Monthly Archives: May 2008

Some things are just dumb

Bet you thought I was going to miss a day, didn’t you? Never, darlings.

But I will say that if there was ever going to be a day I missed, this would be it. This was a day for the record books (and it ain’t even over yet). Everything — truly, everything — went wrong. On top of that, everything that went wrong was dumb.

I won’t go into what it was, but suffice it to say that it had nothing to do with my students. They were great today. It was the 40-and-over crowd, for dang sure. What to do with them? From poor service on an order that I needed for tonight’s awards banquet, to ____________ doing a _____________ for __________ (sorry, students read this so I must resort to clandestine tactics once in awhile), it’s been a rot-filled day.

Looking forward to going home and relaxing after the awards banquet. Oh wait….I FORGOT.

Fink (down and) out.

Once again

I’m proud of my students. It was a strange concert….some really great music was made, but I sensed that everyone was tired (including Yours Truly). I feel like I pushed them/thrashed them about/made them weary this year. In my drive for whatever you call it, I think I sometimes forget that they are 15-18 years old, and with other lives.

This requires reflection. But seeing as how I’m too tired for that, I will just tell you that my students made me proud again last night. I know not why, but blessed I am.

Yoda

You tell ’em, Kenny

Admittedly, I couldn’t pick Kenny Chesney’s music out of a line-up. But I have to tell you I admire the guy.

I guess winning Entertainer of the Year at the Country Music Awards for the fourth straight time gives one some license to opine. Apparently, for the first time in its history, the Country Music Association (or whatever governing body makes the rules for the CMA awards) decided, in their infinite wisdom, to let the fans vote for the top winner. Hey, that’s just like American Idol! Cool! (*sigh*)

What he said about their decision — especially after winning — was gutsy, but right on target:

I don’t think it’s right that they picked the one award that means the most, that all artists sacrificed the most for, and turned it into … a sweepstakes, to seeing who can push people’s buttons the hardest on the Internet. It’s a complete disrespect of the artists. I think because of that, it really diminishes the integrity of the work.”

Whoa-ho, Bru-NO! You tell ’em, little man in overly-large black hat.

I wonder how the CMA people will respond, or if they will at all. No matter, though. Anything that exposes the absolutely embarrassing non-class of American Idol gets my vote. Heh. I made a lil joke there. “…gets my vote.” Get it? I’m punny.

RNF II

Random Neuron Firings

Last night I was thinking about how fast I found something I was looking for (not in “real life,” God knows – I can’t ever find anything, EVER. I mean on the web). I needed an author’s name of a specific research text, and found it within seconds.

Now what if I’d tried to do that in 1977, when I was a senior in high school? What would it have involved? Well for one thing, I wouldn’t have been able to find *anything* out about a book at 10 p.m., because the public and university libraries would be closed. No such thing as an online catalog, because, well…there was no “online.”

Machines you could plug into your phone to let people record a message if you missed a call were just now being rolled out to the general public, but at ridiculous prices – I remember my friends telling me their parents paid $200 for a model like this one, that used reel-to-reel tape to record messages.

But otherwise, the good old telephone was the only way to find something out without leaving your house. Imagine that. I know I sound like my dad and my grandma…telling the younger folks how bad it was in the “old days.” But I’m not saying this to make the younger generation feel grateful for what they have (heck, I consider myself the “younger generation,” and I have no clue what I would do without my computer and cell phone). I’m saying it because I’m amazed at what got done back then without computers, the Internet, and cellular technology. Crikey.

I toured Europe for a month in 1976. I had just completed my junior year of high school, and hadn’t yet turned 17. My parents got exactly one post card from me the whole time I was gone. There was no email, no website to check to see how everything was going, and no digital cameras to send photos back home minutes after they were taken. Overseas telephone calls were frightfully expensive, so that was out, and my parents sent exactly $130 with me to last me 29 days. [I came home with about $1 in various currencies.] They waited 2 hours in Cleveland for my flight from New York. They had no idea if I was on the plane or not. Can you imagine doing something like that now? As a parent, I’d be flipping out.

Also interesting to note is the availability of recorded music. Obviously, there were no downloads, but we had the added frustration of selection. If you didn’t live near a large record store (and there wasn’t one anywhere near where I lived until they put one in a nearby mall in the 80s), you were out of luck. You bought what was available at the local “five-and-dime,” and that wasn’t much. A Wal-Mart on every corner was still years in the future.

Another note of some interest: in 1969, I think my sister and I paid about 50-60 cents of our allowance money to buy a 45 RPM single. Downloads of singles today are around 89-99 cents. Considering the staggering effect of inflation on most everything else offered in the retail market, that’s not too serious a price hike. Hmm.

All right. Enough blathering for one morning. I have a paper to finish. Ugh.

Fink out.

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Crosley Record Changer graphic courtesy retroradiozone.com

Various & Sundry

Inspiration. When you think life is basically stinky, and people are basically stupid, and basically nobody seems to be giving you a break, watch this video. Basically incredible.

Hubris. Two-word definition: Bill Belichick.

Yawn. Ellen DeGeneres is engaged. Again.

Nuts. Indians lose to the Reds. Sheesh. (Enjoy it while it lasts, D – the Tribe shall rise again, um, someday.)

Quote of the Day. “Student misbehavior isn’t a school problem, it’s a community problem. Kids don’t come to school and suddenly act differently.” –Mansfield City Schools Superintendent Lloyd Martin. (Rock on. Good luck convincing some parents of that fact.)

Horrifying. Makes one wonder what lesson God is trying to teach us.

Tragic. What would possess a 49-year-old woman to pose as a 16-year-old boy on MySpace, and ultimately cause a 13-year-old girl to commit suicide?

Your opinions on any of the above? Priceless. Feel free to post. Discussion is good.

Fink out.