Friday, October 17, 2008

Answer (R)uffda!



OK, I’m turning the tables. This time, I’M asking the questions.

Huh?

Why are the antennae painted red and white?

Uh... because they’re peppermint?

How many peppermint antennae have you come across in your lifetime?

Besides the ones at the volleyball games?

Matches, but yes.

Well, do candy canes count?

Why do you keep asking me questions? Does a candy cane look like an antennae to you?

Well, it’s red and white...

And hooked, right?

Some are. Some are straight.

If the hook’s broken off it, maybe.

No, seriously. Some come as straight candy canes.

But they’re small, right? Maybe 8 inches, tops?

I guess.

So, all in all -- besides the color -- not antennae-like, right?

I suppose. Do you have any other questions?

You’re asking me questions again.

Sorry.

I have a list. Shall I read it?

No.

What’s the difference between a triple block and a double block?

One?

What’s the difference between an improper request and an inappropriate suggestion?

Depends on the girl ...

Very good! Why is a game now a set, but a set is still a set?

They’re pacing themselves?

Are three “one” passes equal to one “three” pass?

Can we stop now?

If you could be any vegetable in the world, which one would it be?

A butternut squash.

The Cucurbita moschata?

Yes.

Who is Dagmara Szyszczak?

Seriously. Can we stop now?

Is it safe?

I have things to do.

Are you now or have you ever been a member of the Communist party?

I’m leaving now.

On a jet plane? Will you be back again?

Hello? Are you still there?

Well, that went well, I think. Let’s do it again soon, shall we?



Ask (R)uffda!

Some knowledgeable volleyball people are calling Penn State the best DI team of all-time? Is this true?

Yes, that’s what some of them are saying.

Let me rephrase ...

Don’t bother. I was just joshing with you. Is Penn State the best DI team of all-time?

That was my question.

Don’t interrupt me, please. I was speaking rhetorically.

I would say maybe. Who knows? It’s like that Coke commercial where the high school football team from the 50s is playing the team from the 00s. Coke, of course, pretends that the game will be competitive, whereas we all know that 50s team is going to have their asses handed to them.

How do we know how this Lions team would do against the 1998 Beach team? Or the Walsh/Folkl Stanford squad?

This sort of question is just not something I can answer. I can’t deal with pure hypotheticals.

Is it true Obama is a Bulgerian?

No. And way to go all tangential on me.

If Obama were a Bulgerian, would that change how you feel about Bulgerians?

No. It’s Belgians I have my beef with. With which I have my beef. But if Obama were a Bulgerian, it’d change how I feel about the Democratic nomination process.

What’s been the biggest surprise so far this season?

I’d have to say the T-Rex eating all those WSU fans. A close runner-up was Mick Haley singing the National Anthem with Boy George.

How do we dig our way out of this financial crisis?

Gotta trust the block and your teammates. You start Gentiling on us and you may as well kiss that 401K goodbye. Only Paula can pull that off.

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Saturday, October 11, 2008

Additional Excess

Memo to Penn State:

Get with the program. Less may not be more, but it's Moderation at work.

Tuesday, October 7, 2008

Lots and Lots of Moderation

There are many things wrong with this world we live in. Sean Hannity, for instance. But right up there at the top is Excess. Notice the capital E? That was intentional.

I'll give you an example. We take probably the most perfect food on Earth -- chocolate -- and we add caramel and nuts, maybe throw in a wafer cookie of some sort, or peanut butter, and we call that a candy bar. That's not a candy bar. That's Excess.

I could go on, but I don't want to overdo it. For the obvious reason. What I really want to say is simple: Six Pac 10 teams ranked higher than the #2 team in the Big 10 is excessive Excess. This is the sort of thing that gives birth to movements like BASTA!

What ever happened to good old-fashioned Moderation? We need more Moderation. Lots and lots of Moderation.

(Too much with the same joke?)

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Monday, October 6, 2008

Impossible Qwest

I’ve been having problems with Qwest. For the last two billing cycles, I’ve been unable to view my bill on-line. You might think that’s the problem, but that’s only part of it. There’s no one at Qwest who can help me. The Live Chat Help is live and chatty, but of zero help. The Customer Service folk I call tell me to take it up with Live Chat Help or they say they’ll send something or other to their IT group. I even wrote a fairly scathing letter to Corporate Headquarters.

But I still get “This file is damaged and cannot be repaired” when I try to view the damned bill on-line. On my last unhelpful chat, they promised to send me a paper copy, but it never arrived. So I tried them again today. Believe it or not, today's Live Chat helper was named Bambi. I thought for a second I had stumbled into the wrong kind of Live Chat Help, but nope. She was legit. She couldn’t help me either, but she was legit.

So I’m thinking about not paying this month’s bill.

