Friday Music Day: Memorial Weekend, 2011

For the past 7 or so summers, I've pieced together a mix CD for my wife and our sisters that's my attempt at, well, a Summer mix for that summer. I try to put together a pop collection of stuff I think is good and will be popular with all of us. (And I try to keep the lyrics kid-friendly.) I generally stick to broadly-defined "Pop," but that has included everything from Bonnie 'Prince' Billy to Buju Banton, White Stripes to Kanye West, Justin Timberlake to Zola Jesus, Taylor Swift to Sleigh Bells, and Grizzly Bear to Gang Gang Dance.

I'm just putting my thoughts together for this year (mix usually ready for the 4th of July), but here's what I've got so far:
EMA "Milkman"
Hooray for Earth "No Love"
Nicki Minaj "Super Bass"
Eric Copeland "Puerto Rican"
JKR70 presents Clay Hughes "The Love I Gave Ya"
I'm also thinking of maybe some Current 93, Fovea Hex, Andy Stott, and Gang Gang Dance, but that's already way too much weird for a year's worth of summers. I'm going to look into Adele (I haven't heard anything other than that she's HUGE), and maybe find good summer songs of the new Thurston Moore and Low LPs, but I'm very short on actual pop. I tried listening to about 15 minutes of KDWB and whatever became of B96, but that was difficult and those songs stunk.

So, you got any suggestions of upcoming new things that would be good? (I can especially use some help finding my obligatory country single.) Thanks much!

Happy Birthday–May 27

Frank Snyder (1894)
Pinky Higgins (1909)
Terry Moore (1912)
George O’Donnell (1929)
Jerry Kindall (1935)
Fred Bruckbauer (1938)
Jim Holt (1944)
Gary Nolan (1948)
Terry Collins (1949)
Mark Connor (1949)
Mark Clear (1956)
Ed Nunez (1963)
John Jaha (1966)
Jeff Bagwell (1968)
Frank Thomas (1968)
Todd Hundley (1969)

Mark Connor pitched in the Twins’ minor league system from 1971-1972 before he suffered a career-ending arm injury.  He has been a pitching coach for the Yankees, Arizona, Toronto, Texas, and Baltimore.  He also was the head baseball coach at the University of Tennessee.

Continue reading Happy Birthday–May 27

The Association – Along Comes Mary

looks like the hitman might be a bit indisposed. perhaps he can write about it in the new column.

anyway, i saw this awhile back, and all the engineer talk yesterday made me think of it. on the spot at work, it's the first thing that popped into my head. the said engineers of the nation should enjoy brian cole's educating the crowd on the band's technical specifications.

httpv://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hVmw9U5p0yk
1967

(i believe bS played a different version of this awhile back, so we'll just call this a reprise)

6 votes, average: 8.50 out of 106 votes, average: 8.50 out of 106 votes, average: 8.50 out of 106 votes, average: 8.50 out of 106 votes, average: 8.50 out of 106 votes, average: 8.50 out of 106 votes, average: 8.50 out of 106 votes, average: 8.50 out of 106 votes, average: 8.50 out of 106 votes, average: 8.50 out of 10 (6 votes, average: 8.50 out of 10)
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Father knows Best, an Introduction

For those readers who haven't caught it in the cup of coffee, WGOM will be launching a rotating post "Father Knows Best" as a dedicated post to discuss fatherhood issues.  By the simple method of asking, I got the honor of debuting this feature.

As a little background on my... erm... qualifications on the topic, I have a beautiful 1 year old daughter, Gwen.  She's a delight to watch grow (as are all kids, I'm sure), and I am constantly amazed at how many things she's picking up (both literally and figuratively).  One of the newest delights is that she is paying attention and actively responding to discussion and commands, which brings up the topic of the day.  With the ability to listen, she also is getting the much less desirable ability to actively disobey.

