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	<title>Bronx Banter &#187; Pat Jordan</title>
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		<title>Number One with a Bullet</title>
		<link>http://www.bronxbanterblog.com/2013/05/14/number-one-with-a-bullet-2/</link>
		<comments>http://www.bronxbanterblog.com/2013/05/14/number-one-with-a-bullet-2/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Tue, 14 May 2013 17:11:42 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alex Belth</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[1: Featured]]></category>
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		<category><![CDATA[Rifle shooting]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[roopstigo]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Straight Shooters]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.bronxbanterblog.com/?p=102586</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Here&#8217;s Pat Jordan on why women rule the rifle range: Early one morning in March,...]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p style="text-align: center;"><a href="http://www.bronxbanterblog.com/wordpress/wp-content/uploads/2013/05/stir-scherer2-hero-web.jpg"><img class="aligncenter  wp-image-102587" title="stir-scherer2-hero-web" src="http://www.bronxbanterblog.com/wordpress/wp-content/uploads/2013/05/stir-scherer2-hero-web-1024x341.jpg" alt="" width="614" height="205" /></a></p>
<p><a href="http://www.roopstigo.com/reader/straight-shooters-why-women-rule-the-rifle-range/" target="_blank">Here&#8217;s Pat Jordan on why women rule the rifle range:</a></p>
<blockquote><p>Early one morning in March, Caitlin Morrissey showed me around the blindingly lit white range. She is 21, built strong with long blonde hair and blue eyes. She is pretty and perfectly made-up. “My ritual,” she said. “Shower, hair, make-up every morning. I’m very organized.” There is no artifice about her. She looked directly at me when she spoke. It was disconcerting. She stood at her locker, painstakingly putting on her uniform: shoes, a sling for her left arm, her gloves. “Everything’s so our muscles will not be used,” she said. She walked penguin-style to the firing line. She put on her granny glasses with blinders, and a third blinder over her left eye. “I don’t like to shut my left eye,” Caitlin said. “The exertion causes face fatigue. I took out my contacts too, so they won’t move around.” A lot of shooters wear glasses. Exceptional vision is overrated in shooting, they claim.She stood at the firing line, her body sideways to the distant target. She assumed a model’s slouchy pose, legs spread, loose-hipped, her left hip cocked higher than her right. She turned her head and shoulders toward the target, aimed her rifle, her left hand under the barrel, cradling the rifle very gently, her left elbow propped against her left hip for support.</p>
<p>“Girls are better shooters than boys ‘cause we have hips,” Caitlin said. No smile, a fact. She pressed her cheek against her rifle, whispered something to it, and aimed. She exhaled, her body relaxed, got still. She held this pose for a few minutes, and then put her finger on the delicate trigger. It takes 1½ ounces of pressure to depress that trigger. Most firearms require 5 – 12 pounds of pressure. Caitlin stopped breathing, “ping”, took a breath and said, “9.8. Anything less than 10.0 is a failure. I haven’t settled into my position yet.” She aimed again. Two, three minutes went by, and then she fired. “A 10.6,” she said. “10.9 is perfect. See? My body’s settling in.” She aimed again, “ping” and a 9.8. “I could feel it was a 9 when I broke the shot. I wasn’t smooth pulling the trigger; I jerked it,” she said. She shot again (10.4), again, (10.6) again (10.8). I asked Caitlin if shooting a 10.9 was thrilling. She lowered her rifle and looked at me. “I wouldn’t call it thrilling,” she said. ”Rewarding maybe.”</p>
<p>&#8230;As a young girl in Topeka she played all the sports against boys. When she was 7 years old, her father took her to a shooting club. By 9, she was beating all the boys. That was her main motivation, she said, but that didn’t last. Beating boys was no big deal. Beating girls, however, was something else. At first, boys were fascinated by the girl with the gun. By the eighth grade that was just her persona. That was when she learned that Margaret Murdock lived nearby. She went to visit her and wrote a story about the woman who’d won an Olympic gold medal in rifle shooting, and then had it taken away in favor of a man. Caitlin called her essay, a mini-book, really, “The Life of a Champion”, author: Caitlin Morrissey, Copyright: 2003, Publisher: Morrissey Publishing.<br />
Maybe that’s still in the back of her mind, she said, because, “It’s still fun to beat boys. It’s an accepted fact that girls are better. Girls know how to calm themselves down, relax, focus on one thing. Boys get distracted. They don’t have our attention span. When we find something we like, we latch on to it. Ninety percent of shooting is mental toughness. We calm ourselves down after a bad shot, and not relax too much after a good shot.” She said that what gratifies her most about shooting is that it taught her how to calm herself in life. “It’s a monotonous sport,” she said. “You have to be self-motivating. You’re in the practice range for three hours every day. Your body is locked in a cramped position. Boys build muscle for movement. Girls build muscle for stability. We do neck and trapezius work” because that’s where all a shooter’s tension is. “What do I do to relax?” she said, smiling for the first time. “I go shopping. Or organize things, like our graduation party.”<br />
Caitlin’s boyfriend is a hunter. “I could never be with a guy who didn’t like guns,” she said. “I’ve never hunted, but I might one day. I don’t have a Bambi Complex. But I don’t like to point my gun at anything I don’t intend to shoot. It’s a tool, like a baseball bat, never a weapon. I could never be a sniper. You should talk to Jaime. She’s a hunter. She’s in ROTC. She could be a sniper.”</p></blockquote>
<p>[Image Via: Roopstigo]</p>
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		<title>BGS: Thin Mountain Air</title>
		<link>http://www.bronxbanterblog.com/2013/05/07/bgs-thin-mountain-air/</link>
		<comments>http://www.bronxbanterblog.com/2013/05/07/bgs-thin-mountain-air/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Tue, 07 May 2013 11:34:32 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alex Belth</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[1: Featured]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[4: Gold]]></category>
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		<category><![CDATA[Steve Carlton]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Thin Mountain Air]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.bronxbanterblog.com/?p=102218</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[This profile of Steve Carlton &#8220;Thin Mountain Air&#8221; was written by our man Pat Jordan....]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p style="text-align: center;"><a href="http://www.bronxbanterblog.com/wordpress/wp-content/uploads/2013/05/tumblr_mlm4nxT8LS1qe0lqqo1_500.png"><img class="aligncenter size-full wp-image-102221" title="tumblr_mlm4nxT8LS1qe0lqqo1_500" src="http://www.bronxbanterblog.com/wordpress/wp-content/uploads/2013/05/tumblr_mlm4nxT8LS1qe0lqqo1_500.png" alt="" width="500" height="502" /></a></p>
<p>This profile of Steve Carlton &#8220;Thin Mountain Air&#8221; was written by our man Pat Jordan. It originally appeared in <em>Philadelphia</em> magazine in April, 1994 and appears here with the author&#8217;s permission.</p>
<p><em>Durango, Colorado, is a cold mountain community 6,506 feet above sea level. It is known for its thin air, which can make residents light-headed, disoriented. It is surrounded by the La Plata mountain range. Built into the foothills of those mountains is a domed concrete house covered with snow and dirt. No one but its owner can explain what he was seeking with that house.</em></p>
<hr />
<p>&#8220;I came to Durango in 1989 to get away from society,&#8221; he says. He is a big man, 6–5, 225 pounds, dressed in a Western shirt, jeans and cowboy boots. He is standing beside his truck in the thick snow that covers the land around his bunker and rests gently on the branches of the low-lying piñon trees that dot his 400 acres. It is a few days before Christmas.</p>
<p>&#8220;I don&#8217;t like it where there are too many people,&#8221; he says. &#8220;I like it here because the people are spiritually tuned in.&#8221; He glances sideways, out of the corner of his eyes. &#8220;They know where the lies fall.&#8221;</p>
<p>He makes a sweeping gesture with a long arm, encompassing his bunker, his barn with its turkey, pheasants and horses, and more than 160 fruit trees he has planted. &#8220;This is sacred land,&#8221; he says. &#8220;We&#8217;re self-sufficient here. There&#8217;s no one around us. We grow our own food.&#8221;</p>
<p>He points to sliding glass doors that lead inside his bunker to the greenhouse off his bedroom. &#8220;We have our own well,&#8221; he says. &#8220;And 16 solar batteries for heat and electricity.&#8221;</p>
<p>Even his telephone works on cellular microwave transmitters. That way no one can tap his wires.</p>
<p>&#8220;The house is built with over 300 yards of concrete,&#8221; he says. &#8220;Three-feet-thick walls covered by another three feet of earth.&#8221; Why? He looks startled, like a huge bird. His small eyes blink once, twice, and then he says, &#8220;So the gamma rays won&#8217;t penetrate the walls.&#8221;</p>
<p>Built under the house is a 7,000-foot storage cellar. He&#8217;s stocked it with canned foods, bottled water, weapons. &#8220;Do you know if you store guns in PVC pipe, they can last forever underground without rusting?&#8221; he says.</p>
<p>He glanced sideways again. &#8220;The Revolution is definitely coming.&#8221; He believes in the Revolution, only he isn&#8217;t precisely sure which of a myriad of conspiratorial groups will begin it. Possibly, he says, it will be started by the Skull and Bones Society of Yale University. Or maybe the International Monetary Fund. Or the World Health Organization. There are so many conspiracies, and so little time. Sometimes all those conspiracies confuse him and he contradicts himself. One minute he&#8217;ll say, &#8221;The Russian and U.S. governments fill the air with low-frequency sound waves meant to control us,&#8221; and the next he&#8217;ll say, &#8220;The Elders of Zion rule the world,&#8221; and then, &#8220;The British MI-5 and-6 intelligence agencies have ruled the world since 1812,&#8221; and, &#8220;Twelve Jewish bankers meeting in Switzerland rule the world,&#8221; and, &#8220;The world is controlled by a committee of 300 which meets at a roundtable in Rome.&#8221; The subterfuge starts early. Like the plot by the National Education Association to subvert American children with false teachings. &#8220;Don&#8217;t tell me that two plus two equals four,&#8221; he once said. &#8220;How do you know that two is two? That&#8217;s the real question.&#8221;</p>
<p>He believes that the last eight U.S. presidents have been guilty of treason, that President Clinton &#8220;has a black son&#8221; he won&#8217;t acknowledge and that his wife, Hillary, &#8220;is a dyke,&#8221; and that the AIDS virus was created at a secret Maryland biological warfare laboratory &#8220;to get rid of gays and blacks, and now they have a strain of the virus that can live ten days in the air or on a plate of food, because you know who most of the waiters are,&#8221; and finally, that most of the mass murderers in this country who open fire indiscriminately in fast-food restaurants &#8220;are hypnotized to kill those people and then themselves immediately afterwards,&#8221; as in the movie <em>The Manchurian Candidate</em>. He blinks once, twice, and says, &#8220;Who hypnotizes them? They do!&#8221;</p>
<p>Maybe he isn&#8217;t really contradicting himself. Maybe he is just one of those people who read into the simplest things a cosmic significance they may or may not have. Conspiracies everywhere to explain things he cannot fathom. The refuge of a limited mind. &#8220;The mind is its own place,&#8221; John Milton wrote in <em>Paradise Lost</em>. &#8220;And in itself can make a Heaven of Hell, a Hell of Heaven.&#8221;</p>
<p>Steven Norman Carlton, &#8220;Lefty,&#8221; discovered his first conspiracy in 1988, when he was forced to leave baseball prematurely and against his will, he says—after a 24-year-major-league pitching career of such excellence that he was an almost-unanimous selection for baseball&#8217;s Hall of Fame on his first try, this past January. He received 96 percent of all baseball writers&#8217; votes, the second-highest percentage ever received by a pitcher (after Tom Seaver&#8217;s 98 percent) and the fifth-highest of all time.</p>
<p>Carlton, who pitched for the Phillies from 1972 to 1986, after seven years with the St. Louis Cardinals, has—after the Braves&#8217; Warren Spahn—the most wins of any left-handed pitcher. Carlton won 329 games and lost 244 during his career. Six times he won 20 games or more in a season, and he was voted his league&#8217;s Cy Young Award a record four times. His most phenomenal season, one of the greatest seasons a pitcher has ever had, came in his first year with the Phillies: Carlton won 27 games, lost only ten, and fashioned a 1.98 ERA for a last-place team that won only 59 games all season. In other words, he earned almost half of his team&#8217;s victories, the highest such percentage ever. For almost 20 years, he was the pitcher against which all others were judged.</p>
<p>The secrets to his success were many. Talent. An uncanny ability to reduce pitching to its simplest terms. An unorthodox, yet rigorous, training regimen. A fierce stubbornness and an even fiercer arrogance. All contributed to his success on the mound and, later, to his inability to adjust to the complexities of life off the mound.</p>
<p>As a pitcher, Carlton knew his limitations. A mind easily baffled by intricacies. There were so many batters. Their strengths and weaknesses confused him, so he refused to go over batters&#8217; tendencies in pregame meetings. He blocked them out of his consciousness and reduced pitching to a mere game of toss between pitcher and catcher—his personal catcher, Tim McCarver. He used only two pitches: an explosive fastball and an equally explosive, biting slider. He just threw one of the two pitches to his catcher&#8217;s glove. Fastball up and in; slider low and away.</p>
<p><iframe width="500" height="375" src="http://www.youtube.com/embed/-iHFkgs1zx8?feature=oembed" frameborder="0" allowfullscreen></iframe></p>
<p>He worked very hard to let nothing intrude upon his concentration. Once the third baseman fired a ball that hit him in the head. He blinked, waved off the players rushing to his aid, picked up the ball, toed the rubber and faced his next batter. His parents, Joe and Anne Carlton, claim they&#8217;ve never seen their son cry.</p>
<p>It was not always easy for him to be so singularly focused while pitching.</p>
<p>&#8220;Concentration on the mound is a battle,&#8221; he says. &#8220;Things creep into your mind. Your mind is always chattering.&#8221;</p>
<p>To prevent any &#8220;chattering&#8221; before a start, he had the Phillies build him a $15,000 &#8220;mood behavior&#8221; room next to the clubhouse. It was soundproof, with dark blue carpet on the floor, walls, and ceiling. He&#8217;d sit there for hours in an easy chair, staring at a painting of ocean waves rushing against the shore. A disembodied voice intoned &#8220;I am courageous, calm, confident, and relaxed &#8230; I can control my destiny.&#8221;</p>
<p>Carlton, said teammate Dal Maxvill, lived in &#8220;a little dark room of his mind.&#8221; His training routine was just as unorthodox. He hated to run wind sprints, so instead he stuck his arm in a garbage pail filled with brown rice and rotated it 49 times, for the 49 years that Kwan Gung, a Chinese martial-arts hero, lived. By then, Lefty himself was a martial-arts expert.</p>
<p>He performed the slow, ritualized movements in his clubhouse before each game. He also extensively read Eastern theology and philosophy. Those texts discussed the mysteries of life, the unknowable and how a man should confront them. Silence, stoicism, and simplicity. Those tenets struck a chord in him because, increasingly, his life off the mound was becoming more complex than a game of catch. People constantly clamored for his autograph. Waitresses messed up his order in restaurants, so he tore up their menus. Reporters began to ask him questions he didn&#8217;t like, or didn&#8217;t understand, or maybe he just thought were trivial. They even had the effrontery to question him about his failures.</p>
<p>&#8220;People are always throwing variables at you,&#8221; he said in disgust, and refused to talk anymore. The press called it &#8220;the Big Silence.&#8221; From 1974 to 1988, Carlton wouldn&#8217;t speak to the media. (It wasn&#8217;t just <em>Daily News</em> sportswriter Bill Conlin&#8217;s stories, as many assumed, but a series of articles, Carlton says now, that drove him to withdraw.) One sportswriter said there would come a time when Lefty would &#8220;wish he&#8217;d been a good guy when he&#8217;d had the chance.&#8221; But he didn&#8217;t have to be a good guy. He wasn&#8217;t interested in the fame being a good guy would bring him. He wanted only to perfect his craft, which he did, and to become rich.</p>
<p>Over the last ten years of his career, Carlton earned close to $10 million, almost all of it in salary because he didn&#8217;t want the annoyance of doing endorsements. It was demeaning, he thought, for him to hawk peoples&#8217; wares. Then again, thanks to the Big Silence, there weren&#8217;t a lot of sponsors beating down his door. He already had a reputation for sullen arrogance. When he went to New York City once to discuss a contract for a book about his life, he told the editors he really didn&#8217;t care about the book, that he was just doing it for the money and because his wife, Beverly, thought it was a good idea. The editors beat a hasty retreat.</p>
<p>Carlton didn&#8217;t need a publisher&#8217;s money, or a sponsor&#8217;s, because he had a personal agent who promised to make him so rich that when he retired he could do nothing but fish and hunt. He had his salary checks sent directly to the agent, David Landfield, who invested them in oil and gas leases, car dealerships and Florida swampland. Since Carlton couldn&#8217;t be bothered with the checks and often had no idea exactly how big they were, Landfield simply sent him a monthly allowance, as if he were a child. These monthly allotments would be all Carlton would ever see out of his $10 million. Not one of Landfield&#8217;s investments for him ever made a cent. By 1983, all the money was gone.</p>
<p>During the nine years that Landfield worked for him, Carlton&#8217;s friends tried to warn him off the agent. Bill Giles, the Phillies&#8217; owner, and Mike Schmidt, Lefty&#8217;s teammate, pleaded with him to drop Landfield. But he wouldn&#8217;t listen. One time, he even got in a fight with Schmidt in the clubhouse because of Landfield, and the two, formerly close friends, stopped speaking. Carlton said it was because he was loyal to Landfield, whom he trusted. Others said he was just being stubborn and arrogant because his success on the mound had led him to believe he was invincible off it. McCarver once said that Lefty &#8220;always had an irascible contempt for being human. He thinks he&#8217;s superhuman.&#8221;</p>
<p>When the truth of what Landfield had done with his money finally intruded into Carlton&#8217;s psyche, it was too late. He went through the motions of suing Landfield in 1983, but by then Landfield had declared bankruptcy. Worse, Carlton never had a chance to recoup his money, because only a few years later his career was on the downswing and those big paychecks were a thing of the past. He began to lose the bite on his slider in &#8217;85, and people told him he should try to pick up another pitch. But he refused. He continued to throw the only way he knew how.</p>
