Sunday, September 21, 2025

Weekly Mail September 21, 2025

 



El Capitan Theater June 18, 2025 


Hi Everyone:

I was hoping to have an all sports blog today. Well, both of my teams are currently sucking big time. And unfortunately we have other things happening. On that note..


JIMMY KIMMEL SUSPENDED - I'm not going to get into what he said that ended up getting him in trouble. However you feel about it, it's definitely up to you. I'll make the following observations..


1) People last week who were all quick to remind us of their 2nd amendment rights to stockpile weapons to protect themselves from Charlie Kirk shooter copycats, seemed not to care quite as much about the amendment in the Bill Of Rights just proceeding the 2nd Amendment, that being the one that guarantee Freedom of Speech.


2) A few folks I follow on FB pointed out that Jimmy Kimmel made a bunch of jokes at the expense of Tucker Carlson who was fired by Fox News after they settled with Dominion Voting Systems for $787 million. That settlement was due in large part because certain members of Fox News made false statements about the 2020 election.

Of course the difference between the two was that FOX fired Carlson because his false statements cost the Murdoch's almost 1 billion dollars. It had nothing to do with the FCC threatening Fox or Carlson. What happened to Kimmel was ABC Disney folding like a cheap suit to threats from Captain Orange and a now militarized FCC.  That's a huge difference. A difference even Carlson himself acknowledged. It's not the same thing no matter how much one tries to spin it that way. 

3) The Convicted Felon Cpt Orange took some time from visiting King Charles in London to say that he plans to "go after" Jimmy Fallon the way he gone after Kimmel and Stephen Colbert. 

It kind of brought me back to when I first started working at the Post. I worked the 3-10:30 shifts on Monday and Tuesday. I usually got home in time to catch David Letterman's monologue and the bits he would do before he brought out his first guest. On many of these nights, he would do a bit poking fun at then President George W. Bush. (The one I remember mostly was "The George W. Bush Joke that wasn't really a Joke", but there were others. He start by playing Hail to the Chief, followed by a less than flattering video clip. He did something along those lines almost every night. 

I'm positive Bush never said a word about any of that. And that was for two reasons, 1) he was usually in bed well before Letterman came on, but mostly 2) because he had more important things to worry about, like I don't know, running the country?. 

Again, of all the things on the laundry list of shit I can't stand about Captain Orange, his inability to roll with the punches is right there at the top.  And if he can't handle Jimmy Kimmel and Stephen Colbert, how do you think he's going to handle creeps like Putin and Kim Jong Un? 

The government trying to put a lid on anyone speaking should send chills down anyone's spine, no matter who you support. Just like seeing Charlie Kirk get killed should have spooked us all.  We all think it can't happen to us till it does. I can't stand Ted Cruz, he's almost as big a scumbag as CFCO is, but even he saw all this for what it is. He compared the FCC to Goodfellas. 

But if you voted for CFCO, this is what you wanted. So celebrate for now, just don’t complain when it’s your voice they want to silence. 


A couple of OBITS


ROBERT REDFORD-. I wonder if I was the only person who was surprised when upon hearing the news of Robert Redford's passing, that he was 89 year old. He always just seemed much younger than his years. I was also surprised to learn that he never won as Oscar as an actor, his lone win coming as a director for Ordinary People in 1980. 

A quick gander at his acting credits shows both how versatile he was, and how many different generations of actors and actresses he got to work with, both as a co-star and director. Not to mention how he built a small city in Utah dedicated to showcasing independent filmmaking. When we first got DirectTV in my house, I spent an inordinate amount of time watching the Sundance Channel. So many young filmmakers either go their start or got a boost from Redford, that is probably the greatest legacy he left behind last week. 


ED GIACOMIN- One of Jerry Seinfeld's most famous bits is the one where he says when you are rooting for a sports team, you are in effect rooting for laundry. Players come and go, they get traded, they leave via free agency, they retire. It's the uniform, or as Seinfeld put it, the laundry, that stays the constant. How many times have you jeered a player till he ended up on your team (see the Yankees with Roger Clemens, Wade Boggs and Johnny Damon) or cheered for a player till he went elsewhere, (see me with Darryl Strawberry 5/7/1991 and Mark Messier 11/25/1997). 

