we needed to win. At the end of the day, St. Louis is going to say, ‘We won it and we’re in the World Series.’ We congratulate them, they played well, but in my mind, we were the best team in the National League.’”

Hey, Carlos: in our minds, too.


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Posted by metsgrrl at 02:24 PM | Permalink

Sunday, October 22, 2006

HUGE news flash!

I spent the whole season in search of this: Carlos Beltran’s at-bat song.

No? You spent an entire season not wondering about this? He used the same song, every single time, period.

No, seriously. This was a big deal. We could make out a few words, but we are white kids from Connecticut and Long Island, respectively. Even the sisters who sat next to us got in on it. We would watch people sitting near us to see if anyone was singing along; if they were, we would have leapt on them and begged them to tell us what the song was called. Alas, we never found anyone who seemed to be familiar with the song.

To my delight, a few days ago metsgrrl.com reader Phil B. wrote in to say: Having searched the whole season for it, I understand your pain. However; here’s the info you’ve been hunting for: El Esta Aqui by David y Abraham.

A little research indicates that David y Abraham are Christian artists from Puerto Rico.

Mystery solved!

Posted by metsgrrl at 05:44 PM | Permalink
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