<p>Fastball up and in, slider low and away.</p>
<p>Between 1986 and 1988, Carlton was traded or released five times, until finally, after being cut by the Minnesota Twins, no club would sign him—even for the $100,000 league minimum. Carlton was furious. At 43 he insisted he could still pitch. That&#8217;s when he uncovered his first conspiracy.</p>
<p>&#8220;The Twins set me up to release me by not pitching me,&#8221; he says today. &#8220;And other owners were told to keep their hands off. Other teams wouldn&#8217;t even talk to me. I don&#8217;t understand it.&#8221; To understand it, all Carlton has to do is look at his pitching record from 1985 to 1988: 16 wins, 37 losses and an ERA of more than five runs per game. It was a reality he didn&#8217;t want to face. So, sullen and hurt, Carlton decided to punish those who had hurt him. He retreated to Durango and soon afterward began building his mountain bunker, turning his back on the game and the real world that had betrayed him.</p>
<p>Steve Carlton, 49, dressed in a T-shirt and gym shorts, is standing on his head in the mirrored exercise room, performing his daily three hours of yoga.</p>
<p>&#8220;I don&#8217;t even feel any weight above my neck,&#8221; he says, upside down. Just then a screaming flock of children runs into the room with their female yoga instructor, who is dressed in black tights. Immediately, Carlton takes out two earplugs and sticks them in his ears.</p>
<p>&#8220;It takes the bite off the high-end notes,&#8221; he says, smiling. He is still a handsome man, his face relatively unlined. His is a typically American handsomeness, perfect features without idiosyncrasies. Except for his eyes. They are small and hazel and show very little.</p>
<p>&#8220;I spend my summers riding motorcycles and dirt bikes,&#8221; he says. &#8220;I work around the house. It&#8217;s taken us three years and we&#8217;re still not finished. (It is rumored that he doesn&#8217;t have the money to do so.) In the winter I ski and read books, Eastern metaphysical stuff. All about the power within. Oneness with the universe. I want to tap into my own mind to know what God knows.&#8221; He rights himself, sits cross-legged on a mat and begins contorting into another yoga position, the ankle of his left leg somewhere behind his ear.</p>
<p>&#8220;You ought to try,&#8221; he says. &#8220;Yoga for three hours a day. And skiing, too.&#8221; He says this with absolute conviction, as if it has never crossed his mind that there are those who do not have three hours in the morning to spare for yoga, and three more hours in the afternoon to ski. In fact, Durango seems to be the kind of town where people have unlimited leisure time. At 10:30 on a weekday morning, the health club is packed. Durango is one of those faux-Western towns whose women dress in dirndl skirts and cowboy boots and whose men, their faces adorned with elaborately waxed 1890s handlebar mustaches, wear plaid work shirts rolled up to the elbows. It has a lot of &#8220;saloons&#8221;—not bars—with clever names, like Father Murphy&#8217;s, that have walls adorned with old guns, specialize in a variety of cappuccinos and frown upon cigar smoking. Clean air is an important subject in Durango. When the town&#8217;s only tobacco shop wanted to hold a cigar smoker, its two owners were afraid it would be disrupted by protesters chaining themselves to their shop door. It&#8217;s a town for people who cannot countenance the idiosyncrasies of their fellow man. So they come to this clean, thin mountain air where they can breathe without being contaminated by the foulness of the rest of the world.</p>
<p>Carlton believes he is in better physical shape now than when he left baseball six years ago. &#8220;In a month I could be throwing in the 80s [miles per hour] and win,&#8221; he says. &#8220;There&#8217;s nothing wrong with me. I was labeled ‘too old.&#8217; But you can still pitch in your 50s. It&#8217;s not for money but for pride, proving you can perform. That&#8217;s the beauty of it. Then to be cut off &#8230; It&#8217;s disheartening. If only they let you tell them when you know you&#8217;re done. It hurts. But I haven&#8217;t looked back. No thought of what I should have done. Maybe I should have learned a circle change up in my later years. But I didn&#8217;t think I needed a change.&#8221;</p>
<p>Most great pitchers intuit the loss of their power pitches before it actually happens. Warren Spahn, for example. He could see, in his early 30s, a time when his high, leg-kicking fastball would no longer be adequate. So he began to perfect an off-speed screwball and a slow curve. By the time Spahn lost his fastball, he had perfected his off-speed pitches, and his string of 20-victory seasons continued unbroken into his late 30s and early 40s. But Carlton was both luckier than Spahn and less fortunate. Because he did not lose his power pitches until late into his 30s, he was deluded into thinking he would never lose them, and so didn&#8217;t develop any off-speed pitches.</p>
<p>Carlton, lying on his back now, pulls one leg underneath himself and stretches it. &#8220;Baseball was fun,&#8221; he says. &#8220;But I have no regrets. Competition is the ultimate level of insecurity, having to beat someone. I don&#8217;t miss baseball. I never look back. You turn the page. Eternity lies in the here and now. If you live in the past, you accelerate the death process. Your being is your substance.&#8221;</p>
<p>As a player, Carlton was known for his conviviality with his teammates. He spent a lot of his off-hours drinking with them, and there were hints in the press, most notably by Bill Conlin, that his drinking contributed to some of his disastrous years, such as the 13–20 &#8217;73 season. After he left baseball, Carlton, who used to be a wine connoisseur, with a million-dollar cellar, gave up drinking.</p>
<p>&#8220;I had nobody to go drinking with anymore,&#8221; he says. &#8220;Now when I see old baseball players, I have nothing to talk to them about. All that old-time bullshit. It bores me. I live in the here and now. I&#8217;d be intellectually starved in the game today.&#8221; Still, Carlton would like to get back into it. He sees himself as a pitching coach in spring training.</p>
<p>&#8220;I&#8217;d like to teach young pitchers the mental aspect of the game,&#8221; he says. &#8220;Teach them wisdom, which is different than knowledge. Champions think a certain way. To a higher level. They create their future. The body is just a vehicle for the mind and spirit. Champions will themselves to win. They know they&#8217;re gonna win. Others hope they&#8217;ll win. The mind gives you what it asks for. That&#8217;s its God.&#8221;</p>
<p>Then he relates a story about a friend in Durango, who, years ago, didn&#8217;t want to play on his high school basketball team because he knew it was going to have a losing season. Before the season began, the friend was hit by a car, destroying his knee.</p>
<p>&#8220;See,&#8221; says Carlton, as if he&#8217;s just proved a point. &#8220;If you have an accident, you create it in your mind. That&#8217;s a fact. The mind is the conscious architect of your success. What you hold consciously in your mind becomes your reality.&#8221;</p>
<p>If this is so, then Carlton must have willed his own failure in the twilight of his career. When such a possibility is broached to him, he looks up, terrified. He blinks once, in shock, and a second time to banish the thought from his psyche. &#8220;Why do you ask such questions?&#8221; he says shrilly. He has so carefully crafted his philosophies that he can become completely disoriented when they are challenged. That&#8217;s why Carlton has withdrawn from the world into the security of his bunker.</p>
<p>There he is left alone with only his thoughts, his dictums, his conspiracies, with no one to question them. Such questions strike fear in Carlton. And above all else, Steve Carlton is a fearful man.</p>
<p>&#8220;Fear dictates our lives,&#8221; he has said. &#8220;Fear is a tremendous energy that must be banished. Fear makes our own prisons. It&#8217;s instilled in us by our government and the Church. They control fear. It&#8217;s the Great Lie. But don&#8217;t get me started on that.&#8221; For a man who, for 15 years, was known for his silences, Carlton now talks a lot. In fact, he can&#8217;t stop himself. When he was voted into the Hall of Fame this past January, he held a press conference. At the end of its scheduled 45 minutes, the sportswriters got up to leave. Carlton called them back to talk some more.</p>
<p>&#8220;I don&#8217;t mind,&#8221; he said. &#8220;It&#8217;s been a long time.&#8221;When he is inducted, with Phil Rizzuto, into the Hall in late July before the assembled national press, it will be interesting to see if he will still be so loquacious.</p>
<p style="text-align: center;"><img class="aligncenter" src="http://img.gawkerassets.com/img/18mve68ow0xgnjpg/original.jpg" alt="" width="433" height="567" /></p>
<p>A lot of people are suspicious of his motives for talking so much. Carlton claims, &#8220;It&#8217;s all Bev&#8217;s idea.&#8221; He says his wife wants him to get back into the world. For years, Beverly Carlton ran interference for her husband during &#8220;the Big Silence.&#8221; After Carlton won his 300th game, in 1983, he surrounded himself with a police escort and fled the clubhouse to avoid reporters. He left it to Bev to talk to the press.</p>
<p>&#8220;Steve would like to play another ten years,&#8221; she told them. &#8220;He just might. Baseball&#8217;s been great to us.&#8221;Then, to humanize her distant husband, she revealed a little intimacy. &#8220;Well,&#8221; she said, &#8220;he likes Ukrainian food.&#8221;</p>
<p>In Carlton&#8217;s final season, when he began to rethink his silence, he said it was because &#8220;my wife convinced me that if I want to find a job after I&#8217;m through playing, having my name in the paper doesn&#8217;t hurt.&#8221; Even today, Bev Carlton schedules her husband&#8217;s interviews. (He no longer has an agent.) When reporters show up in Durango, Carlton will feign surprise at their presence.</p>
<p>&#8220;I didn&#8217;t know you were coming,&#8221; he says. When told that his wife said she confirmed the interview with him, he blinks, once, twice, and says, &#8220;I didn&#8217;t pay any attention.&#8221;</p>
<p>In this way, he can lay off the distasteful prospect of being interviewed on his wife. He can maintain, in his mind&#8217;s eye, the lofty arrogance of &#8220;the Big Silence&#8221; while no longer adhering to it. (&#8220;Bev likes to read about me,&#8221; he says.) It is likely that Carlton is talking now because he needs money, looking to reassert his presence in the public&#8217;s consciousness so he can do endorsements.</p>
<p>&#8220;We&#8217;ll probably do some of that stuff in the coming years,&#8221; he says. It&#8217;s a distasteful position his old agent put him in, and one he doesn&#8217;t like to be reminded of. &#8220;It&#8217;s one of life&#8217;s little lessons,&#8221; Carlton says of David Landfield. &#8220;I don&#8217;t want to talk about it. I no longer live in the past.&#8221;</p>
<p>Then, after a moment of silence, he adds, &#8220;It all came down to trust. You&#8217;re most vulnerable there. When your trust is breached, it affects you.&#8221;</p>
<p>Most of Carlton&#8217;s money for the past few years has come from his two businesses. He claims he is a sports agent, but won&#8217;t mention the names of his clients. (It is hard to imagine anyone, even a ballplayer, entrusting his money to a man who lost millions of his own.) The bulk of his money, a reported $100,000 or so per year, comes from autograph shows and the Home Shopping Network, where he peddles his own wares. Caps, cards, T-shirts, little plaster figurines of himself as a pitcher—all emblazoned with the number 329, his career victory total. He sells these objects by mail, too, out of a tiny, cluttered office in a nondescript, wooden building a few miles from town. A sign out front lists the building&#8217;s occupants, lawyers and such. But there is no mention of Carlton&#8217;s enterprise, Game Winner Sports Management, and he likes it that way.</p>
<p>&#8220;We didn&#8217;t want a sign up so people would know where we are,&#8221; he says, smiling. In fact, even the occupants of the building aren&#8217;t sure where &#8220;the baseball player&#8217;s&#8221; office is.</p>
<p>&#8220;We have a toll-free number [1-800-72LEFTY],&#8221; he says. &#8220;We accept VISA and checks. Just send me a check and don&#8217;t bother me.&#8221; Now as Carlton finishes with his yoga, the instructor in the black tights ushers one of the children over to him. The teacher is smiling, giggly, blushing, a vaguely attractive woman who seems to have a crush on Carlton. She leans close to him and says, &#8220;I have someone who wants to meet you.&#8221; Carlton shrinks back from her even as she urges the uncomprehending child toward him.</p>
<p>&#8220;Go ahead,&#8221; she says. The child looks up at the towering man and says, &#8220;Happy birthday.&#8221; Carlton blinks, confused.</p>
<p>&#8220;I don&#8217;t celebrate birthdays,&#8221; he says.</p>
<p>At the foot of a steep, winding dirt road rutted with snow, Steve Carlton stops his truck and gets out to engage its four-wheel drive. When he gets back in and begins driving carefully up the path, he says, &#8220;I&#8217;ve been lucky. I&#8217;ve had teachers in my life. One guy began writing me letters, four or five a week, in 1970. That&#8217;s the year I won 20 games with the Cardinals. He told me where the power and energy comes from. He was a night watchman. We talked on the phone a few times and met a couple times. He was a very spiritual guy. All I knew about him was that his name was Mr. Briggs. Then he was gone as quickly as he came into my life. It was a gift.&#8221;</p>
<p>When he reaches his bunker, at twilight, he stops and gets out. He looks out over his land and says, &#8220;There&#8217;s nothing like being by yourself. I&#8217;m reclusive. I want to get in touch with myself.&#8221; He glances sideways, and adds, &#8220;But society is coming.&#8221;</p>
<p>That&#8217;s why he is preparing by being self-sufficient. He is not so self-sufficient, however, that he&#8217;s ever mustered the courage to butcher his animals for food. But, that&#8217;s a moot point now. All his chickens were killed by raccoons last winter.</p>
<p>It&#8217;s late. Carlton has a dinner appointment. But he&#8217;s not sure what time it is now, because he doesn&#8217;t wear a watch. &#8220;I never know what time it is,&#8221; he says. &#8220;Or what day it is. Time is stress. Pressure melts away if you don&#8217;t deal with time. I don&#8217;t believe in birthdays, either. Or anniversaries. I don&#8217;t watch television. We don&#8217;t read newspapers. We don&#8217;t even have a Christmas tree. Those things hold vibrations of the past, and I exist only in the now. Bev is even more into it that I am.&#8221;</p>
<p>He trudges through the snow to the side door of his odd, domed bunker. Inside, he puts the flat of one palm against the concrete and says, &#8220;I&#8217;m waiting for the coldness to come out of the walls.&#8221; Bev is waiting for him in the living room. She is a small, sweet, nervous woman, sitting in a chair by a space heater. She used to bleach her hair blonde, but now her short cut is its natural brown. She smiles as her husband sits down across from her. She hugs herself from the cold, and then drags on a cigarette.</p>
<p>Their home is starkly furnished, not out of design but necessity. A few wooden tables, a bookcase filled with Carlton&#8217;s Eastern metaphysical books, a patterned sofa and easy chair, hand-me-downs from their son Scott, 25, a bartender in St. Louis. Their other son, Steven, 27, lives in Washington State, where he writes children&#8217;s songs.</p>
<p>Carlton doesn&#8217;t like to talk about his kids. &#8220;Why do you have to know about them?&#8221; he says plaintively. He doesn&#8217;t talk much about his parents, either, whom he rarely sees or speaks to. They, it seems, are another part of Carlton&#8217;s past that he has cut out of his life.</p>
<p>&#8220;The correspondence lacks,&#8221; admits Joe Carlton, 87 and blind. &#8220;We don&#8217;t hear from him much. It&#8217;s okay, though.&#8221;</p>
<p>&#8220;We keep up with him in the newspapers,&#8221; says Anne Carlton, who says of her age, &#8220;It&#8217;s nobody&#8217;s damned business.&#8221;</p>
<p>The elder Carltons are sitting in the shadowed, musty living room of their small, concrete house in North Miami, where they raised their son and two daughters, Christina and Joanne. From the outside, it looks uninhabited. The drab house paint is peeling, and the yards out front and back, dotted with Joe&#8217;s many fruit trees, are overgrown, rotted fruit littering the tall grass.</p>
<p>Inside, the furniture is old and worn, and thick dust coats the television screen. Even the many photographs and newspaper articles on the walls are faded and dusty, like old tintypes. The photos are mostly of their son in various baseball uniforms. As a teenager—gawky, with a faint, distant smile, posing with his teammates, the Lions. With the Cardinals, his hair fashionably long, back in the &#8217;60s. Then with the Phillies, posing with Mike Schmidt, captioned MVP AND CY YOUNG.</p>
<p>&#8220;No, I haven&#8217;t heard from him,&#8221; says Joe, a former maintenance man with Pan Am. He is sitting on an ottoman, staring straight ahead through thick glasses. &#8220;I can&#8217;t see you, except as a shadow,&#8221; he says, staring out the window. He is a thin man, almost gaunt, with long silvery swept-back hair. He is wearing a faded Hawaiian shirt.</p>
<p>&#8220;It&#8217;s no special reason,&#8221; says Anne, sitting in her easy chair. &#8220;He just doesn&#8217;t call me anymore.&#8221;</p>
<p>&#8220;He called when Anne&#8217;s mother died, at 101,&#8221; says Joe. Then he begins to talk about his son as a child. How Joe used to go hunting with him in the Everglades. &#8220;We used to shoot light bulbs,&#8221; he says.</p>
<p>&#8220;Steve was a natural-born hunter,&#8221; says Anne. &#8220;Tell what kind of animals you hunted in the Everglades.&#8221;</p>
<p>&#8220;Lions and tigers.&#8221;</p>
<p>&#8220;Oh, you didn&#8217;t. There are no lions and tigers in the Everglades. Tell what kind of animals.&#8221;</p>
<p>Joe, confused, says, &#8220;There were lots of animals.&#8221; Anne shakes her head. &#8220;Steve was always quiet,&#8221; adds Joe, trying to remember. &#8220;He wasn&#8217;t very talkative around the house when he was a boy.&#8221; He fetches an old scrapbook and opens a page to a newspaper photograph of his son in a Phillies cap. There is a zipper where his mouth should be.</p>
<p>&#8220;Can I bum a cigarette off you?&#8221; Anne says to their guest. &#8220;Oh, you don&#8217;t have any. Too bad.&#8221;</p>
<p>&#8220;The last time we saw Steve was five years ago,&#8221; says Joe.</p>
<p>&#8220;It wasn&#8217;t that long ago.&#8221;</p>
<p>&#8220;Yes, it was. Time flies.&#8221;</p>
<p>&#8220;It was only four years.&#8221;</p>
<p>&#8220;He never told us about his house.&#8221;</p>
<p>&#8220;We don&#8217;t even know where Durango is. I never heard of it. Have you seen his house? Really, it&#8217;s built into a mountain?&#8221;</p>
<p>&#8220;Steve got an interest in his philosophies when he got hold of one of my books when he was in high school,&#8221; says Joe.</p>
<p>&#8220;He doesn&#8217;t believe in Christmas trees anymore?&#8221; asks Anne. &#8220;We always had a Christmas tree. Bev liked Christmas trees. No, we never asked him for any money,&#8221; Anne continues. &#8220;He would have given it to us if we asked, though.&#8221;</p>
