Tuesday, December 24, 2024

Weekly Mail Christmas Eve Special 2024

 





December 14, 2024 

Outside of the I ❤️ NY Gift Shop


Thank you for tuning in. 


So unfortunately, I really couldn’t come up with anything like I had the past few years. So, we are just going to have a few random observations and also go through our top 10 Christmas/Holiday songs. 



1) Christmas is on a Wednesday this year. When we were in school, it didn’t matter what day Christmas fell on because you always got the whole week off. But when you are working, especially in a place that is open 24/7/365, Wednesday Christmases are hard. It’s smack in the middle of the week. Tuesday is Christmas Eve, and Thursday, the day after Christmas, it’s awfully hard to drag into the office. Plus, then you still have to deal with Friday.

I realize that there are people that have to work Christmas Day, and for those who do that for us, of course we thank you for all you do. I also realize there are people who are not working and not by choice. I’ve been there and I feel for you. And I hope that the New Year brings you everything that you hope and wish for. 

The other issue when Christmas falls on a Wednesday, is that it’s a late Thanksgiving, meaning that Christmas seems to come up faster in those years. Now you have stores running Christmas ads the day after Halloween, but most of us don’t feel the holiday season starts till Santa arrives at the Macy’s Thanksgiving Day Parade. The older you get, the faster time flies, but this season, it came at warp speed. 


2) Dreaming of a White Christmas- It’s funny the games your mind can play with you. I have these images in my brain of snow on the ground during Christmas. Maybe it’s because of all the songs about snow on Christmas or the cartoons we all watched growing up, but in fact snow on Christmas is quite rare in New York.

This chart shows all the Christmases where there was at least one inch of snow on the ground in Central Park. It doesn’t account for whether or not the snow had fallen that day or stuck around after snowing previous. I can tell you that we had a huge snowstorm on December 21, 2009, (because we had just moved into our new house the day before) which I believe accounted for the snow on the ground that Christmas. The chart also says there was 6 inches on the ground in 1995, which I had forgotten about, until I remembered this buffoon…..




The Giants and Chargers played a Saturday afternoon game on December 23rd. The Chargers needed a win to make the playoffs and the Giants at 5-10 were playing out the string. (Sound familiar?) The Giants Stadium maintenance crew did what they could, but there was just too much snow in the stands.  It was freezing cold, the Giants barely showed up that day, and the fans began throwing snowballs on the field. One of the projectiles had so much ice in it, that it knocked out a Chargers equipment manager. 

The unfortunate schmuck pictured above had that very picture on the front page of the NY Daily News a couple of days later. Police offered a $1000 reward to anybody who could identify him, and lo and behold, police officials said that 15 people identified the snowball tossing offender, which led me to wonder if I was in a similar situation, which 15 people would sell me down the river. (I had a list compiled somewhere on a floppy disk. It’s probably somewhere in my parent’s basement)

1983 there was an inch of snow on the ground. I can also attest that was the coldest Christmas in my lifetime, and if you don’t believe me, you can ask my sister Katie who, though two days short of her two-month birthday, remembers how cold it was that day. 

I could have sworn I read somewhere that it snowed on Christmas in 1969, but that was a bit before my time. This chart says 7 inches of snow in 1966.

There were three things NYC didn’t see throughout the 70’s. One was Jets playoff football, the second was Giants playoff football and the third was a White Christmas. We had some snow this morning. But unless the snow we got on Saturday sticks around, it looks like another non-snow Christmas. 


Speaking of football, Netflix is showing two games tomorrow. The Chiefs and the Steelers at 1PM and the Ravens and Texans at 4PM. Not for nothing, but enough already. I can see if it was a regular day of football, Thursday, Saturday, Sunday or Monday, but shoving in a couple games on Wednesday just because it’s Christmas is bush league to me. Let the NBA have Christmas day. I really hope these games flop. If Netflix production is anything like the one they had for the Tyson/Paul fiasco, they will. 