But on November 2, 1975, Ranger fans showed that it wasn't just the white jersey with the blue and red letters they were rooting for, it was the guys wearing those jerseys they cared about...well, one man in particular, who a few days before had been wearing that jersey but was released.


He returned to the Garden wearing the red sweater of the Detroit Red Wings and was given one of the loudest ovations ever heard in the World's Most Famous Arena. 


Ed Giacomin wipes away tears as fans chant his name 11/2/75

Eddie Giacomin had been the Rangers goalie from the dark days of the mid 60's to their near misses in the early 70's. Indeed between 1971 and 1974, they made it to the Conference Finals, and came within two wins of the Stanley Cup in 1972. Backstopped mainly by Ed Giacomin. 

In 1975, the Rangers were knocked out of the playoffs by the Islanders and the powers that be decided that perhaps it was time for a rebuild. They had a young goalie named John Davidson in their system, and to make room for him, they released Giacomin. He was almost immediately picked up by the Red Wings and as luck would have it, their next game was against the Rangers at MSG.

As Giacomin took his place in the Red Wings net, the Garden roared with chants of Ed-die, Ed-die. Giacomin was overcome with emotion, and several of the Rangers recalled feeling guilty shooting at their former teammate that night. More than one admitted they whispered “Sorry Eddie” as they skated past him. 

Can you imagine that happening now? 

Like Seinfeld says, it's just laundry. Players move all the time. It's one reason that all star games are so pointless now. 

It was different times back then. I have spent many a night on these pages bemoaning the fact that my teams don't win. We're going to do a little more of that in a few minutes. Sometimes as a fan, it's not about wins and losses but about moments and how they move you. Anyone who was at the Garden that night, (and a whole bunch more who weren't) can tell you how they felt when Ed Giacomin returned with Detroit on 11/2/1975. 


RIP


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


I'm going to wait till next week to write about the state of the Mets. They will either have squeaked into the playoffs or suffered one of the worst choke jobs in baseball history. For now, let's see how our NY Jets are doing.


FOOTBALL: SOJ

I recall being less than thrilled when the Jets signed Justin Fields to a 2 year $40 million deal (see WM March 16, 2025). I wondered aloud about how much faith we could put in a QB going on his third team in 5 years. 

On opening day, those who told me I should give him a shot were proven correct. 

They lost, but he played well, giving the Jets yardage both with his arm and his legs. They actually looked like a functioning football team, and not the bunch of stiffs they usually look like. It was a botched kickoff return and a couple of stupid penalties that did them in two weeks ago.

Last week, they went back to looking like what they have been: the worst franchise in the NFL since 2011. 

Fields couldn't make any good throws, they still committed killer penalties and they turned the ball over a couple of times (though to his credit, Fields didn't throw any picks). The Jets lost a not as close as the final score 30-10 game to the Bills.

Fields is now in concussion protocol and will be out indefinitely. Tyrod Taylor is our newest QB1.

I didn’t get to watch much of the game on Sunday against Tampa. They were down 23-6 when I shut it off and ended up losing 29-27, so they must have done something right in the second half. Of course they didn’t do enough of it.

I realize that 3 weeks in is way little time to judge a new regime. I also will say again that Robert Wood Johnson IV has long ago pissed away any benefits of the doubt from me and many of my fellow Jet fans. We just are hoping he one day stumbles into the combination of GM/Coach that finally ends the Jets playoff drought.

For now they are 0-3 and going nowhere fast. 

Good times, Good Times.


That’s all we got. 


Stay Safe,

and Have a Great Week

Sunday, September 14, 2025

Weekly Mail Season Premiere September 14, 2025

 






Hey There:


Friday marked the 10th anniversary of when I brought Weekly Mail out of retirement and started posting it in blog form on Facebook. A month ago, I was on the fence about bringing it back at all, and certainly not right on the 2nd Sunday of September. I'm still not sure how consistent I'm going to be with it. 

But some things have been going on since I went on hiatus. Namely Charlie Kirk being killed.


So that is where we will start.



CHARLIE KIRK KILLED


I'd like to say that this should go without saying, but in this world we live in, what's obvious is that there is no such thing as going without saying. So I'll say it.


