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February 28, 2010

The Straight Dope from @Arseblog about Aaron Ramsey’s injury and the media’s role in it. And leadership.



 

Arsene Wenger addressed it already this season at one his press conferences.

I am always absolutely amazed that people get away with it. When we get kicked and lose the game, the question I get from the press is ‘oh, you did not fancy that’. But nobody is upset or shocked by it. When we are kicked they find that it is absolutely all right.

And the assembled hacks had a little titter and off they went to do exactly that. The furore over Gallas’s tackle after the Bolton game was incredible. I don’t remember any pundit saying “He’s not that kind of player”, only slamming him for what was, I agree, a bad challenge. The Shawcross apologists are out in force today yet these are the same people who made such a mountain out of the molehill that was Eduardo’s dive against Celtic that UEFA ‘investigated’ and tried to ban him. A dive. Yet when a young man has his leg broken in bits they keep their mouths shut or come out in defence of the honest English clogger (any coincidence all three challenges have been by Englishmen?). Honestly, they make me fucking sick. This willingness to overlook acts of horrific violence yet focus on trivia like diving.

Shawcross gets a three match ban, Alex Song is now banned for two matches for a booking that never was. How the fuck does that work in any sane kind of world? It’s rotten to the core, is what it is. 

Cesc Fabregas became the leader Arsenal fans have so dearly wanted for so long. I won’t hear a thing about how he’s not a captain because he fucking well is. First goal – assist for Bendtner’s fantastic header. Second goal – a penalty under the most intense pressure imaginable. He had the balls to get up there, take it and score it. Third goal – assist for Vermaelen. Nor did he stand for any of Stoke’s baiting. He had a little kick at one of their players who had kicked him earlier. He Sssshhh’d Tony Pulis. He dragged his Arsenal team over the line. He led by example last night and at the end of the game our players stood in a huddle, knowing they’d shown what they’re made of, and the captain rallied his troops. Each one of them was fantastic last night. The lessons of Birmingham have been learned.

I know people all have their opinions of this team, the players, the managers and everything else but if last night didn’t make you proud to be an Arsenal fan then there’s something wrong with you. My spine is tingling even thinking about it.

Excellent summary in my opinion. I’ve had my problems with the English media when it came to foreigners in football, but then again who hasn’t had problems with media on either side of the pond. It’s become a wasteland of writers who value making a name more than getting the facts straight, of becoming the news rather than reporting it. So while I hope more attention goes to that fact, I don’t expect it to – especially past today.

Regarding the team leadership, I think two years on we can see the difference. The team fell apart after the Eduardo situation then (much like Chelsea is doing now), but rallied here to win the game in The Britannia and even gathered in a team circle after the game (much to the chagrin of the Potter faithful who, it would seem, would have cheered the Lions against the Christians.

3 points off the top with about 11 to go. We can do it!

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April 12, 2009

Pirates Foiled, Matey



 

Gotta give it to our Navy – they know how to fuck some people up. I’m glad they didn’t rush in there like Bush’s team probably would have. And they tried negotiation. So what this does now is set the pirates up as an unreasonable group that can now be politically, if not militarily, disarmed and what not. Sound familiar? Hello Mahmoud AhmeDon’tGetTooComfyJad, Kim Jong Ill and Mexican drug lords – this is what’s waiting for you. A thoughtful foreign policy strategy that doesn’t start with “shoot first …”

Question is – how many people (besides the RIAA – hah!) are going to look at piracy as a symptom and not a problem. Pirates don’t just appear because it’s a fun thing to do. They’re funding a war against Ethopia and have some links (unknown how close) with Al Queda. But all you heard this weekend was “why don’t we just go in and kill them? We’re the fucking US Navy versus a bunch of amateurs.” Well the French tried that hero shit and got one of their hostages killed. It’s all fun and games until one of your family members becomes collateral damage. Let’s let the people who get paid to think about contingencies and dominoes do their jobs and leave the squawking and monday morning quarterbacking to the sports arena.

This ain’t Braveheart. Too many people are too cavalier about the lives of soldiers and people in harms way – especially when sometimes the use of force creates or excerbates problems rather than fixing them. But the breakdown of government in Somalia isn’t something that’s sexy enough for the lay person to discuss – so we’ll focus on the syrupy reunion and heroism stories, and rightfully so, but unfortunately exclude the complexities of why there are pirates out there to begin with and what the connection is to other goings on. My guess is that the only person on major cable news that will dig beneath the surface of this story past tomorrow is Rachel Maddow. Everyone else will be parrots then move on to the next car crash. Damned parrots.

Arg


Update - check out this video from CBC – enlightening.