And now for our top 10 Christmas songs 2024 edition 


10) Holiday Party-Dan and Shay- Really dig this tune. Maybe a bit corny for most, but with the world going to hell in a hand basket, corny might be what the doctor ordered. 


9) 2000 Miles- The Pretenders- I’m not quite as pissed at Chrissy Hynde as I was, (though I still find what she said reprehensible*) This is still a great song to remember anyone you may have lost over the year. 



8) Christmas in New York-Shilelagh Law- Another song about remembering people we lost; namely those we lost on 9/11. But also, a great way to honor all that makes NYC still the greatest city in the world. 



7) O Come O Come Emanuel- Joan Baez- I used to have a music editor here at WM, she is now the drummer for a local group called the Mom Band up in Westchester County. The first time I did this list back in 2002, she pointed out to me that I didn't have any religious songs on the list. So, from there on in, I've made sure to have at least one or two. We had a Joan Baez Christmas cassette tape back in the early 90’s. Good times. 



6) Christmas in Hollis- Run DMC- I'm sure if I scour YouTube I can find someone who sang a song about Christmas in Woodside or Rockaway. I'm sure someone has come into Donovan's and performed near the fireplace, and there are lots of songs about Rockaway (besides the Ramones classic). For now though, this song is the closest one I have to repping my two hometowns. Word up!



5) Wonderful Christmastime-Wings- this was number three for a long time. Now it holds steady at number five. I know this song out everybody’s cup of tea, but it’s Paul McCartney so it has to be here. 


4) Oh, Holy Night- Josh Groban- And here's our second Jesus song to keep The Big Guy happy. O Come O Come Emmanuel is about waiting for the birth of Christ, this song is about the night He arrives. The pastor at my dad's church did a great version of this, but since his version was never committed to a record, (at least as far as I know) we'll stick with the amazing Josh Groban's version. 



3) Happy Christmas (War is Over) Plastic Ono Band- All these years later, this powerful John Lennon song still resonates. One that I will never get tired of. For the second year in a row, it comes in at number 3. 




Before we get to the top 2, let's look at some Honorable mentions...




Grandma Got Run Over by a Reindeer-Elmo and Patsy  This was a staple for years, the first real good Christmas Novelty Song. Now it's a bit dated and out played but will always be a WM fave. 




Mele Kalikimaka-Bing Crosby- I know this song has been around since the 50's, but the first time I heard it was during the reboot they did of Hawaii Five-0, (the Alex O'Loughlin/Scott Caan version). I always say I'd like to spend one Christmas in my life some place where it's warm. Failing that, I'll just put this song on and make pretend.



Blue Christmas- Elvis/Porky Pig Elvis has left the building, or at least WM’s top 10 Christmas songs list. Still get a kick out of Porky singing his way through this.



And then there were two…


2) Fairytale of New York- Last year this was the number one song, and it was tough to knock it down again. It’s still incredible and always will be.





1) Do They Know it's Christmastime-Band Aid- this marks the 40th anniversary of this Christmas classic. For 39 of its 40 years, I would say it was my favorite Christmas song of all time. The collection of talent gathered to make this record is unbelievable.


Many years ago, when You Tube first came out, Bill Simmons of ESPN put out his YouTube Hall of Fame. This video was at the top of the list. His only beef was that Paul Young both led off and had a solo in the middle of the song. He even went as far as to compare Bob Geldof to former Red Sox skipper Jimmy Williams, which was entirely unfair. 

Someone pointed me to a Wikipedia page that stated Paul Young was a last-minute substitute for David Bowie.  I’m not sure even the thin white Duke himself would have placated Simmons, who couldn’t understand how they could have Simon LeBon, Sting, and Bono lined up 4, 5 and 6, (with Boy George and George Michael batting 2nd and 3rd respectively). He was also pissed that Sting was sandwiched between LeBon and Bono and didn’t get to sing a solo. 
This is what’s commonly known as being nitpicky. 