What happened to Charlie Kirk should never happen. To anyone. 

No, I didn't agree with most of what Charlie Kirk said or stood for. A few times something he posted would show up on my feed, on Facebook, it was usually someone re-posting. On X, it was on that For You part where to be honest, it's stuff I don't want to read from people I don't care for. Sometimes I read it just to see how the other half lives. Most times, I scroll past and get on with what constitutes my life. 

Not that I have anywhere close to the following that he had, but I also know that I may write things here that people don't agree with. I guarantee you I'm going to write some things here this week that many of you won't agree with. What is supposed to make this nation great is that we can do so without fearing for our lives. There were some things he said that were downright despicable, (and we'll get to some of those things) but to get killed over it?  That is not what we are supposed to be about. 

People are saying that they don't know how we got here or how we can prevent it. Well, I'm by no means a genius, but there are a couple of things that immediately come to mind as we ponder what can we do to make sure things of this nature stop happening. And I'm also not breaking any new ground here, or suggesting something I haven't already mentioned hundreds of times before, but, well, here goes.

First, we really really REALLY need some common sense gun control here in Murica. While Kirk was being shot at in Utah, two kids were being shot at a Colorado high school. This time, the only person to die from this latest shooting was the shooter, who killed himself after putting one fellow student in critical condition. Colorado is the same state that gave us Columbine and the movie theater shooting in Aurora. If you think Charlie Kirk shouldn't have gotten killed for giving a speech, how do you feel about a kid who got killed just for going to school? Or to the movies?

I'm sorry folks, I find school shootings a lot more heartbreaking. Neither of those should happen, but they do. After Kirk was killed, some of the people I'm hooked up to on Facebook actually suggested they were going to either get a gun, or stockpile even more guns than they already have. 

More guns is not the fucking answer here. Talk about things that should go without saying! 

And some other people on my friends list pointed out that Kirk himself said the following..

"I think it’s worth to have a cost of, unfortunately, some gun deaths every single year so that we can have the Second Amendment to protect our other God-given rights. " April 5, 2023 per factcheck.org. 

I'd rather have the kids from Columbine back, or the kids from Ulvalde back, or especially the kids from Sandy Hook.  Were those the gun deaths Charlie thinks we needed to protect the 2nd amendment? 

And look, I again am not saying to repeal the 2nd amendment. I'm saying let's come up with a plan where it's harder to get a gun in this country than it is to get a cheeseburger at McDonalds. 

The other thing we need to do, (and I'll admit this is the much much harder factor) is to lower the temperature around here. I'll admit I'm not totally blameless here (though I really do try to limit my political comments to this blog, my FB Feed is almost free of political memes) 

But I'm sorry people, if you voted for Captain Orange the last time around, you clearly did not want to cool things off. 

It cracks me up anytime someone posts something about Joe Biden or Barack Obama or Bill Clinton losing their cool. Like they are trying to prove that those guys were anywhere near as unhinged as the convicted felon is. Almost every day, CFCO tweets out insults and threats against people who disagree with him. He ran again for two reasons, to stay out of jail and to avenge his enemies, real or perceived. He had no intention of uniting the country. 

And yeah, there are people on the left who I don't think want to unite us either. The so called squad fits that category (IMO). And also there are a few Republicans who I still hold out hope that they could at least calm things down, even if I don't agree with their policies. Nikki Haley might have been someone who could have made things a little less divisive. 

But we went for the guy who thrives on division. And we keep doing absolutely nothing about gun proliferation. Charlie Kirk said the quiet part out loud. I suppose that's why people loved him so much. On the other hand, seriously? 

Charlie Kirk should not be dead today. But that doesn't mean I'm going to shed any tears for him. 

And if that makes me some sort of asshole, so be it. But ask yourself this..

Did you shed tears when Nancy Pelosi's husband was attacked?

Did you shed tears when Melissa Hortman, John Hoffman and their spouses were shot in Minnesota? Both were Democratic politicians. Hortman, her husband and the family dog were killed. Hoffman and his wife were critically injured. 

Did you shed tears when Josh Shapiro's house was set ablaze? He's the governor of Pennsylvania, and a Democrat. 

Did you? 