<p>&#8220;He never helped us financially. I didn&#8217;t need it.&#8221; Joe, who is also hard of hearing, cups a hand around an ear. &#8220;What? His sons? You mean Steve&#8217;s sons? No, we never hear from them, either.&#8221;</p>
<p>&#8220;Our daughters call, though,&#8221; says Anne.</p>
<p>&#8220;They came down for my 85th birthday,&#8221; says Joe. &#8220;They gave me a surprise party. Steve didn&#8217;t come.&#8221;</p>
<p>Joe gets up and goes into a small guest room where, on a desk, dresser, and two twin beds, he has laid out mementos of his son&#8217;s career. A photograph of a plaster impression of Steve&#8217;s hand when he was a boy. A high school graduation photo of Steve with a flattop haircut.</p>
<p>&#8220;Steve doesn&#8217;t collect this stuff,&#8221; says Joe. &#8220;He&#8217;s too busy. Here&#8217;s another picture of Steve. I got pictures all over. I got another picture here, somewhere, when we took Steve to St. Augustine, where Anne is from. It&#8217;s a picture of Steve in the oldest fort in America. He&#8217;s behind bars.&#8221;</p>
<p>Joe rummages around for the photo, disturbing dust, but he can&#8217;t find it. He leafs through one last scrapbook; on its final page is a photograph of a burial mound of skulls and bones, thousands of them, piled in a heap. Joe looks at it and says, &#8220;We took it in Cuba. See here what I wrote at the bottom: The end.&#8221;</p>
<p>There are no photographs of Joe and Anne in their son&#8217;s living room. No photos of his and Bev&#8217;s children. No photos of themselves when younger. No wedding photos of smiling bride and bridegroom. No photos of Carlton in a Phillies uniform or on a hunting trip. There are no keepsakes of their past. No prints on the wall. No Christmas tree, no presents, nestled in cotton snow. There is nothing in that huge, high, concave, whitewashed concrete room except the few pieces of nondescript furniture and the space heater. Bev and her husband seem dwarfed by the cave like room. They huddle around the space heater like a 20th-century version of the clan in the movie Quest for Fire. Mere survival seems their only joy, their only beauty, except for the view through the sliding-glass living room doors of the La Plata mountain range, all white and purple and rose in the setting sun, which Beverly has turned her back on.</p>
<p>Bev tries to make small talk as she drags on her cigarette. Curiously, her husband no longer hates cigarette smoke as he once did as a ballplayer, when he claimed he could taste it on his wineglass if someone in the room was smoking. Of course, in those days he didn&#8217;t eat red meat either because of the blood. His thinking has changed now, he has said, because he realizes &#8220;that the juice of anything is its blood, that the juice of a carrot is the carrot&#8217;s blood.&#8221;</p>
<p>Bev is talking about the time she and other Phillies&#8217; wives met Ted Turner. &#8220;Oh, yes,&#8221; she says, &#8220;he kept putting his hands on the behinds of the wives.&#8221;</p>
<p>&#8220;He was crude and vulgar,&#8221; says Carlton. &#8220;What&#8217;s wrong with America?&#8221; He shakes his head in disgust and begins a long monologue on the unfairness of the American government, primarily because it won&#8217;t allow its citizens to walk around armed. Bev listens patiently smiling her thin smile, her head nodding like a small bird sipping water. Her husband is right. She is a lot like him. Frightened. When it is time to meet their guests for dinner, Carlton stands up. Bev remains seated hugging herself against the cold.</p>
<p>&#8220;Oh, I&#8217;m not going to dinner,&#8221; she says without explanation. &#8220;Just Steve.&#8221;</p>
<p>It&#8217;s confusing to their guest, until he remembers Carlton&#8217;s words: &#8220;Bev wants me to get out into the world,&#8221; Carlton had said. Which is what she is doing now: sending him out into that fearful world in order to make a living for them. It&#8217;s something she knows he has to do on his own if they are going to survive, like a mother bundling her tiny child off the school for the first time. Meanwhile she sits at home in their stark bunker huddled close to the space heater for warmth, worrying about him out there, alone and scared, in the real world he shunned for so many years.</p>
<hr />
<h2>Postscript</h2>
<p><strong><em>Pat Jordan (as told to Alex Belth)</em>:</strong> I did Steve Carlton for <em>Philly Magazine,</em> which was the most controversial thing I did other than <a href="http://www.bronxbanterblog.com/2012/03/12/trouble-in-paradise/">the <em>Inside Sports</em> piece on Steve and Cyndi Garvey</a>.</p>
<p>The Carlton story is a riot. So I&#8217;m working for my friend Elliot Kaplan in Philadelphia and I wasn&#8217;t getting paid a lot. I&#8217;d known Eliot for years and done a lot of work for him when he was at <em>GQ</em>. Carlton was going to be inducted into the Hall of Fame and he had been a Philly guy.</p>
<p>I had one rule with Eliot. I said, &#8220;As long as you pay me what you pay your other writers, I don&#8217;t care. But if I ever find out that you were paying me less because of our friendship, I&#8217;ll be really annoyed.&#8221; He wasn&#8217;t paying much but I&#8217;d do whatever I could for him.</p>
<p>He wanted me to do Steve Carlton, but he didn&#8217;t have the budget to fly me to Durango, Colorado, which is an expensive flight. L.A. would be a cheap flight from Fort Lauderdale, where I lived at the time. New York is a cheap flight. Durango is not.</p>
<p>Now, I had an assignment to do Brian Boitano for the<em> L.A. Times Magazine</em>, so I booked a triangle flight: Ft. Lauderdale, San Francisco, did Boitano, took a puddle-jumper to Denver, rented a car, and drove to Durango. My wife Susan went with me and we got to Denver in the middle of a snow storm. We get on this puddle-jumper plane and they are de-icing the wings to go fly over the Rocky fucking Mountains. I hate to fly and I said, &#8220;Oh shit, this is how I&#8217;m going to die? I&#8217;m going down for friendship, for Eliot? I&#8217;m going to die in the fucking mountains for Steve Carlton, who I didn&#8217;t want to do anyway?&#8221;</p>
<p>I knew nothing about Carlton other than he hated to talk to the press. But he was going to the Hall of Fame and he wanted to capitalize on it. So I get there. I&#8217;m supposed to meet him the next morning at a gym, at 10. Susie and I got up at 6 or 7 and it&#8217;s freezing in Durango. We drive and I find the gym so I know where it is. Before we go to breakfast I drive back to the airport to make sure I can find my way back there. On the way, we get a flat tire on the highway. It&#8217;s so cold my hands are sticking to the lug nuts. I change the tire. Now, I&#8217;m in a panic to get back to Carlton, and I&#8217;m going to get back just in time. I get back to the gym, he&#8217;s doing yoga or something, there&#8217;s women running around, kids, and we start talking. I wasn&#8217;t tape-recording because there was too much noise.</p>
<p>Carlton was odd. He told me, &#8220;I&#8217;m up here because I wanted to be secluded because of what America&#8217;s becoming,&#8221; or something like that. So I changed the subject and told him about a new gun I had bought. I&#8217;m into guns. For some reason, I knew that would perk him up. So I mentioned that I had gotten a Czechoslovakian military pistol, a CZ 85.</p>
<p>He said: &#8220;Oh yeah, that&#8217;s a great gun. You know you&#8217;d better bury that in PVC pipes because the UN is coming in black helicopters to confiscate all of our guns.&#8221;</p>
<p>I said, &#8220;Oh, really?&#8221;</p>
<p>He said, &#8220;Yeah, it&#8217;s a world organization that&#8217;s dictated by the Elders of Zion, the twelve Jews in Switzerland who control the world.&#8221;</p>
<p>At this point, I just let him go. We went from the gym to his office where he was selling all of his tchotchkes, figurines of him pitching, autographs. This is how he thought he was going to make a living, &#8217;cause he was almost broke at the time. He had lost a fortune because of his agent.</p>
<p>So we talked in his office and then I went out to his house, which is like a concrete bunker. And he was really weird. I called Eliot and said: &#8220;Eliot, this guy&#8217;s crazy. He&#8217;s the kind of guy who should not be allowed to read a book. He believes everything in the last book he read. Like the whole Elders of Zion thing. He told me he had read that in a book.&#8221; Well, shit, there are other books than that.</p>
<p>So I wrote the story and it caused a big stink. <em>The Today Show</em> came down to interview me. Now, after the story came out, everybody started defending Steve. Tim McCarver, Jim Kaat, all these guys who were in the fraternity of ex-athletes. Even though they knew I had written the truth, I was not in the fraternity. I was the outsider, the outlaw freelance writer living in Florida. The guy you can&#8217;t trust. So <a href="http://articles.philly.com/1994-04-14/sports/25864730_1_meeting-in-switzerland-rule-jewish-bankers-meeting-conspiracy-theories">the papers</a> are <a href="http://articles.latimes.com/1994-04-14/sports/sp-45948_1_carlton-anti-semitism">running pieces</a> about what a hatchet job I did on poor Steve Carlton.</p>
<hr />
<p><strong><em>Eliot Kaplan (via email)</em>:</strong> I had recently moved to <em>Philadelphia Magazine</em> as editor-in-chief after several years as the deputy at <em>GQ</em>. Pat had done some fantastic stories for us at GQ, everything from Greg Louganis and Pete Rose Jr. to Marilyn Chambers and Traci Lords. When I got to Philly, he was kind enough to agree to write for me, more out of friendship than money. We paid him whatever our top rate was then, probably $2,000-2,500. Including travel expenses!</p>
<p>Steve Carlton had not talked to any media in almost 20 years but was going to be inducted into the Hall of Fame and agreed to be interviewed. I think both Pat and I were expecting a rather bland, clipped interview but figured Pat could make something out of it, as he always does. Pat ended up flying over a winter holiday, through a bumpy blizzard, into Colorado.</p>
<p>He called me that night. I remember leaving a holiday dinner and him telling me, &#8220;He&#8217;s nuts. Carlton is nuts,&#8221; and proceeding to describe the bunker-type residence, Carlton&#8217;s vast conspiracy theories, his almost survivalist mentality.</p>
<p>Pat got great stuff and wrote a spectacular piece.</p>
<p>It came out in the April issue and then … nothing. Not a peep in the media.</p>
<p>Two reasons come to mind. First, Philly can be a weird place. The newspapers and <em>Philadelphia Magazine</em> were always competitive and antagonistic toward each other, so they weren&#8217;t going to talk up the piece. And remember, this was before the internet or magazines having publicists.</p>
<p>But more importantly, the same issue featured a very juicy story in which the popular mayor, Ed Rendell, was quoted making extremely saucy, suggestive comments to reporter Lisa DePaulo. THAT story was the one that grabbed the headlines, including a few front days of the <em>Philly Daily News</em>.</p>
<p>It wasn&#8217;t until about a week later when my friend, the writer and Philadelphia native Joe Queenan, was on a New York radio show and mentioned the Carlton piece, that it suddenly exploded, with the New York media being the ones driving it and the Philadelphia media then forced to react. I don&#8217;t think it affected sales of the magazine by that point but it definitely got a lot of chatter and reaction from Phillies PR, who denied everything. You can look up a Tim McCarver interview in <em>Times</em> that basically said, Yeah, Carlton is kinda nuts but not an anti-Semite (which I believe, but the Elders of Zion thing was easy for people to pick up on). Thought I came up with a good line to one reporter: &#8220;Carlton was always known for his slider. Turns out screwball is more like it.&#8221;</p>
<hr />
<p>[Photo Credit:<em> <a href="http://www.martinalindqvist.com/athousandlittlesuns01.html" target="_blank">Martina Lindqvist</a>; <a href="http://www.tabithasoren.com/#/weathering/0" target="_blank">Tabitha Soren</a></em>]</p>
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		<title>The Man for the Job</title>
		<link>http://www.bronxbanterblog.com/2013/04/03/the-man-for-the-job/</link>
		<comments>http://www.bronxbanterblog.com/2013/04/03/the-man-for-the-job/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 03 Apr 2013 12:47:20 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alex Belth</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[1: Featured]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Baseball]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Games We Play]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Pat Jordan]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Sportswriting]]></category>
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		<category><![CDATA[Derek Jeter]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[joe maddon]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[men's journal]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.bronxbanterblog.com/?p=100519</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[And here&#8217;s Pat Jordan on Joe Maddon: Maddon likes to do what he calls &#8220;theme...]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p style="text-align: center;"><a href="http://www.bronxbanterblog.com/wordpress/wp-content/uploads/2013/04/940x.jpg"><img class="aligncenter size-full wp-image-100520" title="Joe Maddon" src="http://www.bronxbanterblog.com/wordpress/wp-content/uploads/2013/04/940x.jpg" alt="" width="512" height="360" /></a></p>
<p>And <a href="http://www.mensjournal.com/magazine/joe-maddon-baseballs-scrappy-genius-20130315" target="_blank">here&#8217;s Pat Jordan on Joe Maddon</a>:</p>
<blockquote><p>Maddon likes to do what he calls &#8220;theme road trips.&#8221; There was the pajama road trip, the nerd road trip. For the nerd one, he had the players pose for a photo outside their chartered flight dressed in high-water pants, bow ties, and suspenders. &#8220;Some guys won&#8217;t do it,&#8221; Maddon says. &#8220;They think it&#8217;s not big-league. They can&#8217;t laugh at themselves.&#8221; David Price, the Rays&#8217; Cy Young Award-winning left-hander, says, &#8220;He asks us for theme ideas. Once, we dressed as cowboys. It&#8217;s fun.&#8221; Ben Zobrist, a utility player for the Rays, adds, &#8220;Joe wants us to do one wearing skinny jeans. Never gonna happen.&#8221;</p>
<p>&#8220;You couldn&#8217;t do theme days with Alex Rodriguez,&#8221; I say.</p>
<p>Maddon shakes his head. &#8220;I dunno. I hope I could convince A-Rod to wear onesies. He&#8217;s not a bad guy.&#8221; He looks over at me. &#8220;I hear a lot of Yankees like him better than Jeter.&#8221;</p>
<p>Maddon says the most important thing he has to do as manager is listen to the players. &#8220;I coached for a manager once who told his guys, &#8216;There&#8217;s 25 of you and one of me, so you have to adjust to me.&#8217; I hope I&#8217;m never like that guy. The days of dictatorial managers are over.&#8221;</p>
<p>When I tell him the hotdogging and emotional outbursts of B.J. Upton (the former Rays center fielder, now with the Atlanta Braves) offend my sense of the way the game should be played, Maddon says, &#8220;Aw, he&#8217;s a good kid. He was brought to the big leagues too soon. He had to make his mistakes in front of a lot of people and the media. He&#8217;s learning mental stuff he should have learned in the minors.&#8221;</p></blockquote>
<p>[Photo Credit: <em>Associated Press</em>]</p>
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		<title>Now What Was I To Do?</title>
		<link>http://www.bronxbanterblog.com/2013/04/02/now-what-was-i-to-do/</link>
		<comments>http://www.bronxbanterblog.com/2013/04/02/now-what-was-i-to-do/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Tue, 02 Apr 2013 18:47:58 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alex Belth</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[1: Featured]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Baseball]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Games We Play]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Magazine Writers]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Pat Jordan]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Sportswriting]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Writers]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[phenom to felon]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[roopstigo]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.bronxbanterblog.com/?p=100513</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Over at Roopstigo, here&#8217;s the latest from Pat Jordan: Vito Frabizio is 23 now. In...]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p style="text-align: center;"><a href="http://www.bronxbanterblog.com/wordpress/wp-content/uploads/2013/04/prisonsports29a_400.jpg"><img class="aligncenter size-full wp-image-100515" title="prisonsports29a_400" src="http://www.bronxbanterblog.com/wordpress/wp-content/uploads/2013/04/prisonsports29a_400.jpg" alt="" width="400" height="303" /></a></p>
<p>Over at Roopstigo, <a href="http://www.roopstigo.com/reader/phenom-to-felon-frabizio-drug-fueled-bank-heists/" target="_blank">here&#8217;s the latest from Pat Jordan</a>:</p>
<blockquote><p>Vito Frabizio is 23 now. In 2009, when he was 19, the Baltimore Orioles signed him to a $130,000 bonus. “I was the best pitcher in the Orioles’ minor leagues,” he says. “Scotty McGregor (former O’s pitcher) told me I’d win the Cy Young Award one day.” He looks around, and then back at me, adding, “I’d always been in the right place at the right time. Now I’m here, the lowest of the low.”</p>
<p>Vito is sitting behind bars in the visiting room of the Yaphank, Long Island, minimum security prison on a fall day. The visiting room is crowded with men in green prison jumpsuits talking to women, some of them in low-cut blouses, who lean over to remind their men of what waits for them when they get out. The guards have put Vito in the far corner of the room so he can talk to me with a little privacy through the bars. He grips the bars with both hands and says, “The other prisoners can’t believe it. ‘You played baseball and robbed banks? Why?’” Actually, Vito robbed three banks to support his 20-bag, $200-a-day heroin habit.</p>
<p>Even in his prison-issued jumpsuit, with white socks and flip-flops that slapped against the floor when he walked toward me with that slouching, hangdog shuffle of prison cons, Vito is still a good-looking man. Just not that good-looking anymore. He has a jailhouse pallor — he’s been incarcerated for two years at this point — with the blemished skin of a needle junkie and tattoos, which can be seen in his police mug shots. There’s a naked woman in flames on his upper left arm. A heart and a cross adorn his upper right (throwing) arm. A Burmese python suffocates a tiger on his stomach. The word “Hollywood” is scrawled across his upper back. “I always had to be the center of attention,” he tells me. “The most popular. Class clown. Even in here I make people laugh so the time goes easier.” He also amuses them with glimpses of his pitching prowess of two years ago. He wets paper, molds it into a ball, and puts a sock over it, then shows his fellow cons his pitching motion. “Until the guards take the ball away,” he says. “Then I make another.”</p></blockquote>
<p>[Photo Credit: <a href="http://prisonphotography.org/2009/05/10/slideshow-prison-baseball-by-david-bauman/" target="_blank">David Bauman</a>]</p>
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		<title>Sometimes Love Don&#8217;t Feel Like it Should</title>
		<link>http://www.bronxbanterblog.com/2013/02/21/sometimes-love-dont-feel-like-it-should/</link>
