37 thoughts on “September 16, 2015: Another Way In”

  1. Stupid head cold. I can blame my this on my niece, right? She herself wasn't sick, but she's 3 1/2 and goes to daycare, so I assume she's just a plague ship unto herself.

  2. I'll be at the game tonight in the Legends Club. It's good to know people with money and tickets they can't use.

    The only other time I was in a box Ryan Doumit hit a walk off double.

  3. Don't feel like waiting for the next movie day:
    I've been going through some of Season 2 of Parks & Rec lately, and noticed a couple things that the writers either laid down way in advance, or went back and used:

    Actual Spoiler(s) SelectShow
    1. Awesome. I remembered the first one, but not the second.

      I'm going a little crazy waiting for the last season to be released on Netflix, since I still haven't seen it. No word that I can find anywhere though...

        1. The NBC app had them for awhile, but that was while they were airing. I have no idea, but would probably guess they have been removed by now. But it still might be worth checking if you have a device to watch on.

  4. A book I had requested at the library about a month ago has just become available. I'm gonna have to plow through it to get to "Infinite Jest" at all. I'm gonna need all the time I can manage for that one.

    1. Same thing. Just got notification that I can pick up a 700 pager I've been waiting on for a month, but I still have a decent chunk left of another library book.

          1. Yeah, that's why I'm reading it. We watched the pilot back in the spring. It was really good and I'm glad they picked up the entire series.

          1. I picked up book yesterday that I'd requested a few months ago. Fortunately, it's a mere 276 pages once you discount the endnotes and index. And the point size is on the generous side.

        1. Have you read Hornblower (or, more accurately, Forester) before? I read a few of those novels years back after being introduced via David Weber's Honor Harrington series. From what I remember, they were pretty great reads. Enjoy!

          1. Picked up the 2nd Hornblower At Halfpriced Books yesterday ...read 1/3 of it last night. Fun stuff. Also grabbed a couple of Tim O'Brien books. I love that place almost as much as the library.

    1. There are two arms for the usual ligament. After that they either switch to the leg or get them from cadavers. Or maybe both.

        1. Yes. From The Repository:

          Typically, the reconstructive surgery, generally known as Tommy John surgery, will involve an autograft of the palmaris longus tendon (mostly seen as an accessory tendon) or an allograft of tissue from a cadaver or donor. The new tendon is attached by drilling holes in the medial epicondyle of the humerus and the sublime tubercle of the ulna and lacing the tendon through them in a figure eight.

          So Johnson whacked someone and is set for his third and fourth TJ.

    1. I know these big mergers happen in all sorts of industries, so clearly there is a big economic benefit to being a bigger company controlling more of the marketplace (less competition, less redundancy, etc.). But other than those, I just don't get how this makes sense.

      Their problem: The behemoths InBev and MillerCoors are losing market share to smaller, craft breweries.
      Their solution: Get even bigger! Merge all the similar beers! Make ourselves even LESS like the breweries that are doing well and expanding rapidly!

      Seems like doubling down on your current issues instead of changing to try to improve.

      1. It sounds like they have no response to craft brewers other than price, so they'll become the economy brand. To do that, they need to cut back on expenses and eliminate competition in that area of the market, and the best way to do that is a merger like this.

          1. What I've read says that despite craft beers' growing popularity in the states, internationally there's next to nothing. Seems like this may be a way for a smaller brewery to get international exposure, and start increasing demand world-wide.

            It also seems to me that buying up smaller breweries seems like a logical way for InBev and Miller to grow their sales and fight off stagnation: buy up the smaller places that are starting to gain ground, not unlike Google or Facebook buying up smaller tech firms.

            1. In my travels, China is a beer wasteland, but that's no shock.

              I was actually able to find American imports in Bangkok to a very limited extent. It was at a (fantastic) restaurant serving traditional Thai food but owned by an ex-pat. They had some sierra Nevada and some rogue and some others I can't recall.

              As for England, man, the English are friggin stubborn and still think American beer is crap, largely because we really don't do real ale and because of Bud. That said, I ran across cans is Sixpoint at a bar in a mall by my hotel. They also had a Sixpoint cask and another cask from 21st Amendment, so while there's room to expand that easy, it's still pretty sparse.

              1. I wonder how much Europeans actually want beer from the US. Even aside from the just thinking it's all crap, it seems like each country (or even region within a country) has their own local favorite, and often not much is available outside that. EU means they could easily get beer from other EU nations, but no one seems all that intent on doing so, so how likely is it really that large numbers would switch to something even harder to get, and presumably more expensive?

                1. The Sixpoint I had was actually reasonably priced. Cans help quite a bit with that. The two casks there were basically contract brewed by a big English brewery, so that's a possible means for getting US beers around the world.

                  But to your larger point of whether Europeans even want US brews, that's a much tougher nut to crack. I suspect Germany would be really hard to get into since each region basically had their own style and that's what they drink (because I'm conceived they're all robots.)

                  The Scottish sales guy I was in England with enjoyed the Bengali Tigers he had, but overall the general hopiness of our beers is probably an even harder sell to the British palate.

                  The French are just Assholes.

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