I didn't either truth be told. But I didn't mock them either like some people did. 

I'm not mocking Charlie Kirk either.

I'm just saving my tears for the next kid who gets gunned down for committing the mortal sin of going to school. 

Just hope it's not my kid.

Or yours. 


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


I'm almost thinking I should make this a stand alone blog, it feels weird going from shootings to the rest of what I want to discuss today. But we will press on here.


Two people in the sports world died last week. 


DAVEY JOHNSON- That the Mets will most likely miss the playoffs this year due to the fact that they have been one of the worst teams in baseball since Father's Day, makes what Davey Johnson accomplished here almost 40 years ago all the more remarkable. 

After the Mets traded Tom Seaver in 1977, the franchise fell apart. For 6 of the next 7 seasons, they lost over 90 games, and it would have been a perfect 7 for 7 if not for the 1981 players strike. 

Things were getting better in 1983. They traded for Keith Hernandez and brought up Darryl Strawberry. Their AAA team, won the 1983 championship. Dqvey was the manager of that team. George Bamberger started the 83 season as Mets manager, but skipped out 48 games in. Frank Howard took over but was not getting the job full time.

Davey came up and brougt with him Dwight Gooden. That gave the Mets a bona fide ace, but he also brought up guys like Wally Backman, and Lenny Dykstra.  They went from 94 losses in 1983 to 90 wins in 1984, and a pennant race till the middle of September. The next year they were alive till the 2nd to last day of the season. 

The year after that was 1986. 

And this is my favorite story from that year. I remember reading about it the Post a couple years later. I believe it was Kevin Elster, who had been dealt to the Dodgers by then, who told the story.*


Davey came into the clubhouse before Game 1 of the World Series and held up a bill that he said the team wanted us to pay because we had caused some damage on the plane (back from Houston after winning the NLCS.) Davey asked what we thought we should do about it. He then proceeded to tear the bill up right in front of us. 

Now that was a manager with (guts)

Even at my relatively young age, I knew that guts was in parenthesis because he said another word not suitable for the paper. (at least not in the early 90's) Davey Johnson was one of the first managers to use computers to figure out lineups and things like that. Which is ironic because of all the managers I've ever seen, nobody managed on (guts) more than he did. 

I mean that was no computer on earth in 1986 that would have had Davey make some of the moves he made in the 1986 playoffs. Howie Rose once joked that after WFAN replayed Game 6 of the 1986 World Series on Christmas night 1989, that he was going to do a Mets Extra just so that "someone could call in and scream about Davey not having HoJo bunt in the 9th inning." 

At the time Frank Cashen fired him 42 games into the 1990 season, I was up in arms. All I knew was that the team was awful before he got there and I was afraid they would be awful he left. 

And they were.

But looking back, he had also kind of lost the clubhouse by then. Hernandez, Backman, Dykstra and Gary Carter were gone. The swagger that had defined the Mets between 84 and 87 had left with them. They were talented but lacked the fire they had in those years. 

Ironically, talking to my co-editor Karl (the Ace) Ludwig the other night, and recalling how he had been calling for Johnson's head since they lost to the Dodgers in the 1988 NLCS, he to had a change of heart, saying that he felt Davey may have figured it out and kept them in contention. 

Part of the problem was that in 1989, the Yankees hired Dallas Green as the manager, who if nothing else, gave the writers plenty of good quotes. After George Steinbrenner inevitably fired him with about 50 games left in the season, many of those writers were clamoring for the Mets to hire Green. Instead they hired poor Buddy Harrelson (who was in over his head) and then Jeff Torborg, who would tell Mike and the Mad Dog about line up changes he was making before he told the players about them, earning the nickname Jeff from Flushing. Green eventually managed the Mets from 1993-1996.

 But in any event Davey Johnson passed last week at the age of 84. 


KEN DRYDEN- Several years ago, I read Al Michaels autobiography You Can't Make This Stuff Up. At the time, I felt Michaels was a pompous ass. After finishing the book, I confirmed that he was one. 

But that's not to say that there weren't a few good stories that he told, and my favorite was about his color commentator for the 1980 Olympic Men's Hockey tournament Ken Dryden. 