		<comments>http://www.bronxbanterblog.com/2013/02/21/sometimes-love-dont-feel-like-it-should/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Thu, 21 Feb 2013 16:53:37 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alex Belth</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[1: Featured]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Baseball]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Games We Play]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Links: Sportswriting]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Magazine Writers]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Pat Jordan]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Sportswriting]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[sb nation longform]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[the pleasure and pain of spring training]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.bronxbanterblog.com/?p=98861</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Over at SB Nation&#8217;s Longform, here&#8217;s Pat Jordan&#8217;s latest&#8211;The Pain and Pleasure of Spring Training:...]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p style="text-align: center;"><a href="http://www.bronxbanterblog.com/wordpress/wp-content/uploads/2013/02/Last-Picture-Show-Jaime-6-July-2012.jpg"><img class="aligncenter size-full wp-image-98862" title="Last-Picture-Show-Jaime-6-July-2012" src="http://www.bronxbanterblog.com/wordpress/wp-content/uploads/2013/02/Last-Picture-Show-Jaime-6-July-2012.jpg" alt="" width="570" height="308" /></a></p>
<p>Over at SB Nation&#8217;s Longform, here&#8217;s Pat Jordan&#8217;s latest&#8211;<a href="http://www.sbnation.com/longform/2013/2/21/4009152/spring-training-baseball-pat-jordan" target="_blank">The Pain and Pleasure of Spring Training</a>:</p>
<blockquote><p>
That spring, I was assigned to the Boise club in the Class C Pioneer League. It might not have seemed like much of a jump from my Class D stint in McCook, Neb., the previous year, but Boise was one of the Braves’ elite minor league teams for its top prospects, especially pitchers. The Braves stacked Boise with so many great hitters that it was impossible for Boise pitchers to have losing records, even if their earned run averages were above five per game. The Braves thought that young pitchers needed confidence in their ability to win games and a stint at Boise would give it to them.</p>
<p>I threw well that spring, maybe 95-98 mph (there were no radar guns then) with a devastating overhand curveball that my teammates called &#8220;the unfair one.&#8221; I coasted through the first half of spring training with great anticipation for the start of the season, until one day, during a stint pitching batting practice, when my arm felt weak. I knew it was just a spring training sore arm, nothing serious, and it just needed rest, but I was too foolish to tell my manager, a redneck Southerner named Billy Smith. I wasn’t able to put much on the ball during my batting practice and my teammates complained to my catcher, Joe Torre. Torre kept shouting at me to throw harder, but I couldn’t. Finally, after one pitch, he walked halfway out to the mound and fired the ball at me. When he turned back around, I fired the ball at his head. It hit his mask, sent it spinning off his head, and the next instant we were both wrestling in the red dirt until our teammates pulled us apart.</p>
<p>The next morning I was assigned to a Class D team, Quad Cities, in the Midwest League. Billy Smith had told the Braves’ farm director, John Mullen, he didn’t want &#8220;no red-ass guinea&#8221; on his team. When I heard that, I wondered why I was the &#8220;red-ass guinea&#8221; and not Torre.
</p></blockquote>
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		<title>The Outcast</title>
		<link>http://www.bronxbanterblog.com/2013/02/05/the-outcast/</link>
		<comments>http://www.bronxbanterblog.com/2013/02/05/the-outcast/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Tue, 05 Feb 2013 14:18:38 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alex Belth</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[1: Featured]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Arts and Culture]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Football]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Games We Play]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Links: Sportswriting]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Magazine Writers]]></category>
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		<category><![CDATA[Pop Culture]]></category>
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		<category><![CDATA[Writers]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[o.j. simpson]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[the new yorker]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[the outcast]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.bronxbanterblog.com/?p=98250</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[From the vaults, here&#8217;s Pat Jordan&#8217;s 2001 New Yorker profile of O.J. Simpson: We turned...]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p style="text-align: center;"><a href="http://www.bronxbanterblog.com/wordpress/wp-content/uploads/2013/02/la-noire_banner79-68633-full.jpeg"><img class="aligncenter  wp-image-98251" title="la-noire_banner79-68633-full" src="http://www.bronxbanterblog.com/wordpress/wp-content/uploads/2013/02/la-noire_banner79-68633-full.jpeg" alt="" width="648" height="196" /></a></p>
<p>From the vaults, here&#8217;s <a href="http://www.newyorker.com/archive/2001/07/09/010709fa_FACT" target="_blank">Pat Jordan&#8217;s 2001 <em>New Yorker</em> profile of O.J. Simpson</a>:</p>
<blockquote><p>We turned the corner and drove down a residential street. Housewives in spandex shorts were jogging on the sidewalk. Simpson glanced at them and said, “I loved the way Nicole looked. If I saw her on that sidewalk right now, I’d pull over and hit on her. If she had a different head.”</p>
<p>Simpson is used to playing the character he created over the years—the genial O.J. we saw in the broadcasting booth, in TV commercials, and in films—and he seemed ill equipped to play a man tormented by tragedy. His features rearranged themselves constantly. His brow furrowed with worry; his eyebrows rose in disbelief; his eyelashes fluttered, suggesting humility; his eyes grew wide with sincerity. All of this was punctuated by an incongruous, almost girlish giggle.</p>
<p>It was Simpson’s will, as much as his talent, that enabled him to become not only a great football player but also one of America’s most beloved black athletes. (“When I was a kid growing up in San Francisco, Willie Mays was the single biggest influence on my life,” Simpson told me. “I saw how he made white people happy. I wanted to be like Willie Mays.”) Over the course of his life, Simpson had gotten virtually everything he has wanted—fame, wealth, adulation, Nicole Brown, and, eventually, acquittal. It was widely reported that Nicole told friends that if her husband ever killed her he’d probably “O.J. his way out of it.” Today, at fifty-three, almost six years after his acquittal, Simpson seems to be free of doubt, shame, or guilt. He refers to the murders of his wife and Ron Goldman, and his subsequent trials for those murders, as “my ordeal.” Now he wants vindication. Only that can erase the stigma that has transformed him from an American hero into a pariah, living out his days in a pathetic mimicry of his former life. And he appears to believe that he will get it, as he got everything—by sheer will—and with it a return to fame and wealth and adulation.</p></blockquote>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
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		<title>Love Among the Ruins</title>
		<link>http://www.bronxbanterblog.com/2013/01/16/love-among-the-ruins/</link>
		<comments>http://www.bronxbanterblog.com/2013/01/16/love-among-the-ruins/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 16 Jan 2013 21:37:32 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alex Belth</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[1: Featured]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Games We Play]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Links: Sportswriting]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Magazine Writers]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Other Sports]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Pat Jordan]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Sportswriting]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Writers]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[hialeah]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[horse racing]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[roopstigo]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.bronxbanterblog.com/?p=97674</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Over at Roopstigo, here&#8217;s Pat Jordan&#8217;s latest&#8230;on Hialeah: Once upon a time Hialeah Park was...]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p style="text-align: center;"><a href="http://www.bronxbanterblog.com/wordpress/wp-content/uploads/2013/01/pr30658.jpg"><img class="aligncenter size-full wp-image-97675" title="pr30658" src="http://www.bronxbanterblog.com/wordpress/wp-content/uploads/2013/01/pr30658.jpg" alt="" width="600" height="407" /></a></p>
<p>Over at Roopstigo, here&#8217;s <a href="http://reader.roopstigo.com/view/roopster/story/665/#/chapter/1/" target="_blank">Pat Jordan&#8217;s latest</a>&#8230;on Hialeah:</p>
<blockquote><p>Once upon a time Hialeah Park was the most beautiful and famous thoroughbred racetrack in the world. People ventured to the sport’s showplace outside of Miami in Hialeah, Florida, not only for the races but also for what they called “The Hialeah experience.” The glamour, the celebrities, the prettiness, the bougainvilleas, the hibiscuses, the royal palms, the pink flamingoes, the food, the champagne, the thoroughbreds and, almost incidentally, the wagering. You went to Hialeah if you were famous, and rich; and if you were not, you went to rub elbows with the famous and the rich under the flamingo pink-and-green canopy that led into the clubhouse.</p>
<p>Then, in the late 1980s and early ’90s, Hialeah fell on hard times. It struggled to survive until 2001, when it lost its thoroughbred racing license and faded to black. The track closed, the horses disappeared, and the crowds disbanded into memory like ghosts on the Titanic. The wooden stables rotted then were demolished. The royal palms began to die, their brown fronds littering the grounds. The ubiquitous bursts of pink and green gradually lost their zest. The concrete and coral clubhouse, with its winding stairs that bled the color of rust, decayed. The flock of flamingoes nesting on the infield grass by the small lake grew pale, lean, lethargic. They had no reason to flutter up, as when a trumpeter used to play “The Flight of the Flamingoes,” sending them flapping around the track to herald the most famous race of all, the Flamingo Handicap.</p>
<p>There were tales that Hialeah would be sold, torn down, and replaced by a shopping mall, or townhomes, or a casino. Or maybe not torn down, maybe just turned into a tourist attraction like the Queen Mary, tethered to a dock in Long Beach, California, where it could be gawked at by tourists while it rotted in the sun. But then. miraculously, in 2009&#8211;or maybe not so miraculously to some &#8212; Hialeah again was granted a horse racing license, but not for thoroughbred racing. Eight years after its demise, Hialeah reopened as a quarter horse racing track. Problem was, no one seemed to notice, at least not the people who counted, those who remembered Hialeah from the past. Quarter horse racing is to thoroughbred racing what drag racing a ’57 Chevy is to racing a Ferrari at Monaco. A low-rent distant cousin of profound embarrassment.</p>
<p>I had last been to Hialeah for the Flamingo Handicap in the early ’90s. So this winter I decided to return to Hialeah, like an archeologist to a Mayan ruin, to excavate, pick through bits and pieces of its bones, to see if I could reconstruct the lost civilization that once flourished there and that was now, like the Old South, gone with the wind.</p></blockquote>
<p>[Photo Credit: <a href="http://www.floridamemory.com/items/show/243945" target="_blank">Carleton Wood</a>]</p>
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		<title>Hustler&#8217;s Handbook</title>
		<link>http://www.bronxbanterblog.com/2012/10/24/hustlers-handbook/</link>
		<comments>http://www.bronxbanterblog.com/2012/10/24/hustlers-handbook/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 24 Oct 2012 12:55:06 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alex Belth</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[1: Featured]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Games We Play]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Links: Sportswriting]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Magazine Writers]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Other Sports]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Pat Jordan]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Sportswriting]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Writers]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[a clutch of odd birds]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[effran reyes]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[pool]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[sports illustrated]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[The Atlantic]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[the magician]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.bronxbanterblog.com/?p=93683</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Here&#8217;s Pat Jordan&#8217;s 1971 Sports Illustrated pool room story, &#8220;A Clutch of Odd Birds&#8221;: Joe...]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p style="text-align: center;"><a href="http://www.bronxbanterblog.com/wordpress/wp-content/uploads/2012/10/tumblr_mcdwv0nROt1qzt15co1_500.png"><img class="aligncenter size-full wp-image-93684" title="tumblr_mcdwv0nROt1qzt15co1_500" src="http://www.bronxbanterblog.com/wordpress/wp-content/uploads/2012/10/tumblr_mcdwv0nROt1qzt15co1_500.png" alt="" width="500" height="395" /></a></p>
<p>Here&#8217;s Pat Jordan&#8217;s 1971 <em>Sports Illustrated</em> pool room story, <a href="http://sportsillustrated.cnn.com/vault/article/magazine/MAG1085235/index.htm" target="_blank">&#8220;A Clutch of Odd Birds&#8221;</a>:</p>
<blockquote><p>Joe McNeill&#8217;s mother used to say, there&#8217;s a Mort Berger in every town, and she may have been right. But those of us who knew him in the summer of 1962 liked to think she was wrong and secretly hoped he was unique. Berger was the proprietor of the only pool hall I can ever remember seeing in our small town in Fairfield County, Conn. He was a Jew from South Philadelphia who spoke out of the side of his mouth. On windy days he stuck bobby pins in his hair, which was deep reddish brown, the color of an Irish setter&#8217;s. But, at 33, he didn&#8217;t have much to stick bobby pins in. To compensate, Berger let the little patch of hair at the base of his neck grow until it would reach far down his back if he let it—which he didn&#8217;t. Instead, he combed it forward over his brow where he teased it into a tuft like a rooster&#8217;s comb. Actually, Berger resembled a rooster more than anything. He had watery blue eyes, a pointy nose and the gently curving, bottom-heavy build of a Rhode Island Red. He waddled.</p>
<p>Berger&#8217;s greatest fear was that a strong wind might come along and reveal his artifice. To defend against this possibility he ventured outside the pool hall as infrequently as possible. This tended to make his pale and mottled redhead&#8217;s skin so opaque that veins were visible beneath it. Whenever he did appear outside he walked about with his hand flattened over the top of his head like a man who had misplaced a migraine. Finally, in desperation, he had resorted to bobby pins. It was hard for anyone, at first, to talk casually to Berger without breaking up at the sight of the bobby pins, but after a few withering looks one learned to ignore them. The only person I ever heard question Berger about them was a college freshman who wandered into the pool hall one day, challenged Jack the Rat to a game of dollar nine ball and then, pointing to Berger&#8217;s hair, asked, &#8220;How come you got bobby pins in your head?&#8221; The place fell mute. It seemed even the skidding billiard balls froze in midflight. Berger&#8217;s face took on the color of his tuft. He fixed a beady-eyed stare on the offender and said in a voice the recollection of which still sends shivers down my spine, &#8220;You, my friend, are banished for life.&#8221; The humiliation! Worse even than Kant&#8217;s categorical imperative! It would have been better for the boob if Berger, yarmulke over his tuft, prayer shawl about his shoulders, had intoned the Hebrew prayers for the dead.</p></blockquote>
<p>And for more on pool, here&#8217;s another gem from Patty, written twenty-four years later, <a href="http://www.theatlantic.com/magazine/archive/2005/03/the-magician/303747/" target="_blank">&#8220;The Magician&#8221;</a>:</p>
<blockquote><p>At midnight on a bitterly cold January 15 the lobby of the Executive West Hotel near the Louisville, Kentucky, airport was crowded with men and a few women, all waiting anxiously for the guest of honor.</p>
<p>A man in a yellow windbreaker came through the front door and walked toward the registration desk. A murmur rose from the crowd. Everyone stared at him, a small brown man with slitlike eyes, a wispy Fu Manchu moustache, and no front teeth. He wore a soiled T-shirt and wrinkled, baggy jeans. He moved hunched over, his eyes lowered.</p>
<p>People clustered around him. Men flipped open their cell phones and called their friends to say &#8220;He&#8217;s here!&#8221; They introduced him to their girlfriends. The man looked embarrassed. Another man thrust his cell phone at him and said, &#8220;Please say hello to my son; he&#8217;s been waiting up all night.&#8221; The small man mumbled a few words in broken English. Then the hotel clerk asked him his name. He said, &#8220;Reyes.&#8221; Someone called out, &#8220;Just put down &#8216;the Magician.&#8217;&#8221;</p>
<p>Efren Reyes, fifty, was born in poverty, the fifth of nine children, in a dusty little town in the Philippines without electricity or running water. When he was five, his parents sent him to live with his uncle, who owned a pool hall in Manila. Efren cleaned up the pool hall and watched. He was fascinated by the way the players made the balls move around the table and fall into pockets—and by the way money changed hands after a game. At night he slept on a pool table and dreamed of combinations. He had mastered the game in his head before he finally picked up a pool cue, at the age of eight. He stood on a pile of Coke crates to shoot, two hours in the morning and two hours at night. At nine he played his first money game, and at twelve he won $100; he sent $90 home to his family. Soon he was the best pool shooter in Manila. His friends would wait for him in the pool hall after school, hand him his cue when he walked in the door, and back him in gambling games. He was the best pool shooter in the Philippines when he quit school, at fifteen. By the time he was in his twenties, no one in the Philippines would play him any longer, so he toured Asia. He wrote down in a notebook the names of the best pool shooters in the world, and proceeded to beat them one by one. He became a legend. People who had seen him play recounted the impossible shots he had made. They called him a genius, the greatest pool shooter who had ever lived. Even people who had never seen him play, including many in the United States, soon heard the legend of Efren Reyes, &#8220;the Magician.&#8221;</p></blockquote>
<p>[Photo Credit: <a href="http://www.adambartos.com/selection/" target="_blank">Adam Bartos</a>]</p>
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		<title>The Wrong Stuff</title>