The song was Geldof’s idea after seeing BBC news reports of extreme famine in Ethiopia. It reached number one in 13 countries but only got as high as 13 here in the US. I was kind of hoping it would make it to the top on this its 40th birthday, but to no avail. Mariah’s "reach for the bourbon and ear plugs" All I Want for Christmas is You, and Brenda Lee’s classic Rocking Around the Christmas Tree are at numbers one and two on this week's Billboard charts. 

*******************************************************************


Finally tonight, Rickey Henderson died unexpectedly over the weekend at age 65. He is the third person to pass off of my List of Famous People born on Christmas from a couple years ago, joining Jimmy Buffet and Shane McGowan. I hope I haven’t created a new ghoul pool, but if I did, Annie Lennox, and the Prime Minister of Canada are up next. 




Merry Christmas 







*You can DM me on Facebook if you want to know what she did to upset me so.

Monday, December 16, 2024

Weekly Mail December 15, 2024

 

Book Review Below


Hello Everyone:


This is going to be our Fall Finale. 

I won't be in the city next week, so I don't think I'll have time to bust another blogpost out before the Christmas Eve Special. In fact, I'm also not sure I'm going to be able to put a Christmas Eve special out either. If I do, it will be very bare bones. Christmas Eve is 9 days away and I haven't come up with anything that sounds like it would be fun to do. Again, I am open to any and all suggestions. 


I was kind of hoping to keep this one light, and we will have some fun stuff at the end of this, but I'm going to start with a couple of hard news stories...


CRIME- Daniel Penny Acquitted-

I wasn't as glued to this story as I might have been back when I was working at the Post more than one day week or even still living in the 5 boroughs, but as the case went on more friends and family were weighing in. 

On May 1, 2023, Jordan Neely a 30-year-old homeless man, boarded a northbound F Train at the 2nd Avenue stop. What seems to be universally agreed upon was that Neely began to yell about needing food and water and that he was ready to die. Several people that were near him began to move away. At some point, Penny, a 24-year-old former Marine, approached Neely and put him in a chokehold. 

Penny told the authorities that the chokehold was applied for less than 5 minutes. Prosectors said the chokehold lasted for 6 minutes. After initially declining to press charges, the Manhattan DA's office announced they were opening an investigation. A week later they announced they were charging Penny with 2nd degree manslaughter. Later, a grand jury added a charge of criminally negligent homicide. 

The trail got underway on November 1st. Per CNN.com...


The defense argued Penny “was justified in the actions he took to protect the other riders.

Neely “was on a collision course with himself” and Penny “acted when others could not,” defense attorney Steven Raiser said during his two-hour closing argument.

The defense has also challenged the medical examiner’s determination Neely died from the chokehold and suggested the charges were brought because of “a rush to judgment based on something other than medical science.”

Prosecutor Dafna Yoran, in her closing arguments that lasted more than three hours over two days, said it was admirable Penny intended to protect fellow passengers but “he just didn’t recognize that Jordan Neely’s life too needed to be preserved.”

“We are here today because the defendant used way too much force for way too long in way too reckless of a manner,” she said.

The prosecutor told jurors self-defense is legally justified on rare occasions. While Neely might have threatened deadly physical force on the subway, a reasonable person should’ve known he wasn’t capable of carrying out the threat, Yoran argued.

Finally, she acknowledged to the jury that this was a difficult case but said Penny must still be held accountable.“This is a hard case. It’s hard to find someone guilty of a killing that they didn’t intend on,” she said.


The deliberations went on for 5 days. On Friday the 6th, after the jury told the judge they were deadlocked, the prosecution requested and got a dismissal of the manslaughter charge, leaving the jury to decide on the lesser charge of criminally negligent homicide. On Monday the 9th, the jury returned a not guilty verdict. 