This was further brought to mind by a recent display at church (which I was thankfully able to observe and not participate in): a young family with around a boy around 2 years and a girl about 4 months sat in front of me, and almost immediately, it was apparent the boy called the shots for the family.  Now, I don't know the family or the boy, so this isn't an attempt to call out bad parenting, but the scene that followed amazed me.  At one point, the boy decided the parents should kneel while the congregation was standing, and after a minute of resisting, both parents knelt.  Later, he decided they shouldn't kneel during the consecration, and they both sat down so he could put up the kneeler.  At various times, he demanded to color, eat, stand on the pews, and so forth.  I understand the desire to give concessions to a rowdy kid so that he will be quiet, but I immediately put on my daddy hat and thought, "what would I do in this situation and how can I prevent this from being me in a year" (the misbehaving boy, not the second kid.  I know how to prevent that, not that I want to...).

Up to this point, discipline for Gwen has been mostly the "no, no" type of light admonishment but her increased awareness along with a display of how kids can be if left unchecked has started a trend of more severe punishments, but that brings up the next question - what's are the best ways to encourage the good behavior and discourage the bad?

We're achieving mixed results with escalating (but consistent) consequences.  The first offense gets a stern talking to with enforced eye contact while we explain what she did that brought this on, why it's a problem, and what she could have done that would have been acceptable.  The second gets a timeout, again after giving her a "here's why you're here" speech.  The third usually results the loss of some privilege (food is taken away is she's spitting it out or we go inside if she is persistent in trampling the garden).  On the other side of things, we make a conscious effort to praise her when she listens to what we tell her or does what we say she should do.  We are also making an effort to avoid making one parent the bad guy (I always heard "just wait until I tell your father what you did" growing up).

I don't think there's anything particularly revolutionary in what we do, but this was an aspect of parenting that I hadn't put as much thought into previously and seems like it can play a huge impact on both the child's development and the relationship between the parents and the kiddo.  As such, it seemed like a good inaugural topic. Fathers of the elder set, enlighten us young-uns!

Happy Birthday–May 26

Jim Frey (1931)
Joe Altobelli (1932)
Jim McKean (1945)
Darrell Evans (1947)
Kevin Kennedy (1954)
Rob Murphy (1960)
Jason Bere (1971)
Chris Latham (1973)
Travis Lee (1975)
Kevin Mulvey (1985)

Travis Lee was drafted by Minnesota with the second pick of the 1996 draft.  However, the Twins failed to make a formal contract offer within the time designated under the Basic Agreement, and Lee was declared a free agent.

Continue reading Happy Birthday–May 26

Minor Details: Games of 5/24

Rochester 10, Syracuse 4 in Rochester.  The Red Wings scored five in the first inning and were never threatened.  Toby Gardenhire had two singles and a double.  Luke Hughes singled and homered.  Jeff Bailey had two doubles, Ben Revere singled and doubled, and Aaron Bates had two singles.  Scott Diamond gave up two runs on eight hits and a walk in 5.1 innings.  Jake Stevens pitched 1.2 scoreless innings in his Rochester debut, giving up only a walk.

New Britain 7, Binghamton 3 in New Britain (Seven-plus innings, rain).  The Rock Cats scored five in the fifth and built a 7-0 lead.  The Mets had scored three in the top of the eighth and had none out when the game was halted by rain, but the decision to stop play does not appear to have been controversial.  Mike Hollimon went 3-for-3 with two doubles and a walk, raising his average to .193.  Joe Benson was 2-for-2 with two walks.  Nick Romero hit a three-run homer in the fifth.  Steve Singleton and Mark Dolenc each had two hits.  Liam Hendriks was credited with a complete game, striking out nine in seven innings.  He allowed eight hits and a walk.

Ft. Myers 5, Tampa 4 in Tampa.  The Miracle scored two in the seventh to break a 3-3 tie and move into first place in the FSL South.  Nate Hanson singled and doubled.  Reggie Williams hit a two-run homer.  Matt Schuld struck out four in five innings, giving up three runs on five hits and no walks.  Brad Stillings allowed a run on a hit and a walk in two innings to get the win.  Bruce Pugh pitched a scoreless ninth for his ninth save.

Burlington 9, Beloit 0 in Beloit.  The Bees scored four in the fifth and four in the eighth.  The Snappers had only two hits, both singles.  Adrian Salcedo allowed five runs on seven hits and four walks in 4.2 innings.  Ryan O’Rourke threw 2.1 scoreless innings, giving up only one hit.

Remodeled basement. Same half-baked taste.