		<link>http://www.bronxbanterblog.com/2012/10/03/the-wrong-stuff-2/</link>
		<comments>http://www.bronxbanterblog.com/2012/10/03/the-wrong-stuff-2/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 03 Oct 2012 17:40:41 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alex Belth</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[1: Featured]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Baseball]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Games We Play]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Links: Sportswriting]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Pat Jordan]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Sportswriting]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Writers]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[my aborted career]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[pete rose]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.bronxbanterblog.com/?p=92670</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Over at SB Nation&#8217;s Longform, here&#8217;s Pat Jordan on his days pitching in the minor...]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><a href="http://www.bronxbanterblog.com/wordpress/wp-content/uploads/2012/10/2008_530_0002_a_false_spring_1080-1.jpg"><img class="aligncenter size-large wp-image-92671" title="2008_530_0002_a_false_spring_1080 (1)" src="http://www.bronxbanterblog.com/wordpress/wp-content/uploads/2012/10/2008_530_0002_a_false_spring_1080-1-e1349285993117.jpg" alt="" width="653" height="1020" /></a></p>
<p>Over at <a href="http://www.sbnation.com/longform" target="_blank">SB Nation&#8217;s Longform</a>, here&#8217;s <a href="http://www.sbnation.com/longform/2012/10/3/3444222/a-big-game" target="_blank">Pat Jordan on his days pitching in the minor leagues</a>:</p>
<blockquote><p>The closest I ever came to pitching a &#8220;Big Game&#8221; in the minors was in my last minor league season, and it was a &#8220;Big Game&#8221; only because it was my last game. The year was 1961, and I was pitching for the Palatka in the Class D Florida State League, against the Tampa Tarpons, a farm club for the Cincinnati Reds. I was wild as usual, walking batter after batter, sweating in the merciless August heat, kicking the dirt, cursing myself, my teammates, the umpires, the fans, the opposing batters just standing at the plate, relaxed, grinning even, their bat resting on their shoulder, not even expecting to swing, just waiting out their four balls before they trotted to first base. Their fans cheered my ineptitude at first, but even they got bored with so many walks and runs for their team, the game, for all intents and purposes, already over in the first inning. They began moaning and jeering, pleading with my manager to free everyone from this painful public disgrace, &#8220;Take him out, he’s done on both sides.&#8221;</p>
<p>The next batter stepped into the batter’s box. I already knew he would be the last batter I would ever face in my aborted career. I glared at him, my final chance to salvage some pride, to go out on my shield on a boat filled with burning straw into that vast sea of an ordinary life that awaited me in Bridgeport, where I expected to work one shit job after another to support my wife and squalling kids; Mason laborer. Soda jerk at a drugstore. Ditch digger on a construction crew. And then, after work, dirty, depressed, and disgusted, I would drink too many beers before I went home to my poor beleaguered wife.</p>
<p>So I decided to plant my fastball in this final batter’s ear; Pete Rose.</p></blockquote>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
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		<slash:comments>2</slash:comments>
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		<title>I Don&#8217;t Feel Funny, but I AM Funny</title>
		<link>http://www.bronxbanterblog.com/2012/09/28/i-dont-feel-funny-but-i-am-funny/</link>
		<comments>http://www.bronxbanterblog.com/2012/09/28/i-dont-feel-funny-but-i-am-funny/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Fri, 28 Sep 2012 15:45:19 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alex Belth</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[1: Featured]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Baseball]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Games We Play]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Links: Sportswriting]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Magazine Writers]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Pat Jordan]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Sportswriting]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Writers]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Mike Veeck]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[The funniest man in baseball]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.bronxbanterblog.com/?p=92414</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Head on over to Garden and Gun for Pat Jordan&#8217;s latest&#8211;this one is on Mike...]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p style="text-align: center;"><a href="http://www.bronxbanterblog.com/wordpress/wp-content/uploads/2012/09/700_GG0512_Mikeveeck_02.jpg"><img class="aligncenter  wp-image-92415" title="700_GG0512_Mikeveeck_02" src="http://www.bronxbanterblog.com/wordpress/wp-content/uploads/2012/09/700_GG0512_Mikeveeck_02.jpg" alt="" width="560" height="280" /></a></p>
<p>Head on over to <em>Garden and Gun</em> for <a href="http://gardenandgun.com/article/mike-veeck" target="_blank">Pat Jordan&#8217;s latest&#8211;this one is on Mike Veeck</a>:</p>
<blockquote><p>“I know a little bit about anger,” Mike Veeck tells me. “I have a passing acquaintance with anger, too,” I reply. We discuss how anger can be an energy source. Some use it in destructive ways. Beat the wife, the kids, the dog; blow planes out of the sky. Some put it to better use. Throw the money changers out of the temple, demand justice for the weak, write a book, pitch a no-hitter, make people laugh. That last one is Mike Veeck’s cause. He’s demented about making people laugh.</p>
<p>Veeck (as in wreck, as the title of his father’s autobiography puts it) is sixty-one, getting round, with eyes like a ferret, a goatee, and dark hair I know he dyes. He has a limp. Once on the fourteenth fairway, a guy in a golf cart reached for a lighter for his cigar and ran over him. Veeck wrote a column about it for the Lowcountry Sun, a monthly paper distributed around Charleston, South Carolina. He published the guy’s name and phone number so people could berate him for breaking Veeck’s leg. Funny, angry, or both?</p>
<p>We’re sitting under a hot noonday sun in the exposed left-field bleachers of Joseph P. Riley, Jr. Park, home of the minor-league Charleston RiverDogs, the single-A affiliate of the New York Yankees of which Veeck is part-owner and president. A groundskeeper manicures the field below. A few kids are tidying up the stadium for a 5:05 p.m. game against the Delmarva Shorebirds. Veeck and I are catching up. We’ve known each other fifteen years but don’t see each other much. He travels a lot, to conventions and conferences, where he makes people laugh.</p></blockquote>
<p>[Photo Credit: Sully Sullivan]</p>
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		<title>Million Dollar Movie</title>
		<link>http://www.bronxbanterblog.com/2012/08/02/million-dollar-movie-253/</link>
		<comments>http://www.bronxbanterblog.com/2012/08/02/million-dollar-movie-253/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Thu, 02 Aug 2012 12:03:02 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alex Belth</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[1: Featured]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Arts and Culture]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Million Dollar Movie]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Pat Jordan]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Pop Culture]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Writers]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[flash gordon]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.bronxbanterblog.com/?p=89458</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Here&#8217;s a short essay by Pat Jordan on going to the movies when he was...]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p style="text-align: center;"><a href="http://www.bronxbanterblog.com/wordpress/wp-content/uploads/2012/08/7.Flash-Gordon-Conquers-the-Universe-Main-Title3.jpg"><img class="aligncenter size-full wp-image-89459" title="7.Flash-Gordon-Conquers-the-Universe-Main-Title3" src="http://www.bronxbanterblog.com/wordpress/wp-content/uploads/2012/08/7.Flash-Gordon-Conquers-the-Universe-Main-Title3.jpg" alt="" width="550" height="371" /></a></p>
<p>Here&#8217;s <a href="http://www.nytimes.com/2012/07/29/magazine/no-flash-its-a-trick.html?_r=1&amp;ref=magazine" target="_blank">a short essay by Pat Jordan</a> on going to the movies when he was a kid:</p>
<blockquote><p>I was 10 in 1951. Every Saturday morning, my father would give me two dollar bills so I could take two buses from Fairfield into Bridgeport, Conn., where I would go to the Globe movie theater for the kids’ matinee from noon to 5 o’clock. I had to get a bus transfer in Black Rock and wait on a street corner for the next bus, which would drop me off downtown in front of Morrow’s Nut House, “nuts from all over the world.” I then walked four blocks along Main Street, past the stores and shoppers of this big, grimy factory city, until I came to the Globe and a long line of rowdy kids my age waiting to get inside.</p>
<p>After I got my popcorn and Jujyfruits, I searched for a seat in that dark, crowded, noisy theater with its frayed, burgundy-velvet seats and huge, overhead chandeliers like icicles. In the ’20s and ’30s, the Globe was a bustling Vaudeville theater with leering, popeyed, baggy-pants comics and peroxide-blond ecdysiasts. After World War II, the Globe fell on hard times and was reduced to holding kiddie matinees.</p>
<p>I found a seat next to an old man. He was unshaved, smelly, in tattered clothes. It was not unusual to find such bums scattered throughout the theater each week, their heads nodding on their chests, snoring. It was cheaper to buy a 25-cent ticket to the kiddie matinee than it was to pay a buck for a flophouse bed. There were other strange moviegoers, too. Teenage couples high up in the balcony, kissing. And an occasional woman, like my mother, in a flowered dress with shoulder pads, staring at the screen without interest, as if preoccupied with more weighty matters.</p></blockquote>
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		<slash:comments>3</slash:comments>
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		<title>Winning and Losing</title>
		<link>http://www.bronxbanterblog.com/2012/07/13/winning-and-losing/</link>
		<comments>http://www.bronxbanterblog.com/2012/07/13/winning-and-losing/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Fri, 13 Jul 2012 19:20:58 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alex Belth</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[1: Featured]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Baseball]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Games We Play]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Links: Sportswriting]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Pat Jordan]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Sportswriting]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Writers]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[a team divided can still win]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.bronxbanterblog.com/?p=88470</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Here is a piece that Pat Jordan wrote for the New York Times back in...]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Here is a piece that Pat Jordan wrote for <em>the New York Times</em> back in 1989. It is reprinted here with permission from the author.</p>
<p style="text-align: center;"><a href="http://www.bronxbanterblog.com/wordpress/wp-content/uploads/2012/07/rickey0726.jpg"><img class="aligncenter size-full wp-image-88471" title="Hall Of Fame Baseball" src="http://www.bronxbanterblog.com/wordpress/wp-content/uploads/2012/07/rickey0726.jpg" alt="" width="560" height="314" /></a></p>
<p><strong>A Team Divided Can Still Win</strong></p>
<p>At the Yankees&#8217; spring training clubhouse in Fort Lauderdale, Fla., Rickey Henderson tells reporters Yankee pitchers drink too much. Dave Righetti tells reporters Henderson should mind his own business. Don Mattingly tells reporters he thinks maybe Henderson has a point. Dave Winfield, seated at his locker, watches with a big mischevious grin as schools of reporters swim back and forth from Henderson&#8217;s locker to Righetti&#8217;s locker like tiny fish being led blindly by the pilot fish of dissension.</p>
<p>A few days later, at the Mets&#8217; training camp in Port St. Lucie, Fla., Darryl Strawberry threatens to walk out of camp if the Mets don&#8217;t renegotiate his contract. He sulks on the field during photo day. Keith Hernandez tells him he&#8217;s acting like a baby. Strawberry takes a swing at Hernandez while cameras click. They scuffle and are finally pulled apart by teammates.</p>
<p>Back at the Yankee camp, Winfield, laughing now, says that the Mets have outfoxed the Yankees and now it&#8217;s the Yankees&#8217; turn to find some way to get attention back on them. His teammates laugh.</p>
<p>Reporters, however, take the two disturbances seriously. They wonder, in print and on television, if dissension is ripping apart what they perceive as the delicately stitched fabric of clubhouse harmony each team must weave if it is to be successful? They see it all so clearly from their perspective, as men and women who have never been part of such clubhouses. They have always imparted to clubhouse harmony a certain romance of brotherhood they would only laugh at if someone tried to impart it, say, to the boardroom of I.B.M. They see relationships among players in a baseball clubhouse as merely an extension of the child-play relationships they remember from their youth.</p>
<p>In a way, this is condescending to the players, implying as it does a childishness on their part, which, as grown men, they don&#8217;t have. What reporters see, then, exists only in their mind&#8217;s eye. Which is why the players laugh. They know that clubhouse harmony or the lack of it hasn&#8217;t much to do with a team&#8217;s success on the field. Players know that good-natured camaraderie in the clubhouse, shared intimacies over a locker, plans to get together with families for a cookout on a day off, all have nothing to do with a team&#8217;s success.</p>
<p>Many a sublimely contented baseball team has finished out its season dead last, while more than a few angry, squabbling teams have gone on to win their league titles and the World Series. The Oakland A&#8217;s of the Reggie Jackson-Sal Bando era, and the Yankees of the Reggie Jackson-Thurmon Munson era are perfect examples of the latter.</p>
<p>Jackson and Munson may not have shared too many intimacies in the clubhouse before a game, but that certainly never affected their play on the field. Which is the point. The only thing that matters to players is the game. It unites 25 grown in spite of the fact that they all come from diverse backgrounds and may not have much in common.</p>
<p>The game is what gives players great tolerance for their teammates&#8217; foolishness in the clubhouse. (&#8221;Oh, Rickey. He&#8217;s just being Rickey.&#8221;) They can accommodate themselves to Rickey being Rickey or Darryl being Darryl in the clubhouse as long as Rickey is Rickey and Darryl is Darryl once they step across those white lines. Then, everything is forgotten, fades from memory, becomes trivial.</p>
<p>Like most men in business, baseball players compartmentalize their jobs. What goes on across the white lines is infinitely more important than what goes on behind them. A close friend who consistently strikes out with the bases loaded isn&#8217;t as much use to a ballplayer as a despised teammate who consistently strokes game-winning hits. The respect a player feels for a teammate&#8217;s personal life has nothing to do with the respect he feels for a teammate&#8217;s baseball talent. Babe Ruth, Pete Rose and Wade Boggs are three of the greatest hitters ever in the game, and yet not many teammates might envy their personal lives. Yet to a man, every player in the game would want one of those three at the plate if a World Series championship was on the line.</p>
<p>Dissension then, although it may exist in the clubhouse, doesn&#8217;t much affect the game beyond it. That possibility is a creation of the news media, which mistakingly judges the game by the same standards it judges other jobs in &#8221;the real world,&#8221; a phrase ballplayers use. In the real world, workers work in their clubhouse or office. The mood of their workplace does affect their jobs. A writer can&#8217;t write in a hateful environment any more than a salesman can sell his wares in one.</p>
<p>In the real world, a worker can sabotage a despised co-worker, and get away with it, because it generally won&#8217;t affect his job in a negative way. Often, it affects his job positively. He leapfrogs above his sabotaged co-worker. But baseball players work before a vast, all-seeing audience, not in the private confines of their clubhouse. If Henderson were to drop a fly ball deliberately to show up Righetti on the mound, it would be he, Henderson, who would be heaped with ridicule by the fans. Ballplayers&#8217; egos are too big for them to expose themselves to such abuse. Therein lies the beauty of the game. It appeals to both an individual&#8217;s ego and his sense of team play.</p>
<p>Baseball isn&#8217;t like other team sports where the play of the individual and the team are often blurred. A running back in football can&#8217;t show much without the help of his linemen anymore than a basketball player can score points without sharp picks and passes from his teammates. Dissension in those sports can spill over onto the court and field and affect team play. Basketball players can freeze out a despised teammate, just as a football quarterback can freeze out a wide receiver.</p>
<p>In baseball, an individual&#8217;s play is distinct from the team&#8217;s success even though it contributes or detracts from it. Every player does his own solo dance before the fans. The shortstop, gliding into the hole like a skater on ice, backhands a sure hit, straightens himself, and throws the runner out to thunderous applause. His individual play is rewarded at the same time that his team is rewarded with an out. That&#8217;s the beauty of baseball. It&#8217;s the only team sport where an individual&#8217;s accomplishments or failures are first chalked up to him, personally, and only then added or subtracted from the team&#8217;s success or failure in a peripheral way. And always the team&#8217;s success or failure is greater than the sum of it&#8217;s individuals&#8217; contributions.</p>
<p>In the late 50&#8242;s and early 60&#8242;s, I played minor league baseball throughout this country. I spent four years in baseball clubhouses with players who cheated their teammates in cards, who seduced their teammates&#8217; wives, who were drunks or bigots or just plain mean, and I can&#8217;t remember one time when any of those players&#8217; characteristics affected the play of their team on the field. In fact, I remember one time most clearly of all when I had a fistfight with a teammate who was most closely tied to my success or failure as a pitcher. The player was Elrod Hendricks, now a coach with the Baltimore Orioles.</p>