The morning after the verdict came down, I heard Boomer Esiason on WFAN refer to Daniel Penny as a hero. Captain Orange and JD Vance invited Penny to Saturday's Army-Navy game.

On the other hand,. a state senator named Julia Salazar described Penny's actions as "a lynching." Congresswoman Alexandria Ocosio-Cortez called it a murder. 

I'm going to go out on a limb here and say that most of us fall somewhere in between these two extremes. 

Any of us who grew up in New York City have been approached by homeless people on the subway, most of them are harmless. And we have also most certainly have had to deal with some who were loud and threatening. It's not a pleasant experience and it can be frightening. 

I still believe NY has the best police department in the world, and they do an incredible job of keeping us safe. They can't be everywhere at once. In my heart of hearts, I believe that Daniel Penny was only trying to help. I do. And I don't believe he intended to kill Neely or even injure him.

I just can't help but wonder if there was anyway Penny could have restrained Neely without the use of a chokehold. I've never served in the military (as I've said countless times, sending me off to war is a surefire way to lose said war) and I've never served in law enforcement, so I can't say for sure, but there has to be non-lethal ways to handle a difficult situation. 

I don't think Penny should have had to spend the rest of his life in jail, or even the 5 to 15 he was looking at on the original charge. I'm also not sure he should have gotten away Scot-free and I sure as hell don't think he should be the guest of the President-elect at a football game, even if the President-elect is himself a convicted felon. 

It's just a rotten situation. It seems like Neely needed some serious help, and as tempting as it is to ask "where was his family before this happened?" (as opposed to now, where they have filed a lawsuit, because of course they did) It's a fair question, but the fact of the matter is we don't know that story either. Maybe they tried and couldn't help or maybe they couldn't afford it, and/or maybe they didn't have the insurance coverage. Which leads me to our next story...


CRIME Part II- CEO of United Healthcare Murdered

Brian Thompson, the CEO of United Healthcare was shot and killed on December 4th outside the Midtown Hilton in Manhattan. 

The 2019 Joker movie, starring Joaquin Phoenix, was set in 1981. Back in the real 1981, the movie Escape from New York came out, depicting a New York that was supposed to be so bad in 1997, they made the whole island of Manhattan a maximum-security prison. 

I'm not sure what thought scares me more... thinking in 1981 that things were going so bad that by 1997, Manhattan would be inhabitable or being in 1997 (when crime in NY had dipped precipitously) or even watching Joker in 2019 and wondering how any of us survived living in New York City in 1981. 

Think about it. We just passed the 44th anniversary of John Lennon getting gunned down on the Upper West Side, Jimmy Breslin summing it up by saying that the former Beatle was now "another person who died after being shot with a gun on the streets of New York" That line, reading all these years later, still sends chills down your spine, mainly because if you remember back then, you know that it was a lot more commonplace than it has been recently. 

Brian Thompson was nowhere near as famous as John Lennon, but he was by all accounts as successful businessman. The suspect police have in custody was apparently carrying around a handwritten document decrying the parasitic health insurance industry, and disdain for corporate greed and power. 

As they say on the cops shows, "That sounds like motive to me"

And while it should go without saying, I'm going to say it anyway because nowadays, you can't assume anything can go without saying.. Splattering the brains of the CEO of a company you have an issue with is not the answer to whatever the issue is. 

All of us at one time or another have to deal with medical insurance companies, either for yourselves, or a loved one. I happen to deal with them at work all the time. Verifying coverage, obtaining authorizations, submitting and coding bills for re-imbursements etc. Believe me, I know how difficult they can be. I also know how frustrating it can be to have a claim denied. There are way too many stories in this country about people going broke because of medical bills that are either not covered or under covered. 

And I honestly don't know what the ultimate answer is. I do know what the answer is not though.  


**********************************************************************************


OK, like I said, I really wanted this to be more uplifting. So, I have to tell you all about a book I just finished...


