
Gone too soon at 23; but not forgotten.
We’ll hire a dog to burn down a hospital

Gone too soon at 23; but not forgotten.
…and you thought it was never going to happen.
Submit your answers early and often; the winner will get not only the respect and admiration of all this site’s readers, but also a ball of used Scotch tape! Look at what this young go-getter did with all the tape he won:

This could be you!
Answer now!


I’m messing around with some things, so you may see some moved/missing/phantom links appear and disappear over the next week or so. Fret not.

Well, Super Bowl XL turned out to be a real bomb. Thinking back to last night, and I’d be hard-pressed to come up with more than one or two postives about the whole broadcast. The pizza I ate was pretty good, though.
I didn’t catch too much of the pregame, but what I saw of the ceremony honoring all of the past Super Bowl MVP’s was pretty cool. Conspicuously absent were Terry Bradshaw and Joe Montana, the MVP quarterbacks of the Steelers and 49ers, respectively. I come to find out, today, that they both declined to be part of the ceremony because they wouldn’t be paid enough. Montana wanted at least $100,000. What a joke. I don’t think I’ve ever heard a bad thing about Montana, so this is stunning to me. It’s further evidence of the old adage that all athletes care about is money. It doesn’t matter who you are, or what status you hold in the sporting landscape, money is the primary motivator.
Regardless of that, the ceremony was nice. That was then followed by a Dr. Seuss introduction, featuring Harrison Ford, clearly in the middle of an acid trip. Who thinks of this stuff? How did the meeting where this was formulated go? Was everyone actually on drugs, and thought it was a good idea to have a commercial with Harrison Ford on drugs, introducing the Super Bowl? Come to think of it, maybe that guy with the goatee, wild eyes, and earring wasn’t Ford at all; maybe it was Timothy Leary.
The National Anthem was a little iffy as well. All I could think of while Aaron Neville was moaning was Horatio Sanz’ portrayal of him during Saturday Night Live, and his obsession with cocoa butter. Aretha Franklin is fat.


On to the game itself, then. Finally, something to cut through all the endless hype and interminable build-up and rampant commercialism (I like adjectives). And the game sucked. Both teams were basically begging for the other to go ahead and take charge, and neither did until Pittsburgh pulled out a trick play in which their quarterback-turned-wide receiver Antwaan Randle El threw a bomb to WR Hines Ward for the touchdown. It’s probably a bad sign when a wide receiver has a better night at QB than your starting QB (Ben Roethlisberger), who had a 22.9 QB rating. But despite his horrid performance, he got plenty of help from the refs and a bumbling Seahawks team (see the end of the first half for the height of time-management incompetency), and now has a Super Bowl ring.

Big Ben shares his underarm odor in an effort
to describe his Super Bowl performance
The other highlight of any Super Bowl broadcast is usually the commercials, though I think they’ve been pretty lame the past several years. This year was no exception. How do these ad execs have jobs? These companies spend over $2 million dollars so we can watch a bunch of idiots dressed up like lettuce and tomatoes jump on each other? Other high/lowlights:

The rest of my night was spent playing some darts and watching some TV doctors talk very seriously about a “code black” on Grey’s Anatomy. I’m still not sure what a “code black” is, but I think it had something to do with bad, melodramatic overacting, as that seemed to be prevalent in the situation.
All in all, a Super night.
Okay, that last line was really lame, but I was attempting to tie it into the whole Super Bowl theme. Wait a minute, I just called the last line “lame.” The title of this post is “Xtra LAME!” YEAH! I’M AWESOME!!
Hope you all had/are having a good holiday season. This is just a quick update for now; I’ll have more on what went on this past week or so in a couple of days. But, I will say that a vicious prairie dog, surly bartenders, and a carniverous turtleneck feature prominently in the tales that will be told. All true stories. Really.

(as in “I wonder how many feet of snow I’ll have to dig through to find my car tomorrow.”)
For everyone who “misses” dear old Buffalo, here is what you missed by not coming home for Thanksgiving:


The plow guys in Buffalo must be enjoying a vacation day, or else they just suck terribly at their job. There’s a narrow lane about 10 feet wide in the center of the Delaware Avenue (arguably Buffalo’s main road/street). I guess, if the goal is to cause a 187% increase in accidents, the Buffalo Department of Public Works has done their job. It’s still snowing like a son of a bitch as I write this, so I’m looking forward to the 85 minutes it will take me to drive 6 miles to work tomorrow.
Ross, I’m outposting you about 5-to-1. Look at this post right now–it took little to no effort, yet still manages to entertain.

I added a section for capsule reviews of flicks I’ve seen, but don’t want to write a 5-page dissertation on, under the Reports & Reviews page. I’ll try to write a few sentences on whatever movie I’ve seen most recently, regardless of how much I enjoyed it or not. I offer this as yet another service to you, the reader, in the hopes that I will more fully enrich your day-to-day lives. This follows in the great tradition of the Question of the Week, the Secret Page, and my 404 Error page. It’s still a work in progress at this point, so plan accordingly.