<p>Then, in 1959, we were playing for the McCook Braves in McCook, Neb. Elrod and I squared off on the sidewalk on Main Street one sunny afternoon in July. It was a brief fight. I lowered my head and charged Elrod like a bull. He grabbed me around the neck and began punching me in the stomach until I lost my wind and collapsed to the sidewalk. I sat there, ridiculously, legs spread like a child, gasping for breath.</p>
<p>That night, all of our teammates knew about the fight, as did our manager, who fined us both $25. When I took the mound in only my third professional game Elrod was my catcher. He called a beautiful game. He threw out two runners trying to steal second base and he tagged out the potential tying run in the eighth inning in a play at the plate. The runner slammed into Elrod with his shoulder and they both went tumbling in the dust. But Elrod held onto the ball, despite being spiked in the shin, drawing blood.</p>
<p>In the ninth inning, I struck out the last batter of the game with a nice curveball to record my first professional shutout. Elrod caught that third strike and leaped out of his crouch, grinning. He ran to the mound and threw his arms around me and hugged me.</p>
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		<title>Working Stiff</title>
		<link>http://www.bronxbanterblog.com/2012/04/30/working-stiff/</link>
		<comments>http://www.bronxbanterblog.com/2012/04/30/working-stiff/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Mon, 30 Apr 2012 14:14:50 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alex Belth</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[1: Featured]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Actors]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Arts and Culture]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Million Dollar Movie]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Pat Jordan]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[how samuel l. jackson became his own genre]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[new york times magazine]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[sameul l. jackson]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.bronxbanterblog.com/?p=84124</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[  Pat Jordan profiles Samuel L. Jackson in the New York Times magazine: He is...]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p style="text-align: center;"> <a href="http://www.bronxbanterblog.com/wordpress/wp-content/uploads/2012/04/3577567345_9aa43c9d28.jpg"><img class="aligncenter size-full wp-image-84127" title="3577567345_9aa43c9d28" src="http://www.bronxbanterblog.com/wordpress/wp-content/uploads/2012/04/3577567345_9aa43c9d28.jpg" alt="" width="500" height="313" /></a></p>
<p><a href="http://www.nytimes.com/2012/04/29/magazine/how-samuel-l-jackson-became-his-own-genre.html" target="_blank">Pat Jordan profiles Samuel L. Jackson in <em>the New York Times magazine:</em></a></p>
<blockquote><p>He is on location as much as nine months a year — “I love being on the road,” he said — and the first thing he does in a new town is look for the black community. Sometimes people say, “You’re it.” Sometimes they direct him to black restaurants, music bars or, most important, public golf courses. He plays alone or with strangers. One day in Memphis, he joined a group of 12 black policemen who were about to tee off. One cop said: “Hey, man, you’re Samuel L. Jackson. I like your movies. Now here’s the game. We play for a little something.” Jackson smiled, recalling that game. “Before I know it, I got 16 bets with 12 guys,” he said. “I can’t be thinking, Hey, I’m Samuel L. Jackson. I gotta be thinking of those 16 bets.” (He won 10 of them.)</p>
<p>Jackson told me he has never had an unpleasant experience in public like a lot of actors have who go out in public with bodyguards. “I walk the streets, take the train, it’s real simple. Some actors create their own mythology.” He assumed a self-pitying voice: “Oh, I’m so famous I can’t go places, because I created this mythology that I’m so famous I can’t go places.”</p>
<p>&#8230;He goes to theaters where his movies are playing and sits among the audience “to see myself up there.” His “Pulp Fiction” co-star, John Travolta, told me: “Actors go see themselves be someone else because being yourself in real life is not that interesting. I don’t think I’m entertaining.” But Jackson disagreed. “John’s a genuine gentle soul. I love John to death.” Then, speaking in a falsetto, he mocked actors who say, “Oh, I can’t watch myself on screen, it’s too personal.” He dropped the falsetto and began to fulminate like Jules, in ways that can’t be reprinted here. How could anyone expect someone else to pay $12.50 to watch him on screen if he couldn’t watch himself?</p></blockquote>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
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		<title>The Chosen One</title>
		<link>http://www.bronxbanterblog.com/2012/04/19/the-chosen/</link>
		<comments>http://www.bronxbanterblog.com/2012/04/19/the-chosen/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Thu, 19 Apr 2012 17:27:05 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alex Belth</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[1: Featured]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Baseball]]></category>
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		<description><![CDATA[  Pat Jordan plays golf with Justin Verlander: Verlander stops the cart, and we go...]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p style="text-align: center;"> <a href="http://www.bronxbanterblog.com/wordpress/wp-content/uploads/2012/04/SP-JUSTIN-VERLANDER-.jpg"><img class="aligncenter size-full wp-image-83333" title="SP-JUSTIN-VERLANDER-" src="http://www.bronxbanterblog.com/wordpress/wp-content/uploads/2012/04/SP-JUSTIN-VERLANDER-.jpg" alt="" width="620" height="350" /></a></p>
<p><a href="http://www.mensjournal.com/justin-verlander" target="_blank">Pat Jordan plays golf with Justin Verlander</a>:</p>
<blockquote><p>
Verlander stops the cart, and we go into the woods to look for his ball. Two egrets, each standing on one leg, point it out. He drives it out of the woods and into a sand trap. We get back into the cart. Frankie ambles by and says, “There’s some pretty flowers in the woods, huh?” I say, “Yeah, Justin’s showing me the whole course — woods, rough, water hazards.” Verlander replies, “I’m just trying to be a good host, show you all aspects of the course.” I say, “Then why don’t ya show me one of the greens?” I pause, and then say, “With your ball near the pin.” Verlander glares at me, and then laughs. “People in real life don’t get ballplayers’ humor, the way we talk in the clubhouse,” he says. In “real life,” people say things they don’t mean. Ballplayers do the opposite. Verlander says, “I’m always hurting someone’s feelings.”</p>
<p>He sprays sand out of the trap, his ball barely reaching the green. Three shots later, we head off toward the next hole. His fastball topped out at 86 mph his senior year of high school, and scouts weren’t interested. So he went to Old Dominion University in Virginia and spent the winter lifting weights. He gained 20 pounds, and by the end of his freshman year, his fastball had been clocked at 96 mph. “All 20 pounds of muscle went to my legs,” he says, which helped him drive toward the batter with his fastball. “Blessed, I guess,” he says. “I was born to be a pitcher.”
</p></blockquote>
<p>[Photo Credit: Ben Walkter/AP] </p>
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		<title>Pat and Geno</title>
		<link>http://www.bronxbanterblog.com/2012/03/22/pat-and-geno/</link>
		<comments>http://www.bronxbanterblog.com/2012/03/22/pat-and-geno/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Thu, 22 Mar 2012 18:13:01 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alex Belth</dc:creator>
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		<category><![CDATA[Basketball]]></category>
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		<category><![CDATA[geno auriemma]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[The Immigrant]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.bronxbanterblog.com/?p=81906</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[  Here&#8217;s Pat Jordan&#8217;s piece on Geno Auriemma for Deadspin: &#8220;I don&#8217;t coach women,&#8221; the...]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p style="text-align: center;"> <a href="http://www.bronxbanterblog.com/wordpress/wp-content/uploads/2012/03/GYI0061589824_crop_450x500.jpg"><img class="aligncenter size-full wp-image-81907" title="GYI0061589824_crop_450x500" src="http://www.bronxbanterblog.com/wordpress/wp-content/uploads/2012/03/GYI0061589824_crop_450x500.jpg" alt="" width="335" height="500" /></a></p>
<p>Here&#8217;s <a href="http://deadspin.com/5895516/geno-auriemma-mr-womens-basketball" target="_blank">Pat Jordan&#8217;s piece on Geno Auriemma for </a><em><a href="http://deadspin.com/5895516/geno-auriemma-mr-womens-basketball" target="_blank">Deadspin</a>:</em></p>
<blockquote><p>&#8220;I don&#8217;t coach women,&#8221; the coach says. &#8220;I coach basketball players.&#8221; He tells a story. He was practicing with his team before a game when the opposing team&#8217;s female coach came out on the floor. &#8220;I&#8217;m telling my players how to play man-to-man defense. The other coach says: ‘You can&#8217;t say that. It&#8217;s person-to-person defense.&#8217; I said, ‘You&#8217;re shittin&#8217; me.&#8217; She says, ‘But it&#8217;s women playing it.&#8217; I say: ‘Yeah, but it&#8217;s man-to-man. They&#8217;re just pawns, without gender. I&#8217;m a gender-neutral coach.&#8217;&#8221;</p>
<p>&#8230;Geno became a women&#8217;s coach by accident. He was 21, without a job. A friend asked him to help out coaching a girls&#8217; high school team. Geno said, &#8220;Girls! No way.&#8221; Then he thought about it. &#8220;I realized it could be pretty cool,&#8221; he tells me. &#8220;So I gave it a shot. The girls listened to me. They appreciated what I taught them.&#8221; His high school job led to an assistant coaching job on the University of Virginia&#8217;s women&#8217;s team, which led, in 1985, to an interview for the head job at UConn. By then, Geno had decided that he &#8220;liked coaching women. But I didn&#8217;t view it as coaching women. I was just coaching the game the way it should be played.</p>
<p>When I ask him why UConn hired him, he says: &#8220;I have no fucking idea. They wanted a woman. But nobody wanted the job. UConn had had only one winning season in its history. The facilities were lousy, there was no money, the pay was $29,000 a year, but I didn&#8217;t give a shit. I wanted to coach. So I lied to them. I told them I&#8217;m gonna do this, and this, and this, and they believed me. So I took the job. I figured I&#8217;d win a few games then after four years I&#8217;d go someplace good, men or women, as long as I could coach on a high level.&#8221; Those plans never materialized. His teams became very good, very quickly, and then, as he puts it, &#8220;a funny thing happened. After those first winning seasons, nobody called. Nobody gave a shit because I was a guy. The women&#8217;s teams didn&#8217;t want a guy, and the men&#8217;s teams figured if I was coaching women, how good could I be?&#8221;</p>
<p>He smiles, the big smile of a guy who&#8217;s got the last laugh. &#8220;Now nobody wants me because I&#8217;m making too much fucking money.&#8221;</p></blockquote>
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		<title>Trouble in Paradise</title>
		<link>http://www.bronxbanterblog.com/2012/03/12/trouble-in-paradise/</link>
		<comments>http://www.bronxbanterblog.com/2012/03/12/trouble-in-paradise/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Mon, 12 Mar 2012 17:20:50 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alex Belth</dc:creator>
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		<category><![CDATA[cindy garvey]]></category>
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		<category><![CDATA[steve garvey]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[trouble in paradise]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[From the vaults here&#8217;s Pat Jordan&#8217;s profile of Steve and Cyndy Garvey. The piece caused...]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>From the vaults here&#8217;s Pat Jordan&#8217;s profile of Steve and Cyndy Garvey. The piece caused a stir when it was published and the Garveys filed a suit against <em>Newsweek</em>, <em>Inside Sports</em> and Pat Jordan. The case never made it to trial and was eventually settled out-of-court. Soon after, Steve and yindy Garvey separated.</p>
<p>The following is Jordan&#8217;s original manuscript&#8211;featured in <a href="http://www.amazon.com/Best-Sports-Writing-Pat-Jordan/dp/0892553391" target="_blank">&#8220;The Best Sports Writing of Pat Jordan.&#8221;</a> I&#8217;ve reprinted it here, with permission from the author, as an example of the kind of lengthy magazine writing that was fashionable at the time.</p>
<p>&#8220;Trouble in Paradise&#8221; is far from Jordan&#8217;s best work, but it captured a time and a place well and offered a candid look at the difficulties of celebrity marriage.</p>
<p>Enjoy.</p>
<p style="text-align: center;"><a href="http://www.bronxbanterblog.com/wordpress/wp-content/uploads/2012/02/garvey1_NEW.jpg"><img class="aligncenter  wp-image-81048" title="garvey1_NEW" src="http://www.bronxbanterblog.com/wordpress/wp-content/uploads/2012/02/garvey1_NEW-769x1024.jpg" alt="" width="538" height="717" /></a></p>
<p><strong>Trouble in Paradise</strong></p>
<p>This is a story about Southern California, and baseball, and sex, and fame, and wealth, and beauty, and the American Dream. It is a story about a famous athlete and his beautiful wife and the life they live in that rarefied atmosphere that few of us will ever breathe. And yet, despite its uncommon trappings, it is not an uncommon story. It is simply a love story about men and women who marry when young, when they are merely tintypes of one another and their lives together are spread out before them like some preordained feast. It is a story about husbands who go off to work, and wives who become mothers, and the ordinary lives they slip into along the way—lives that are satisfyingly simple when they are young. It is a story about people who change over the years, who grow older in different ways, who become different people from who they once were, and how this is really no one’s fault. Finally, this is a story about people who have slept together in a familiar bed for so many years that it is a profound shock to them when they wake one morning to discover they are sleeping in a strange bed alongside of someone they no longer recognize.</p>
<p style="text-align: center;"><a href="http://www.bronxbanterblog.com/wordpress/wp-content/uploads/2012/03/tumblr_lpjo5042Ly1qzt15co1_500.jpg"><img class="aligncenter  wp-image-81211" title="tumblr_lpjo5042Ly1qzt15co1_500" src="http://www.bronxbanterblog.com/wordpress/wp-content/uploads/2012/03/tumblr_lpjo5042Ly1qzt15co1_500.jpg" alt="" width="350" height="478" /></a></p>
<p><strong>THE HOUSE</strong></p>
<p>The house is decorated in a style common to people who have the resources for instant gratification, but who have yet to grow into a style of their own. The young wife did not have the style, or the patience, to coordinate every detail (the plaid wallpaper with the print sofa), which might have taken years, and so she merely hired the right decorator to whom she could entrust the ten-room house while she and her husband were away. When they returned, the empty house had been filled with things. There was a color television set in every room, and two in the family room. There were eleven LeRoy Neiman prints on the wall of the library. There was a pool table in the den, a few balls scattered across the felt as if to imply a game in progress. There were plants everywhere: hanging-plants in hand-painted pots, floor-plants in wicker baskets, wall plants in elephant horns, plants with spidery tendrils, plants with cactus-like trunks, and plants with rubbery-looking leaves as large as the blade of a shovel. There were three bars done in a Mediterranean style, but no liquor bottles, since neither the wife nor the husband drinks. There were four bathrooms done in Italian marble, with gold-plated fixtures, and a toilet, which, when flushed, spewed forth royal blue Sani-Flush. There was an art book or a high-end magazine in every bathroom, and on every coffee table and end table in the house (<em>Architectural Digest</em>, Paintings by Norman Rockwell, Paintings by Vincent van Gogh, <em>Celebrity Houses</em>), and there were three such books on the massive glass-and-chrome coffee table in the living room, each book arranged casually atop the other, just a bit off-center. There were oriental rugs, too, and inlaid tiles, and matching white linen sofas, and a brick fireplace with a large gold fan in front of it. The fan was so large, in fact, that it obscured the fireplace it was meant to adorn. There was a cut glass sherry decanter ringed by tulip-shaped, long-stemmed glasses on a silver tray on the bar in the library. The decanter was a third filled with an amber liquid, and it was arranged on the bar in such a way that, on sunny days, the light through the window would reflect off the cut-glass in a rainbow of colors. Soft music floated through the house from unseen speakers.</p>
<p style="text-align: center;"><a href="http://www.bronxbanterblog.com/wordpress/wp-content/uploads/2012/03/61vlmueebhL._SS500_.jpg"><img class="aligncenter size-full wp-image-81256" title="61vlmueebhL._SS500_" src="http://www.bronxbanterblog.com/wordpress/wp-content/uploads/2012/03/61vlmueebhL._SS500_.jpg" alt="" width="500" height="500" /></a></p>
<p>The children’s bedroom overflowed with stuffed animals of every pastel hue. Pinks and yellows and baby blues littered the beds, spilled onto the floor, rose, in a miasma of color, to the ceiling. The master bedroom was done entirely in white. There was a telephone in each of the dressing rooms off the master bath. There was a sauna. There were photographs in the bedroom hallway. Photographs of husband and wife and children. Photographs of the husband and wife. Photographs of the children, two young girls with windblown hair—one blonde, one dark. Photographs of the blonde daughter, laughing, with an upraised can of soda. There were more photographs downstairs: The husband in a baseball uniform, holding two small American flags in each hand and smiling at the camera. The wife in profile, her blonde hair as unreal in its perfection as that of a Breck girl. The wife getting out of a car. Posed getting out of a car, the car door opened, the wife smiling as she points one leg out of the car, her silky dress hiked past her thigh. The husband in uniform again, the wife beside him, holding a baby in her arms, the microphone, home plate, and, unseen, thousands of adoring fans. There were dozens of such photographs, and more. Photographs of the husband swinging a bat, throwing a ball, sliding into home plate, posing with other baseball stars, posing with actors, actresses, politicians, and presidents. All the photographs were the same. Stylized. Posed. Perfect exposures without a blemish. They were the photographs of an unseen portrait photographer, who had spent weeks following the family, taking snaps, developing them at his studio, discarding hundreds of possibilities before, finally, selecting those snaps from which he would let the wife choose.</p>
<p>There were mementoes, too. In glass cases. World Series rings. Golden Gloves. Bronzed spikes. Metal sculptures. Framed magazine covers. Civic awards from the Israeli government. From the Junior Chamber of Commerce. From charities. The husband contributed his time and energy to this charity and that. The husband was one of the ten outstanding young men in America in 1977. The husband was a Guardian of Freedom.</p>
<p>All the mementoes were the same. Recent. Expensive-looking. Freshly-minted reminders of the husband’s past, as if, for this family, there was no past worth recalling other than the husband’s, and no past more distant than that of a few years ago.</p>