BOOK REVIEW-Reunion-A Rock and Roll Fairy Tale

BY: Gary Burr


I was plowing through Bob Woodward's most recent book War, which was dealing with the October 7th war in the Middle East, the Russia-Ukraine war, and the way both President Biden and former President Trump were handling them, as President and Presidential candidate respectively. 

After the November 5th election, I couldn't get motivated to read it anymore. 

But I was jonesing for a good book to read. I had read in one of the gossip pages in the paper about Gary Burr, who had written a book about a hypothetical Beatles reunion. Well, that sounded like something that could cheer me up, so I went and downloaded it. 

And it really is just what the doctor ordered. 

I don't want to give too much away, because if you are a music fan in general, and a Beatle fan in particular I think you will really dig this book. 

I'll give you this-the premise of the book is the Beatles getting back together in the wake of Linda McCartney's death from breast cancer in 1998. Paul, holed up on his farm in Arizona and not doing much of anything, is encouraged by his daughters to start playing again. With their encouragement, he runs the idea of getting his old band back together for a concert to raise money to fight breast cancer. How John Lennon managed to survive December 8, 1980, is explained in quite satisfactory detail in the book's prologue.  

Burr obviously knows his stuff, because the details he puts into this book are amazing. I mean there were maybe one or two things he said that I was like "Oh, I doubt that would have happened", but for the most part, it was entirely plausible. This was that period of time between the rise of internet, but pre Facebook and Twitter. There were things that he had the guys saying to each other that literally had me laughing out loud. 

There's a chapter that details John's solo career, a couple more albums he would have put out in the 1980's. Bittersweet. thinking about what could have been.

What should have been.

On the other hand, with things around here going to hell in a hand basket, this book was a nice escape from reality. 

I realize not everyone is as Beatle obsessed as I am, so maybe you wouldn't get as big a kick out of this as I did, but I'm going to give it a high rating anyway. It came around at a time where I needed it. it's amazing how a book can do that for you.

4.5 Auggies. 

********************************************************************************

Santa-Con was Saturday night, and for once, the second Saturday in December wasn't an unseasonably warm day. If anything, it was colder than average. Maybe that’s why I didn’t see that many Santa-clad partiers as opposed to prior years. 


Santa-Con post gaming

That’s all we got.

Christmas Eve Special next Tuesday night at 8:00PM


Stay Safe


and Have a Great Week

Saturday, December 14, 2024

Weekly Mail December 14, 2024

 

Hi Folks:

Was supposed to publish this last Sunday or Monday, but with the late breaking news from Queens, and a couple of other things happening, I didn't get to finish this till Saturday afternoon. So you get two WM's this week. 



Hope you all had a Happy Thanksgiving and that your holiday season has gotten off to a good start. 


We are going to have our Fall Finale tomorrow night. Then somehow, someway, I'll put together a Christmas Eve Special, which once again,  I have not a clue of what it will entail. I have a week and a half to figure it out, so at least there is that. 


I actually had a fairly enjoyable Thanksgiving with my in-laws. Great company, great food, and as always, lousy football.

We'll get to that shortly. For now, we have some late Sunday night news..







BASEBALL: We got 'em!

Sunday night as I was about to turn in the news started to break that the long Juan Soto chase had come to an end with the Mets hauling him in to the tune of a 15 year $765 million contract that has all sorts of clauses and opt-outs and clauses to the opt-outs that you need a whole section of the Law Review to properly explain in full. 

Most of us Mets fans don't care, we got the guy we wanted. 

I'm not here to rub it in the face of the Yankee fan here either. As I've written on these pages many many times before, I have been in the position of watching a player I liked leave via free agency many many times before. I felt for my Giants fans friends when Saquon Barkley left over the last NFL off season.  I know the feeling, and it sux. 

But now, I'm in the somewhat unusual position of seeing the Mets pull off a big free agent score. I know about Max Scherzer and Justin Verlander, but those were short term deals that quite frankly were risky due to the age of the players involved. Soto is in his prime.