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Friday, October 3, 2008

Dear Gorf



It’s funny. “Gorf” is almost more Mark than “Mark” is, if you know what I mean (and I’m pretty sure you do). It was a good name you chose, although this avatar is just spooky.

You know me. My thoughts tend to list toward the morbid. So I’ve always wondered what the world’s going to be like the day after I die. It’s hard to imagine everything just going on like normal. This is not conceit. It’s just hard to imagine. Well, let me tell you, the world’s a poorer place now that you are gone. It hasn’t come to an end (the Large Hadron Collider is broken, after all), but it’s sputtering. I think I even smell smoke.

I miss you, my friend.

B asked me to be one of the speakers at your service and I’m afraid I made a complete mess of it. I don’t even really remember what I said. I do know what I wanted to say, however, and that’s the purpose of this letter.

As you are aware, way back in the late 80s, back when we all had more hair and less mass, I started playing volleyball at the Y. These were pickup games over an extended lunch hour, up to three times a week. Participants ranged from teenagers to octogenarians. I could usually keep up with the octo-crowd -- in ability, that is, not with the wisecracks. I’m guessing that’s where we first met, although maybe it’s when I ventured into the Saturday afternoon games, the more social scene (that is, fewer octogenarians).

At the time, Inertia was my constant companion, the bastard. There had been a series of failed romances and my job, by default, was dominating my life. Somehow, I had found the get-up-and-go to get on down to the Y for volleyball. I was badly in need of some good fortune, something that would change the direction of my life.

So what happens? You did what you did with countless others. You welcomed me into the volleyball scene. Before long I was playing two nights a week in the Y leagues, then on a USAV team, then at the Volleyball Gym on Friday nights. All of this in addition to the lunch hours and Saturdays. Some might have said this was too much volleyball; and the fact my shoulder quickly stopped functioning correctly (and still bothers me to this day) would lead those same people to repeat that preposterous claim. I say I enjoyed every minute of it, even when I didn’t think I was, if you can figure that out.

There were all those post-game get-togethers at the Midway Applebees, where you first started spilling drinks on me, something you did more than anyone I’ve ever met. I can’t even imagine how many stories and laughs and bad puns we shared over the years. Or how much bad food and alcohol was consumed.

There was also the Golden Gophers, of course, a passion we shared. This passion took us on trips all over the country: to Ann Arbor and East Lansing, to Cedar Falls and Iowa City, to Long Beach and San Diego, to Champaign and West Lafayette, even to Honolulu and a Christmas in Maui. And, of course, there was that trip to Happy Valley to watch the Gophers end the Lions long home winning streak. We drove from Pittsburgh to Happy Valley on Friday, then back to Pittsburgh after the match. On Saturday we sped across Ohio to Indianapolis, then on down to Bloomington. After that match, I decided to take off in the opposite direction from how we had driven in, trying to avoid the football traffic. After driving halfway to Ohio and almost running out of gas, we started all over again -- and still caught the football traffic.

Good times.

And I’m glad to say we both made it to the Final Four in 2004. The result was not the best (Ogonna!), but it was amazing being there. Besides the volleyball, I’ll never forget that December sun shining on the Gopher bandmembers who were playing their tubas in the wading pool outside the arena. It was perfect.

Then, of course, there was VolleyTalk, where volleyball geeks from all over came to congregate, on the internet. We were proud to be a part of this geekdom, proud to give the Gophers a presence in the on-going exchange of information and opinions, misinformation and insults. I think my favorite session was when you and I sat in my kitchen during the Gophers’ meltdown at Stanford against Arizona in 2002 and let loose the hounds of our despair, and, as the match wore on, our ridicule of each other. We were the (disembodied) Two Stooges. Meanwhile, my wife was having a Pampered Chef party in the living room. True to form, you ended up buying $100 or so of the stuff.

We continued this dialogue over the years, arguing about whatever we wanted. I believe one of the last was about the mountains in Juno. I contended that Minnesota has no "mountains", certainly not anywhere near the Twin Cities. You disagreed. About there being NO mountains anyhow. It was left unresolved, this argument -- but you were wrong.

So I wanted to represent VolleyTalk at the service, since you are an out and out celebrity there. You’re Paris Hilton, I tell you! So many people have posted their condolences, it seemed only right that they have a voice, even if I did bungle it royally. That’s one of the two primary things I wanted to express. Not that I bungled it royally. That the VolleyTalk community loves you.

The other was to thank you. I’ve joked to you about this in the past, but I’m not joking now. I am perfectly serious. Fact is, I just don’t see how in the world I would have ever met my wife-to-be, become her friend, then her husband, then the father of our three wonderful girls, without you being there to usher her into my life. It was you who invited her into the volleyball community at the Y, as you had done with me. It was you who invited her to play on our team. It was you who made us all feel so welcome.

You were my good fortune and I will never, ever forget you.

Thank you, Gorf.

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