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March 16, 2009

Missing The Point



 

Read 2 good pieces on HuffPo about the Cramer vs Stewart thing from last week. I also watched Cramer’s Friday night show where he made fun of and dismissed the “confrontation” as if Stewart had a problem mostly with his show. Most of the media portrayed it this way, including former CNBC roving reporter Mike Hegadus: Mike Hegedus: Jon, You’re Wrong. It is a Game, and You’re a Player!

Cramer took a verbal pounding, said his “mea culpa,” and spent most of the show looking like someone who had just been caught shop lifting a candy bar. Sorry, it won’t happen again. Stewart rode in on his charger, about the size of an Icelandic horse, poked and prodded and yelled at Cramer and then made sure to tell Jim that the economic crisis that we’re in is not a “….@$#%^%$$##@…game!!!!!!”

He’s right, the economic issues we all face are not a game, but his show is. And they both played it. Cramer and CNBC have never had this much publicity. And while they both come out of it with a slight odor, little is likely to change. There’s nothing like the stink of notoriety. And the same goes for Stewart — how many more folks watched his show because he had Cramer on? How much more polished is his white knight “armour” now that he’s “slain” the evil Booyah? You think that was part of the plan?

The unfortunate piece of this is that Jim Cramer isn’t all of CNBC. Whatever aroma is attached to him will seep now onto the other hard working folks at the network who get up early and stay late to report on the actual financial happenings of the day. The fact that they don’t have the resources available to them to uncover the shenanigans that Stewart keeps harping about is not their fault. It’s a problem faced by all of journalism and something to be discussed at length at some other time.

And Jon Stewart is not a journalist. He’s a civically engaged entertainer, who apparently as frustrated as the rest of us with the economy went looking for someone to hammer. My suggestion Jon is next time find a bigger nail.

It’s like Ari Fleischer defending Bush. News organizations shouldn’t be excused if they don’t have the budgets to gather news. They should get out of the business or relabel themselves as newstainment. Anyone investing any money without the proper information being uncovered by a free press would be doing little more than playing craps in a casino. That’s the point. The parallels to the Iraq war (as identified in the next article) are startling. Lack of information turns our democracy into China. So if those hardworking guys at CNBC were covering things properly and doing their jobs, I’m sure there’d be no odor on Cramer.

Daniel Sinker: “This Song Ain’t About You”: The Media Misses the Real Message of the Stewart/Cramer Interview

Near the end of the interview (which, if somehow you haven’t seen it, is worth watching), Cramer begins to weasel out an explanation to Stewart (the specifics are unimportant, but if you need to know it involved why Cramer utilizes banana cream pies in his financial program) when Stewart interrupts him and says, indignantly, “As Carly Simon would say, ‘This song ain’t about you.’” It was a point largely lost on Cramer, who continued to defend his own show against Stewart’s much larger indictment, but it was also a point lost on the many media outlets that covered this basic cable dustup as actual, honest-to-god news.

You see, Stewart’s real critique wasn’t about Cramer, it was also only marginally about CNBC. Instead, Stewart’s real rage comes from the role the modern media has created for itself: the role of cheerleader instead of watchdog, of favoring surface over depth, of respecting authority instead of questioning it.

It’s the same critique that some have about the New York Times (and the rest of the media) in the leadup to the war in Iraq; the same critique lobbed every time a TV reporter does a stand up in front of the Apple Store before a product release; the same critique leveled every time a sensational murder steals a headline from a corporate crime: is this really the job we want the fourth estate to be doing?

Just take a gander at some of the other leads around the web–surprisingly, Stewart didn’t actually command attention from everywhere:

But none of these stories–Ana Nicole Smith, Michael Jackson tickets, Michelle Obama giving an interview to Good Morning America–pass muster either. None of them address the issues of our time with the fearless tenacity that Stewart brings to his show most nights, and he’s a comedian.

When we can’t compete with a comic in terms of speaking truth to power, then it’s more clear than ever that journalism in the US has lost its way. It comes as no surprise then when, as newspapers crumble around the country, a report like the one released by the Pew Research Center this week says that only 33% of people would miss their local newspaper “a lot.” When you lead with a story about an interview that happened on a comedy show–and it’s the very same story that almost everyone else is leading with as well–what’s to miss?

What’s to miss–the refrain is always repeated–is the investigative reporting that helps to keep our leaders honest, our water clean, our businesses pure. What’s to miss is people asking fearless questions to those that need them asked. What’s to miss is the deep pockets that can fund a reporter to dig and dig and dig until she’s able to uncover some fragile truth. And yes, that stuff is vital to the functioning of a democracy. It also, let’s speak the truth here, doesn’t happen very often.