Which is good because doing the quick math in my head, my son will be 31 years old when this contract expires. I can't even bring myself to say how old I will be, but let's just say if Medicare is still around by them, I might be eligible for it. 

When the rumors first started 6 or so years ago that the Wilpon's were looking to sell the Mets to Steve Cohen, it was a day like Monday that I could only imagine. I remember back to after the 2000 season, when Alex Rodriguez was a free agent, and it sounded like he really wanted to come to the Mets, and GM Steve Phillips came out and said the team wasn't even going to make an offer. Something about creating a 24+1 scenario or something like that. I never believed that A-Rod or more importantly his agent Scott Boras was willing to leave one red cent on the table, and if the Mets had offered $240 million and the Rangers offered their $252 million, A-Rod was still heading to Texas. 

But the Mets didn't even offer anything. And it made it easier for A-Rod and Boras to play the bleeding heart card. I only really bring that up because one of the things I read on Tuesday was that while the Yankees offer was similar to the Mets, the dealbreaker for the Yanks was that Soto wanted his own Yankee Stadium suite and Hal Steinbrenner wasn't willing to give him one. 

Back when Tara and I first met, her father asked me if I was upset that the Mets didn't sign A-Rod. I said I was upset we didn't even try, but I also felt A-Rod was taking the most money no matter who offered it. My future father in law remembered that one of the hold ups was that A-Rod wanted his own office at Shea Stadium. "They lost him because they wouldn't give him an office!"  I didn't quite remember that, but he was pretty insistent. I thought about him on Tuesday morning, and wondering how he would have felt if he lost a player (to the Mets of all teams) because Cohen gave him a suite and Hal didn't. 

One thing is for sure, I think a lot of that "Mets-Yankee fans getting along better" stuff is now going to be severely tested. I have no doubt the Yanks are going to make some moves, they may even swipe Pete Alonzo from us. The four games we play each other in 2025 are going to be a zoo. And if we both make it to the show next year? 

I can't wait to see both teams try! 



FOOTBALL: Good news New Yorkers! There is a team in the NFL that is more poorly coached than the Jets and the Giants. (A FB post I made on Thanksgiving afternoon. 


And that team is a little organization that has been around for over 100 years known to us as..






So next year, I'm going to give you all a gift on Thanksgiving. It could be worth a ton of money actually. 

I'll let you know next Thanksgiving morning who I am picking in that day's Lions game. Doesn't matter who they are playing. I will tell you who I am picking, and then you can go to fan Duel or Draft Kings or whichever Legal Gambling app that you choose to donate what former Post Sports editor Hondo referred to as DDP's (disposable dead presidents) to, and bet all your DDP's on the opposite team I bet.

Every Thanksgiving the last few years, it's has become as much of a tradition as Santa Claus bringing up the rear of the Macy's Thanksgiving Day Parade, the Detroit Lions screw me 9 ways to Sunday. If I pick against them, they win. If I pick them to win, either they lose or worse they win and don't cover the spread. That last scenario has happened the last 3 or four years, including once agaisnt the Bears, the same two teams who cooked my goose while I was eating my turkey this year. 

And I wouldn't even be ranting on about this crap except for the fact that it wasn't so much the result of the game as it was how we got there. 

I was watching the game with Timmy, my nephews Connor and Brendan and my brother in law Brian. When it became obvious that the heavily favored Lions would not cover the 10.5 point spread, I started pulling for Chicago to pull off the upset. 

And they had a really good chance to do just that.

With 36 seconds left, the Bears had the ball at midfield, trailing 23-20. QB Caleb Williams was sacked, and the Bears were trying to line up to get a play off. Brian kept saying "Why don't they call a time out?" and I was like "I don't think they have one." I mean why would you not call a time out there?

I honestly thought they had used all their time outs as I watched the Bears struggle to line up and get another play off before the clock ran out.