<p>Everything in this house looked the same. Unblemished. Freshly minted. Disposable. Objects with no real past. Objects that could be replaced instantly with enough money. There were no rotting, gray, baby shoes of a revered grandmother. There were no brown-tinted photographs of some stern great uncle in a high-button collar, his slicked down hair parted in the middle. There were no off-focus photographs, poorly but lovingly taken by a young husband with his first Polaroid camera. There was none of that faintly shabby, comfortably worn feel of a house filled up in stages over the years as the family prospered and grew. This was a house in which most of its objects seemed to have been purchased at once, and, if they are replaced, it was not because they had been broken, but because someone had had a whim, to change a mood, to redecorate. This house was stuffed with such things. There was no unused space. It was as if, for this family, all these expensive-looking objects were needed to fill in the gaps in their unformed natures. Outside, the house and its surroundings are typical of a certain kind of affluent Southern California architecture and landscaping. Stucco walls. Orange Mission tile roof. Greenhouse plants and flowers. Grass the color of forest green and laid down in sod strips that could be rolled up like a carpet and replaced when the strips died in the Southern California heat. There is the obligatory swimming pool, reached through sliding glass doors in the den. There are floodlights aimed at the house. And a sprinkler system. The sprinklers are aimed at the house, too, not at the grass, because this is the San Fernando Valley, the land of brush fires, a land without trees, with only tall, dried grasses that flame up in the summer, a land once so uninhabitable that only coyotes and rabbits and rattlesnakes thrived.</p>
<p>The house sits at the end of a dead-end street on a bluff overlooking the valley and the community of Calabasas Park. Below in the valley lies a spotless, geometrically laid-out community of similar houses, of streets with vaguely European names (Park Capri, Park Siena, Park Vicente), of schools and shopping centers and country clubs and a man-made lake. All of it looks as if it sprang up, full-blown, only yesterday, without the benefit of a past, a real past, a past more distant than a few years ago. It is not the kind of community in which people go from birth to death without leaving. People move into Calabasas when they become suddenly affluent, and then, after a few years and an amicable divorce, they move back to Los Angeles, thirty miles to the south.</p>
<p style="text-align: center;"><a href="http://www.bronxbanterblog.com/wordpress/wp-content/uploads/2012/03/garvey2_NEW.jpg"><img class="aligncenter  wp-image-81050" title="garvey2_NEW" src="http://www.bronxbanterblog.com/wordpress/wp-content/uploads/2012/03/garvey2_NEW-749x1024.jpg" alt="" width="524" height="717" /></a></p>
<p><strong>THE WIFE</strong></p>
<p>The Wife is thirty-years-old. She is tall and thin. She has long blonde hair. She is pretty. Conventionally pretty. Pretty in the manner of a Miss America contestant. Undistinguished. Lacquered. She embellishes that look to give it distinction—bleached hair, heavy make-up—but her efforts only underline its lack of distinction. It is a look thought glamorous in certain regions of this country, and despite her protestations to the contrary (“I don’t try to look this way. I just always was glamorous.”), it is not a look acquired without effort. She claims her looks are a burden. “As a kid, they made me shy. People reacted to me in a negative way because of them. I always wanted my personality to overcome my looks, but it was difficult for people to get past them.” Her ambivalence is not uncommon among women who have been pretty all their lives. They have taken satisfaction from their looks for so long that, even when they wish to break the habit, it is not easy. “Men bother me on planes,” she says. “Businessmen. Sometimes, I leave first class and go back to coach to read in peace. Sometimes, though, if they’re only trying to be polite, if they say something like they like my profile, well, then I have to stay and talk to them.”</p>
<p>She was born in Detroit of Czechoslovakian ancestry. Her father was an Air Force colonel who dragged his family back and forth across the country. She attended more grammar schools than she can remember, and four high schools before she finally graduated from one in Washington State. She learned early how to forgo a social life in favor of academic achievement. She learned also, how to be alone. “I’m still not comfortable in group situations,” she says. She describes her parents as “harmonious opposites.” Her father was very strict with her, more strict than he was with her two brothers. “Still, I loved him,” she says. “But I identified with my mother. She kept the family together. She made a home wherever we were. And even though she taught me domestic skills, I’ve always felt she wanted me to be something. To achieve. She was not a career woman herself. She could have been, I think, if she hadn’t followed my father all over. When I was a little girl, I told my father I would never marry a man who was gone all the time.”</p>
<p style="text-align: center;"><a href="http://www.bronxbanterblog.com/wordpress/wp-content/uploads/2012/03/369983373_tp.jpg"><img class="aligncenter size-full wp-image-81203" title="369983373_tp" src="http://www.bronxbanterblog.com/wordpress/wp-content/uploads/2012/03/369983373_tp.jpg" alt="" width="400" height="300" /></a></p>
<p>She met her husband at a dance at Michigan State, where she was a freshman, he a sophomore and a professional baseball player. Although he was then in the minor leagues, he was one of those golden youths for whom major league stardom had already been predicted. It was merely a matter of time.</p>
<p>“He was different from anyone I’d ever met,” she says. “He was a gentleman. He was not all over my body the minute I saw him. He seemed so stable. Maybe it was because of my childhood, but it was terrific to talk to someone who knew what he wanted to do. He’d already signed then. He was so directed, you know, to be a baseball star.”</p>
<p style="text-align: center;"><a href="http://www.bronxbanterblog.com/wordpress/wp-content/uploads/2012/03/369983383_tp.jpg"><img class="aligncenter size-full wp-image-81205" title="369983383_tp" src="http://www.bronxbanterblog.com/wordpress/wp-content/uploads/2012/03/369983383_tp.jpg" alt="" width="400" height="300" /></a></p>
<p>They dated for two-and-one-half years, during which time he did become a major league star—he was the National League’s Most Valuable Player at the age of twenty-four—and their relationship reached a point where, as she puts it, “either we married or it died. I’d never thought of marrying a baseball player. I wasn’t even a fan, and then, suddenly, I was the wife of a major leaguer. The wife of a star.”</p>
<p>For the first time in her life, the wife, always a pretty woman, became visible in relation to someone else—her husband. It was exciting. She would walk down the ramp leading to her seat with the other wives at the stadium and fans would turn in admiration. Children, even grown men, begged her for her autograph. When her husband came to bat, he always paused a minute in the on-deck circle, and looked for her in the stands. The camera quickly panned to her (she was easy to spot, with her long blonde hair). She cheered her husband on. He hit a home run, or a double, or a single, and, in a way, she had shared in it.</p>
<p>“The high point of my day was going to the ballpark,” she says. “Soon my entire satisfaction was in my husband’s career, his day-to-day achievements. Some of the wives tear their hair out during the games. I watched one wife unravel the entire hem of her dress. Another tore her nails off. I wasn’t that bad. I wasn’t that team-oriented. Until my husband came to bat, I would read a book to pass the time. I made sure the book was in my lap so no one would notice.”</p>
<p>In her early twenties, she became used to living her life in the public eye, in that rarefied atmosphere of adulation and deference and instant gratification so familiar to famous athletes, politicians, actors, and rock stars, who, after awhile, see it all as their birthright. Her husband bought her a baby blue Cadillac with a vanity license plate—“Cyndy N6” (her name, his uniform number). Her husband took her with him when he was a guest on a television talk show. While she waited in the wings, he took his place beside Johnny or Dinah or Merv or Mike.</p>
<p>Wearing a three-piece-suit, his thumbs hooked into his vast pockets, looking for all the world like a young Southern entrepreneur, the husband could not contain himself. He waited for an opening, forced it even, and then began to tell Johnny or Dinah or Merv or Mike about his wife: how intelligent she was (3.8 grade average in sociology), how beautiful she was (a model), how talented (a dancer), what a great wife she was (she inspired him to hit home runs), what a great mother she was (for by then they had two daughters), and, finally, how much he loved her. The audience applauded. (At home, unseen, more than one ordinary housewife groaned at his effusiveness.) Then, the husband, hinting broadly, told his host that his wife was waiting for him off-stage. The host invariably took the bait. Well, let’s bring her out! She slipped through the curtain onto the stage. The audience applauded, again, applauded as resoundingly as if she had been a famous actress or singer, and not merely the wife of a baseball star. As she walked across the stage towards her husband, he beamed.</p>
<p>The husband took her with him everywhere, and always, it seemed, it was a public occasion recorded by the media. She went to banquets when he gave a speech or received yet another award. There were mostly men at these banquets, older men, baseball executives, Rotarians, and they were all charmed by the wife. “They always said the same thing,” says the wife. “‘Oh, isn’t she lovely!’ They said it to my husband. In front of me. ‘Lovely’ became my middle name.” She went with her husband to charity functions, too, and political fund raisers (for even then, the husband harbored distant political ambitions) in which she and her husband were as celebrated as the politicians seeking office. “When we walked in,” says the wife, “the crowd parted for us as if we were royalty.”</p>
<p>Their public perceived then as a handsome, loving couple. And nice. Nice in that bland, middle American conception of niceness (“If you can’t say something nice about someone, then it’s best not to say anything at all.”) It seemed almost irrelevant that, despite their image, they were nice, truly nice to those who got to know them. The media, in which, increasingly, they seemed to live their lives, began referring to them as baseball’s perfect couple. The blonde wife with the perfect smile (so what if, picture after picture, it was the same smile and her hair seemed a solid piece?). The handsome husband with the blow-dried hair (so what if he looked a bit too boyish and his hair was done at Jon Peters’ Salon in Beverly Hills).</p>
<p>They signed on with the William Morris Agency. Endorsements began to pour in: Pepsi (“As soon as I get to my seat at the stadium,” says the wife, “I order a Coke. . . . Oh, I mean Pepsi!”), Jack LaLanne (the husband and wife exercising, smiling, not a drop of sweat anywhere, and the wife, curiously, appearing taller than the husband), Mattel (the makers of, among other things, Ken and Barbie dolls. After they signed with Mattel, the media began to refer to the couple, not without a touch of sarcasm, as “the Ken and Barbie dolls of baseball.” The sarcasm escaped the wife, at first: “I was so flattered,” she says. “I only wish I had&#8230;” (modest pause) “&#8230;as much on top as she does.”)</p>
<p>Soon, their public image began to work against them. No one could be that perfect! No couple could be that much in love! No life was that simple! “But it was,” says the wife. “It was simple. We were just young and in love and we did a lot of charitable work.” Her husband began to have trouble with his teammates, who felt he was receiving a disproportionate share of publicity. Worse, they felt he courted it. (More than once, he was heard saying to a magazine writer, “Will this be a cover story?”) His image grated on them. They questioned its sincerity. How could someone, a baseball player, a star, on whose time the public had made unfair demands, be so nice to everyone? Before every home game, he went out of his way to say hello to two little old ladies in the stands. “They’ve come to every game,” he says, and then adds with all humility, “They just wouldn’t feel right unless I said, ‘Hello.’ It makes their day.”</p>
<p>There was a much publicized locker room fight with a teammate. Punches were thrown. They grappled on the floor. Their teammates had to pry them apart. Afterwards, there were televised apologies. The husband began to crack. In an emotional speech, he told the audience he was defending his wife’s honor. He refused to elaborate.</p>
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<p>The bad feeling that some teammates harbored against the husband spilled over onto the wife. The other wives complained that she was too often with her husband, especially on those public occasions when the media was present. They told her she had never paid her dues in the minor leagues as they had, as if this was the wife’s fault. They complained that a woman’s magazine photo lay-out of the team wives carried a disproportionate number of photos of the wife. They threatened to withdraw their approval of the lay-out unless the imbalance was rectified. They complained, finally, that too often during a game the television camera panned the wives and focused on the wife.</p>
<p>“It wasn’t my fault,” says the wife. “It was just that my hair made it easy for the camera man to pick me out. And I didn’t tell the magazine to use more pictures of me than the others. It was their decision. A few of the wives—and I want to emphasize this point, I’ve only had trouble with a few of them—maybe were not as pretty as I am, and maybe they didn’t have a vehicle like I did—” meaning the husband—“I began to sit off by myself at games. Why not? I’d always felt their conversation was so trivial, anyway. I mean, those few I didn’t get along with. They spent hours talking about make-up. I would go wild. They said I was a snob for not sitting with them, so I went upstairs to the Stadium Club. I watched the game from behind a glass partition.</p>
<p>“I phased out of baseball three years ago. I don’t see the wives much anymore. I don’t have to ask them about their kids or their husbands or anything. I only went to eight games last year. It wasn’t any one big thing, it was just that a season came along and I said, that’s it. I don’t go to banquets anymore with my husband, either. I told him I couldn’t take it. I wanted to scream! All those men talking baseball. I was just a ‘lovely’, that’s all. I promised myself I wouldn’t do that anymore. My husband says I don’t want to participate in any part of his life now. He gets invitations that say, Oh, and your wife came come, too. She can sit on the dais with you. Of course, she isn’t gonna do shit, but so what? I wouldn’t go. There would always be this empty place beside my husband with my name tag, and my name spelled wrong. I hate that. But that’s the way it was&#8230;I don’t go with my husband to talk shows either. I’ll only go if I have a vehicle of my own. I can sing, you know. I can dance. I can talk. I can chew gum.”</p>
<p>The wife was twenty-nine-years-old. Life was no longer simple. She took a job.</p>
<p><strong>THE JOB</strong></p>
<p style="text-align: center;"><a href="http://www.bronxbanterblog.com/wordpress/wp-content/uploads/2012/03/garvey4_NEW.jpg"><img class="aligncenter  wp-image-81054" title="garvey4_NEW" src="http://www.bronxbanterblog.com/wordpress/wp-content/uploads/2012/03/garvey4_NEW.jpg" alt="" width="436" height="301" /></a></p>
<p>The chef is smoking a long cigar while plucking the feathers from a dead chicken. The lady from Adopt-a-Dog is sitting on stool with two whimpering puppies and a towel on her lap. The male model is smoothing the sides of his hair with the flat of his palms. The housewife, who lost her husband to her best friend and wrote a book about it, is talking to an actress whose career was based on her talent for marrying a succession of men, each more wealthy than the last. The actress, a plump little blonde, is telling the housewife how she has managed to retain her taut facial skin without benefit of a facelift. She throws her hair forward, over her face, and points behind her ears. “You see, Dahlink,” she says. “Not<br />
even a scar.”</p>
<p>Suddenly, there is a call for quiet on the set. The director, a slim black man with a gold earring in one pierced ear, begins counting down, out loud, from ten. “Nine&#8230;eight&#8230;seven&#8230;” Behind him, a New York commercial actress is telling a bearded man about her network coffee commercial.</p>
<p>“You see this,” she says, pointing to her face.” This is the face that launched a thousand coffee cups.”</p>
<p>The director whirls around on his heels, plants his hands on his hips, and snaps, “Quiet, LOVE! If you please!” He returns to his counting. The battery of cameras begins to move forward, towards the talk show host, a dapper man in a pinstriped suit, who is sitting on a large sofa. Sitting beside him is the wife, the show’s co-host. The director points at the host and nods with great exaggeration. The host begins his monologue. The wife smiles at the camera. She is sitting up very straight, legs crossed, hands folded in her lap, leaning slightly towards the host. Every so often she interjects a comment. The host responds without looking at her. She smiles at the camera. The host goes on. From the shadows, the New York actress whispers to the bearded man. “It’s a regional look,” she says of the wife. “It would never play in New York.”</p>
<p style="text-align: center;"><a href="http://www.bronxbanterblog.com/wordpress/wp-content/uploads/2012/03/49regis.jpg"><img class="aligncenter  wp-image-81208" title="49regis" src="http://www.bronxbanterblog.com/wordpress/wp-content/uploads/2012/03/49regis.jpg" alt="" width="513" height="350" /></a></p>
<p>The wife is wearing a teal blue, Qiana, pajama suit with white high heeled shoes. The suit is belted at the waist with a large, cloth flower. There is a string of pearls around her long, tanned neck. Her blonde hair is pulled back into a pony tail revealing a pair of oversized bulb earrings. Her hair is pulled back so tightly from the sides of her face, stretching the skin, that her face looks gaunt. She is too thin. Her thin arms appear as sticks protruding from her sleeveless blouse. On the television screen she appears only as slim, but in person she looks emaciated. There are deep lines, parentheses, on either side of her wide mouth, as if from too much smiling, or too severe a diet, or maybe just from an inner tension that is finally beginning to show in her face.</p>
<p>The host is telling a funny story directly into the camera. The wife adds a word here and there, no more than a phrase. She punctuates her words with a taut smile, a laugh, a flutter of eyelids, a gesture of her hands, all of which seem a bit out-of-sync with her words. She smiles too broadly, too often, too late. The host finishes his story and she laughs, laying a hand on his arm and leaning against his shoulder. The host begins another story. The wife listens, smiles. She initiates nothing, ventures little, seems content only to react to his lead, as if all her life she has been only an appendage of men.</p>