Michaels and Dryden called the Miracle on Ice on Friday, February 22, 1980. The US pulled off what many consider the greatest upset in sports history that evening in Lake Placid against the Soviet Union. Even though Dryden was Canadian, he had to have felt a high that night. 8 years before, he was the goalie in the final game of the 1972 Summit Series, an 8 game exhibition that the Canadians had been expected to dominate, only to have lost 2 of the first four games in Canada. They won Game 2 and tied Game 3.

That series moved to Moscow two weeks later and after dropping the first game, Canada won the next three, including Game 8 on a goal scored with 34 seconds left by Paul Henderson. A tie or a loss would have given the Soviets the series. Dryden started Game 1 of that series at his home arena, the Montreal Forum and had gotten blown out 7-3. The Canadians comeback in that series was as much a source of pride for Canada as the Miracle on Ice would be for us Americans.

The last game the US Played before the Miracle on Ice was against West Germany. According to Michaels, he and Dryden called the game, then Dryden got into a car and was driven across the Canadian border so that he could sit for the Bar Exam! He passed the bar and became a lawyer on his day off from broadcasting the Olympics, then called one of the most memorable games of all time. 

Dryden was an award winning author, and also served in Canadian Parlament from 2004-2011. He ran for the leadership of the Liberal party in Canada, which would have put him in position to run for Prime Minister, but he lost on the second ballot. As a player, he won 6 Stanley Cups, including one against my Rangers in 1979. (A little before my fandom started)

RIP. 


We will hopefully have an all sports blog next week. Till then,


Stay Safe


and Have a Great Week 




Jeff Pearlman’s book about the 1986 Mets, The Bad Guys Won, chronicles this infamous flight in vivid detail in the book’s first chapter. 

Thursday, September 11, 2025

Weekly Mail September 11 Special 2025









24 years on, this is what comes to mind as we look back on that horrible day....


Those of you who are educators and or teachers would probably speak better to this, but my understanding is that it’s usually 11th grade/ junior year of high school where American history is taught. I know that’s where I was taught American history and also last year when Timmy was a junior is where he was taught American history.

It was towards the end of the last school year when Tim was coming home talking about how his class was learning about September 11. He told me what he learned and also had questions about what I remember from that day. 

I was thinking about it. My junior year of high school was 1989–1990. Subtract 24 years from that and you’re talking about 1966–1967, The heart of the Vietnam war.

In 1990, the Vietnam war was probably still fresh for anyone who was alive during that time. Obviously in my family it was still very much fresh in our minds. 

For those of us who are alive on 9/11, it almost seems surreal that now it’s being taught in history classes. 

Instead of textbooks, it's iPads and Chromebooks. And you wonder if what are on those devices can do justice to what those of us who were alive were feeling that day, and the days that followed. 

I was always told by people who were around on 11/22/1963 about how the country just went dead silent after JFK was killed. So many times, people said to me "You wouldn't understand it, unless you were there."

Of course, the technology was a lot more advanced in 2001 than it was in 1963. There are tons more video, photography and audio on 9/11. From all different views and vantage points. 

But even with all that, you wonder.

In fairness, our kids have never known what life was like before 9/11.  They didn't have the luxury of thinking something like that could never happen, the way many of us thought. For them it's been a part of their lives, having to get searched going to a ballgame, or having to go through a full body metal detector at the airport. 

Next year, it will be a full quarter century since 9/11/01. So much has happened, so much has changed since then. And yet, it still seems like yesterday. Because it affected all of us so much, and with the possible exception of the pandemic, altered our lives more than anything else. So many who lost family and friends that day are still grieving. The names will all be read again this morning. For those of us who lived through it, we will feel the hurt, the sorrow and the anger all over again.

And in classrooms all over the country, kids who were born years afterwards will be taught about it. They'll learn who did it and about the changes that happened and the battles that were fought to bring the terrorists to justice. 

And maybe they will understand how truly awful it was. But maybe there are no words or books or lessons that can capture that. 

And hopefully, they will never have to experience anything like it ever.


God Bless those we lost that day, and those that were left behind.

God Bless all those who have died of sicknesses they developed while digging through the rubble.

May God Bless our children and protect them so that they never have to experience anything like this. 

And May God Bless America 





Weekly Mail returns on Sunday