Alas, they did not, and the Lions stole a win, sending their fans home to a happy dinner.

Meanwhile I was arguing with some friends on-line about who was at fault. I think blaming the rookie QB was cheap, the operative word there being rookie. To me this was on the coaching staff, and I'll be gosh-darned if the Jets didn't make a similar (though not nearly as bad) miscue in their game against Seattle the following Sunday. 

The Bears relieved coach Matt Eberflus of his duties the next day. Black Friday indeed. 

I'm not here to kick someone where they are down. Really. I really hope the Bears management didn't send this guy packing over one bad play, as bad as that play was. Nobody deserves that. 

And I also think that these franchises, including and especially the two we call our own here in NY, might want to reconsider this idea of drafting a big shot college QB and expecting them to become Tom Brady overnight. 

The Jets have spent most of the 21st century burning out high drafted QB's. Chad Pennington, Mark Sanchez, Geno Smith, Sam Darnold and Zach Wilson. Pennington and Sanchez won them a few playoff games, Smith and Darnold have gone on to find some success with other franchises. Meanwhile we haven't played a post season game since the middle of the first Obama administration. 

But what do I know? 


HOCKEY- Rangers changes

It appears Ranger president/GM Chris Drury not only read the blog I posed in the aftermath of the Rangers choke job against the Panthers last June, but also took the ramblings of a angry, not all there fan, to heart. 

For Drury took one of my many suggestions, trading defenseman Jacob Trouba. After not being able to deal the captain over the summer when Trouba invoked his no trade clause, Drury, apparently having told Trouba that he would place him on waivers if he didn't accept the trade, was able to deal him to the Ducks for a player I've never heard of and a 4th round draft pick. By getting Trouba's contract off the books, the Blueshirts were able to sign Igor Shesterkin to a long-term contract extension. 

In our Friday night production meeting, Karl (the Ace) Ludwig said he had heard someone say that Trouba was "the worst captain in Ranger history." I don't know about that, like I said, in the 21-22 season, Trouba did his job, which was to play solid defense and hit. The last two years he did neither, and took a bunch of lazy-ass penalties to boot. 

As far as captains go, Barry Beck was the captain when I was first into hockey, and he was either injured, holding out for a contract, or fighting with the coach throughout most of his captaincy. I'd put him up there as far as lousy captains go. 

And I may have to turn in my Ranger fan membership card for saying this, but Brian Leetch was named captain after Mark Messier hi-tailed it to Vancouver, and while he is on the short list of best players in team history, he wasn't a very good captain. Wayne Gretzky was on that team, so was Adam Graves. One of those guys would have been better choices. Again, no disrespect to Leetch, he was an awesome player, but maybe not quite captain material. No sin in that.  Especially following in the footsteps of one of the greatest captains in the history of the sport. 

Back to the future for a minute, the Rangers usually play an afternoon game on Black Friday and that's when I generally first take stock of them. It's like in baseball, Memorial Day is usually considered one of the season's first benchmarks. The team has been sputtering lately, so hopefully this trade kicks them back into gear. 

So far, it hasn't




We here in NYC were in a situation last Saturday afternoon we don't usually find ourselves in. Amazingly it was the third time in 2024 we found ourselves in said position.

The chance to bring home a World Championship. 

The NY Red Bulls of Major League Soccer had a chance to join the WNBA's New York Liberty and hoist a championship trophy, in this case, the MLS Cup. They played for the trophy in Los Angeles against the LA Galaxy on Saturday afternoon. 

Alas they came up short. The final was LA 2 NY 1, but the game was a lot closer than the score indicated. (I really need to retire that joke, that I admittedly stole from NBA play by play extraordinaire Mike Breen) 

The aforementioned Liberty, the Yankees and the Red Bulls all made it to the championship rounds of their respective sports. Only the Liberty were able to bring home the bacon. The Mets and Rangers made it to the final four, the Knicks to the 2nd round, the Islanders to the first round. The Devils and Nets missed the playoffs. 