Traditional news organizations have nothing to lose right now. Why not take a gamble at the one thing they haven’t tried: being fearless. Stewart would probably appreciate the company.

Rachel Maddow talks about the vanishing newspapers and in-depth journalism all the time. I suppose the one group that doesn’t want to talk about it are the media organizations themselves. How else would they be able to justify things like asking Victoria Jackson for her enligntened opinion on politics.

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November 18, 2007

Let’s Arrest Ty Cobb Too

Filed under: Barry Bonds, Baseball, Media, Ty Cobb, steroids — Tags: , , , , — webadmin @ 4:56 am


 

More on the Barry Bonds myopia – read a great post on Sports Biotch comparing Barry Bonds to Ty Cobb and the opposite ratings on the outrage meters.

The other day, I was discussing baseball history with the Sports Biotch, and it struck me; Barry Bonds is a cute, cuddly, remarkably well-adjusted version of Ty Cobb. Ty Cobb makes Barry Bonds look like Strawberry Shortcake.

Cobb and Strawbarry are hardly the only cheating a-holes to become baseball icons. I could compare Barry to any number of elite players with total success. However, I won’t, because Barry’s attitude–”the whole world is trying to screw me, but that’s okay, cuz I’m the best”–is so much like Ty’s more antisocial view of life: “I had to fight all my life just to survive. They were all against me. Tried every dirty trick to cut me down, but I beat the bastards and left them in the ditch.” Also, perhaps not coincidentally, Ty and Barry are probably the best hitters in the history of the game. Cobb is the clear king of hitting for average (career BA=.366), and I don’t need to tell anyone what Bonds can do.

Check out a list of Ty Cobb’s “achievements”

-Sharpened his spikes to make infielders fear injury every time he took a base. Regularly threatened to injure infielders who tagged him out.
-Probably fixed games. Let off by the Commissioner when Cobb threatened to reveal further corruption.
-Kicked a hotel chambermaid in the stomach after she expressed disapproval at his use of the N-word.
-Had a long history of domestic violence.
-Refused to join his team on a Cuban tour, saying “darkies’ place is in the stands or as clubhouse help.”
-Fought a black groundskeeper during Spring Training over the condition of the practice field. Choked the groundskeeper’s wife when she intervened.
-Attacked a heckler who had lost his hands in an industrial accident. When spectators told him to stop because his target had no hands, Cobb said, “I don’t care if he has no feet.”
-Slapped a black elevator operator for being “uppity.” When a black night watchman intervened, Cobb took out a knife and stabbed him.
-After Cobb’s son failed out of Princeton, Cobb traveled to Princeton to beat and horsewhip his son.
-At the plate, arranged to fight an umpire under the grandstand after the game. Teammates broke up the fight after Cobb had knocked the umpire to the ground and began choking him. “I fight to kill,” Cobb said at the time.

Yet did/does anyone talk about Ty Cobb the way they do Barry Bonds?

Ty Cobb didn’t really get punished for his entertaining, yet ridiculously unacceptable behavior, and it didn’t tarnish his legacy. Cobb was elected into the Hall of Fame on the inaugural ballot by one of the largest margins in history. Cobb got many more votes than Babe Ruth, who was elected in the same year.

This is precisely why I will not participate in the argument of the sanctity of baseball’s records and/or tradition being the reason why Barry Bonds is being singled out. You mean the tradition of excluding black players and celebrating avowed racists like Ty Cobb? No matter what people want to say about the game being the same and the records being equal, it’s not. There was the deadball era (whatever that is), bigger ballparks, the juiced ball, the higher pitching mound, and … helloooo … segregation! The steroid era is just another in a long list of the ways the game has evolved. And to say that Barry’s 756 or 762 is tainted is at best intellectually lazy.

1) Is Bonds derided so much and so often for his various misdeeds because he deserves a tarnished legacy, or due to the influence of uniformly negative portrayal in the media?

2) Does the media have ulterior motives and/or unique reasons to rail against Strawbarry? Barry’s relationship with the media is fairly complicated, and I don’t really blame Barry for being unfriendly to the media; the journalistic attacks on his alcoholic father definitely made an impression on the young Barry. Are journalists trying to make an example of Bonds because of his particularly antagonistic attitude towards members of the media?

Baseball writers have waxed poetically for years on the beauty and grandeur of a game that’s been historically full of scandal of the drug, steroid, and gambling variety. For years these writers hid the seedy truths of the game and now seem hellbent on pinning the ills of all of sport squarely on the shoulders of Barry Bonds because he’s the low hanging fruit. I must say it again – baseball sucks. But not because the game sucks (necessarily).More because it’s custodians have been doing it a disservice for years and no one can see the folly.

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