The Jets and Giants should be relegated. 





All right, I'm going there..


POLITICS-Biden Pardon's his son.

There was a time where President Biden pardoning his son after promising he wouldn't, would have bothered me a great deal. In ordinary times, I would shake my head at a politician breaking another promise. 

But these aren't ordinary times.

These are the times in which we just re-elected a convicted felon to office. A convicted felon who as President, pardoned a traitor like Michael Flynn. Who is supposedly going to pardon the people who carried out a terrorist attack on the Capitol on January 6, 2021. Who not only pardoned his son-in-law's father, but he also just made him Ambassador to France. 

Yeah, if you voted for Captain Orange and you are upset that Joe Biden pardoned his son Hunter, well, not that you care, but you are most definitely a hypocrite. But that kind of goes with the territory, doesn't it? Like I said in previously that's an awful lot of lying to yourself.

There was a time I would have had an issue with Joe pardoning Hunter. Not anymore. Again, these aren't ordinary times. 

I would have been upset if he hadn't.



AVIATION: They ought to give this lady a job in the State Department-

Svetlana Dali, a 57 year old woman, somehow managed to sneak onto a Paris bound Delta flight out of JFK on the Tuesday before Thanksgiving. She did this without a US Passport or a boarding pass. 

I'm not sure if I should be angry, frightened or impressed. 

Angry that after all the money spent on beefing up airline security, all the hand wringing and finger pointing going all the way back to the days following the 9/11 attacks, that someone who quite frankly didn't seem all that intelligent was able to get all the way to Paris before someone figured out she didn't belong on the plane. In my Disney blogpost (which I now realize I never wrote the second part of) I told of having to take my iPad out of my carry-on, in addition to taking off my shoes and my belt. Again, I understand why and I'm not (really) complaining, but if we mere mortals have to do all that, and this gal got to fly free and not have to strip? Yeah that's aggravating. 

And of course, if this lady was able to pull this off, a woman who, thankfully seemingly had no worse intention than getting a free flight across the pond, what would happen if one of the bad guys was able to breach security? Knock on wood, we have had very few attempts since 9/11 of airplane terror, and the few that have happened have been quelled. Having something like this happen is a not so gentle reminder of how hard a job it can be to protect our people in the skies. 

According to the NY Times...

Dali exploited weaknesses in the security system at Kennedy International Airport during the busiest period of the year for air travel by blending in with crowds of boarding travelers, prosecutors said.

First, she infiltrated a flight crew and passed through a checkpoint with them. Then, she slipped past Delta Air Lines employees, who failed to ask for a boarding pass, and onto a fully booked plane, they said. While on the plane Ms. Dali attempted to avoid detection during the seven-hour flight to Charles de Gaulle Airport near Paris by


She has been charged with "secreting aboard a vessel", which to me sounds more like the title of a Gerry and the Pacemakers song rather than a federal crime. 

And yet there's a part of me that looks at this and sees a combination of guts, guile and smarts. Again, if she was really up to no good, this would be a whole other blogpost. There are few things more nerve wracking than making sure you have your boarding pass and passport, putting all your crap in the bins lest you set off the alarms, then pulling yourself together after you miraculously make it through. Thankfully you usually have some time between all that and the time you have to board your flight to take a breath. 

From the same Times article...

Prosecutors wanted to ensure she had a stable residence, said Brooke Theodora, an assistant United States attorney for the Eastern District of New York. “We’re concerned for a risk of flight here rather than the nature of the offense.”

She might be a flight risk? ya don't say? 

Not to sound like a broken record but thank the Lord she wasn't looking to hijack the plane in the name of another country, religion or whatever. I'm not going to call it a happy ending, but I will call it a it could have been a whole lot bleeping worse ending. 


Fall Finale Tomorrow.

Till then


Have a Great Night.