<p>As the host is finishing his monologue, the wife interrupts him with a truly funny comment of her own. The camera crew breaks into laughter. The host turns his head towards her, simultaneously pulling away from her as if her touch carried contagion. “What the hell do you know?” he says, only half-kidding. “You’ve only been doing this show for a year. I’ve been doing it for five years.” She smiles at him, as a dutiful wife would a husband who has chastised her in front of guests. Unseen by the camera, she kicks him in the shins.</p>
<p>“Oh, Jeez,” says the New York actress to the bearded man. “No wonder she doesn’t have much confidence. He won’t give her a break. He’s a real cunt.”</p>
<p>Before the commercial break, the host introduces the day’s guests. The camera pans to each of them at various parts of the set. The chef at the kitchen set. The Adopt-a-Dog lady on the stool. The blonde actress and the housewife-author. The male model in a jogging suit. The model looks properly macho into the camera, a snarl on his lips, and then, when the camera leaves him, he dashes off, like the athlete he is supposed to be, towards a make-shift dressing room in the shadows. A male attendant is leaning against the dressing room wall. As the model dashes inside, the attendant disdainfully peels off after him.</p>
<p>During the commercial break, the wife takes a sip from a mug of coffee. When she returns it to the coffee table in front of her it is smudged with lipstick. She climbs down from the elevated sofa set and goes over to the Adopt-a-Dog lady and sits on a stool beside her. She smiles at the lady and pets the whimpering puppies with a wary hand. The black director hands her a towel. She lays it across her lap and reluctantly takes the two puppies. She is holding them stiffly in her lap when the camera returns to her. She smiles into the camera as she begins to interview the Adopt-a-Dog lady.</p>
<p>She gives the audience a number to call if anyone of them wishes to adopt one of the puppies. As she finishes her interview, she looks suddenly startled. She looks down at the puppies in her lap. She shakes her head and rolls her eyes heavenward. The camera crew breaks into laughter. The Adopt-a-Dog lady blushes. The wife forces a smile into the camera as it pans away from her for another commercial break. The wife, with a forced smile, dries her lap with the towel and goes back to the sofa set with the host to wait for the camera’s return. The host points at her soiled lap, and laughs. She says nothing, smiles at him, and sits stiffly waiting for the camera to return. When it does, and the host begins to introduce the next guest, the male model, who is now in a white summer suit, the wife takes the wet towel in her lap and lays it gently over the host’s shoulder.</p>
<p style="text-align: center;"><a href="http://www.bronxbanterblog.com/wordpress/wp-content/uploads/2012/03/jimandregisphilbinandcyndygarvey.jpg"><img class="aligncenter  wp-image-81201" title="jimandregisphilbinandcyndygarvey" src="http://www.bronxbanterblog.com/wordpress/wp-content/uploads/2012/03/jimandregisphilbinandcyndygarvey.jpg" alt="" width="455" height="294" /></a></p>
<p>After the segment with the model, the wife goes over to the kitchen set with the chef. She is replaced at the sofa set by the housewife-author and the blonde actress. The blonde actress stops at the foot of the elevated set, her arms held out from her sides like wings, and says, “Dahlinks, somebody please, give me a step up.”</p>
<p>The director holds her under her outstretched arms and helps her up. Soon the camera pans back to the sofa and the host begins interviewing the housewife-author, who is plugging her book, and the blonde actress, who is plugging a line of cheap cosmetic jewelry. Waiting at the kitchen set, unseen by the camera, the wife is laughing softly with the chef. He is a robust, barrel-chested man with a van Dyke beard and slicked back hair that curls up at the nap of his neck. He tells the wife something with a lascivious grin, flourishing his cigar for emphasis. Laughing, she brushes lint off his navy blazer and straightens the handkerchief dripping from his coat pocket. At the sofa set the housewife-author is telling the host about her experiences. “The problem with most women,” she says, “is that their self-esteem is always tied up with a man.”</p>
<p>Finally, the camera pans to the wife and she introduces the chef. He drops his cigar and steps on it as he greets her and the audience with a booming, good-natured voice. He resembles an 1890s circus strongman. He says he is going to teach the wife how to prepare a chicken for stew. He hands her a pot-holder glove. She looks at it, holds it up to the camera with a thumb and forefinger as if it was rancid.</p>
<p>“What’s this?” she says. “I haven’t been in a kitchen in three years.”</p>
<p>The chef roars with laughter. The wife shrugs, slips on the pot-holder. She is no longer studied, seems very much at ease now, and confident with the chef. Perhaps it is because she is freed from the tyranny of the host, or perhaps it is merely because the chef is such a good-natured, sexually robust man, and the wife is so obviously attracted to such men.</p>
<p>The chef holds up the plucked chicken by the neck. It is a ridiculous sight. He pinches it in various places, slaps it a few times to the delight of everyone on the set. “You know,” he says to the wife, “I used to be a geek in the circus.” The wife laughs, a truly genuine laugh, and as she does she slides her arm around his back and clings to him&#8230; At the close of the show, the camera pans back to the host who announces tomorrow’s guests. The wife stays to talk to the chef. From the shadows, the New York actress says to the bearded man, “You know, she could make it in New York. If I was a casting director, and she came to me for a job, I’d tell her to go home, wash her face, cut her hair, get some sleep, gain fifteen pounds, and then come back and read some copy&#8230;Oh, and of course, she’d have to get over whatever it is that’s making her so drawn and tense.”</p>
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<p><strong>THE HOTEL</strong></p>
<p>The two producers have taken off their suit coats and silk shirts against the morning heat as they sit by the hotel pool playing cards and talking business into telephones. They pause in their business dealings only to acknowledge each other’s play of cards with a nod and a flourish of their long cigars. They are in their sixties, distinguished looking men, in that typically Southern California manner. Tanned. White-haired. Mustachioed. Vigorous-looking, with the faint muscle tone of older men who train daily with chromium-plated weights. They are wearing gold medallions around their necks, the medallions partially obscured by the white foliage on their chests.</p>
<p style="text-align: center;"><a href="http://www.bronxbanterblog.com/wordpress/wp-content/uploads/2012/03/tumblr_lpy8nmO4fv1qaz8bwo1_500.jpg"><img class="aligncenter size-full wp-image-81209" title="tumblr_lpy8nmO4fv1qaz8bwo1_500" src="http://www.bronxbanterblog.com/wordpress/wp-content/uploads/2012/03/tumblr_lpy8nmO4fv1qaz8bwo1_500.jpg" alt="" width="500" height="332" /></a></p>
<p>The pool, like the pink stucco hotel beside it, is camouflaged from the street by palm trees and dark, tropical vegetation, as are most of the pools belonging to the mansions on this residential street of millionaires. The pool boy circles the pool, laying white towels over the arm of each deck chair. A woman is swimming laps. She swims from one end of the pool to the other and back again. She swims with a maddening precision, altering her stroke only to lift her head from the water for a breath, before plunging on. The pool boy is oblivious to the woman in the pool. He is wearing white tennis shorts, and he moves with a ponderous, thick-legged slowness. He is blonde, but no longer youthful, and his body has not aged well as it has taken on flesh. He stops to hand a towel to an actress reclining on a chaise lounge reading a script. She is wearing dark glasses, a string bikini, and satin short-shorts. She accepts the towel with a languidly raised hand without taking her eyes from her script. She resembles, faintly, Jane Fonda, only in a more conventional way, with less of Fonda’s distinct, big-jawed prettiness.</p>
<p>A few chairs away, a party of men in bathing suits is seated around an awninged table, finishing their breakfast. One of them is the son of the wealthiest man in the world. A few years ago the son was kidnapped and held for ransom in Italy, and after he had been released there was talk that he had engineered his own abduction to bilk his father out of millions. Every so often, one of the men at the table glances over at the actress. Finally, the youngest-looking man, red-haired and freckled, with part of an ear missing, leans forward and whispers to one of his friends. The friend gets up and goes over to the actress. He is wearing Bermuda shorts and white patent-leather loafers without socks. He hovers over the actress for a long moment, waiting for her to acknowledge him. She does so, only after she has finished a page of her script. He smiles at her, and says something. She looks at him wearily, closes her eyes behind her dark glasses as if to erase him from sight, and, without speaking, returns to her script. The man utters a curse and returns to his friends. The actress does not look up from her script again for a long while, and when she finally does, the men have gone. Only the remnants of their breakfast remain. Two hummingbirds are hovering over the plates, pecking at the morsels of food.</p>
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<p>The maitre’d sighs, snaps up the menus he has just deposited on the table near the service bar, and leads the wife and her gentleman companion to another table in the center of the nearly-deserted hotel restaurant.</p>
<p>“Will this do, Madam?” he says.</p>
<p>“Yes. Thank you very much,” says the wife, smiling. They sit down. After the maitre’d leaves, the wife says, “Well, I just don’t care. I will not be seated near the service bar.” Her companion nods. He is a tall man, in his forties, with a salt-and-pepper beard. He unbuttons the cuffs of his silk shirt and is about to roll them back, when the wife says, “Oh, let me do it. I think it looks sooo sexy.”</p>
<p>She rolls back the cuffs twice, smiling at the man as she does so. It is the smile of a coquette. Of someone who thinks they are being sexy. Of someone who is trying to be sexy. Of someone who has read too many of the wrong women’s magazines. It implies nothing, is merely a dessert filled with empty calories. Falsely satisfying, yet without substance. She knows, and she assumes her companion knows, that her flirtation is meant to lead nowhere. She is the wife of a star, who can afford such a luxury. She is used to flirting without having to deliver on it. It is safe. Most men are gratified by it, by her merely laying a hand on their arm, a small blessing, for which they are grateful.</p>
<p>Her companion asks how she manages to put up with the talk show host. She smiles and says, “You mean, Bozo? Oh, he’s my big bad brother. He’s always teasing me, but I can put up with it because I don’t need it. The show, I mean. They told him the show would be a lot better if he’d do less. But he won’t. Actually, he’s good for me. There’s a lot of give and take, and I have to hold my own against a very strong man. Viewers like the way we bicker back and forth. It’s like a husband and wife bickering over coffee in the morning. The funny thing is, we really like each other. I mean, he was in a bad mood today because he didn’t get a commercial he auditioned for last night. That’s all. He took it out on me, but that’s the way it is. Still, I really do like him. And I love the atmosphere of the set. It’s kinda like a baseball locker room, only on a higher intellectual level, don’t you think? Oh, that’s dumb to say. I’ve never been in a locker room.”</p>
<p>A waiter comes to take their order, and then leaves. The room is filled now, with voices and the clatter of silverware against porcelain. The people at tables in the middle of the room are talking to one another, while those at the more prestigious booths along the walls are talking into telephones. The telephones are green, hospital green, their wires are a faded pink. Everything in this hotel-lounge, which is famous for its movie star clientele, is done in pink or green. Napkins (green). Table cloths (pink). Rubber plants (green). Carnations (pink, their stems, green). Leather booths (green). The telephones are green and pink. A woman in a turban is seated alongside of a man at a booth. The man is eating while the woman is talking into a telephone. The man says something to the woman. She puts a finger into the ear nearest the man so she can better hear the voice coming through the telephone. The man sighs, disgustedly, and pours heavy cream over strawberries in a silver dish. He sprinkles powdered sugar over the cream. At another booth, two men in dark suits are talking very loudly into telephones in order to be heard over the chatter of the three young blonde women interspersed between them. The men are leaning back in the booths, away from the women, who are leaning forward over the table, chattering gaily.</p>
<p>“Actually, this show is my kindergarten,” says the wife. “I’m working, learning, and some day I’ll graduate. I’ll be all right. I’m not twenty-two anymore. I’m no little nymphet. But I’m no ballsy career woman either. I’m just trying to balance a career with being a wife and mother. I have all this energy and nowhere to channel it. Now I have a voice of my own. I’m gonna do something with my life. Maybe I’ll do news, or straight acting, or a talk show. Whatever, I won’t go through life wondering what I might have been&#8230; Would I like a career in New York? You mean, if my husband was traded to New York? Oh, you mean just me.” She laughs, as if embarrassed. “I can’t answer that right now. The way things are&#8230;”</p>
<p>After the waiter brings their food, the wife is quiet for a long moment. She picks at her food. Finally, she looks up and says in a flat voice devoid of emotion, “When I married my husband, I had no idea it would lead to a career of my own. I never intended to be anything but a wife and mother until a few years ago. I was bored, so I took a job. I know my husband wants me to be happy and fulfilled, and if this job does it then that’s what he wants for me. In the long run, my career might even be bigger than my husband’s.”</p>
<p>She laughs again, as if contemplating a fantasy. “You know, a woman in her thirties needs mobility to grow,” she continues. “When she gets into something she’s hard pressed to give it up&#8230;even for a man. I know in my own case, if I was single now, I’d be a hard person to marry&#8230;But still&#8230;my career doesn’t fill the void of not having my husband home during the baseball season. He’s gone 92 days out of the summer, and during the offseason, he’s very active in business. He’s got to take advantage of his peak earning years as a ballplayer. He’s got to capitalize on his success now. Of course, he only endorses products he uses&#8230;But God, sometimes, I wish I could cuddle with someone. I have to have someone to talk to at night. Baseball is a tough sport for a wife. A baseball wife can’t work at a conventional job, like teaching, or else she’ll never see her husband. Baseball doesn’t leave much time to be together, unless the wife goes to the park and sits in the stands and cheers her husband on. I don’t do that anymore. I’m sick of baseball. It’s fun for guys, but it’s a watching sport for girls&#8230;Jeez, when there’s no man in your house you can really go nuts&#8230;</p>
<p>“The wife of a baseball player must see that baseball is his main thing. I have to be a constant support for my husband. If I’m angry at him when he leaves his house for the stadium, I feel guilty maybe he won’t do well. Of course, he always does do well.” (She says this, not with pride, but with sarcasm.) “At first I channeled all my energy into him. Now he calls home, and I’m not there. A baseball wife either lives her life around her husband’s career or else she gets frustrated and this affects their marriage. A lot of us discover a need for our own identity at 30, but we’re so used to thinking in terms of a man, we think all we need to get rid of the frustration is a different man. We trade up, we think. It’s a halfway measure. If the new man’s an athlete, we’ll outgrow him, too.”</p>
<p>Throughout her monologue, the wife is speaking in a brusque, nasal voice that sounds almost whiny except that there is no self-pity behind it. Her voice is perfectly flat, objective, punctuated here and there by quick smiles and brittle laughter that seem rarely to correspond to the words she is speaking. In fact, her style and words contain none of the nuances of felt emotion.</p>
<p>“Of course, baseball leaves the wives a lot of time to develop,” she continues. “The men are gone so much of the time. It’s one of the advantages, if that’s what you want. If you don’t, you’re lonely. I’m both. And wives left alone tend to take charge. But charge of what? You think, great. I’ve got a famous husband, a big house, a career, everything, but what good is it? Go try to sleep with it. There’s always a dark moment when you want to make love to someone and there’s no one there, so you go stumbling around an empty house talking to yourself.</p>
<p>“The off-season’s no better when your husband is like mine, with a lot of outside business interests. You try to fulfill social obligations, go to dinners, shows, friends’ homes, and still you’re alone. You end up talking about a ghost person&#8230;You know, baseball wives are told how lucky we are, and we’re not ungrateful for the good things, but&#8230;it’s just that sometimes you crave good conversation, a laugh, and in baseball these things aren’t there for women. If a woman shows a baseball player too much in a non-sexual way, he doesn’t know what to make of her. That’s why I love older men. They can appreciate you. They’re their own men. They aren’t still growing up. I mean, I always wonder, am I gonna go through life knowing only baseball players? They’re so shy around real women. They’re nice guys, but I don’t have much to say to many of them. Is that what a hero is? Of course not. I wouldn’t want my child to look at baseball players or any athletes as heroes. It’s such a limited endeavor. You train so hard, for what?</p>
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<p>“My feelings about baseball must sound trite to fans who see players as heroes making so much money. I mean, I don’t want to sound ungrateful. As Chico Escuela on Saturday Night Live says, ‘Baseball been berry, berry good to me.’ And it has. I’ve got security. How do you complain? The average fan is gonna read this and say, ‘What the hell does she have to be frustrated about? Hollywood must have turned her head.’ But they don’t know&#8230;Do you want to hear a baseball story? A real baseball story?</p>
<p>“The other day my daughter fell out of a tree and broke her wrist. My husband and I rushed her to the hospital. While she was in the operating room I had to fill out a questionnaire for a nurse. When I said my husband’s occupation was ‘baseball player’, she asked, for what team? I told her. Then she asked, what position? I got so pissed off, I shoved the paper at my husband and told him to deal with her, she was obviously more interested in him than our daughter. Now there’s another woman who’s gonna think I’m just the stuck-up wife of a star.</p>
<p>“Anyway, just before they set my daughter’s wrist, my husband had to leave to go to the stadium. He couldn’t wait. That’s the clearest vision of when the game comes first. Before anything. It’s so cut and dried with him. I got furious. It’s always been like that. Another time I had a baby while he was playing in the World Series. When they wheeled me back from the delivery room—I’m just coming out of the anesthesia—the nurse is putting on the TV. ‘I thought you’d like to watch your husband playing in the World Series,’ she says. I screamed at her to shut it off. Hell, he didn’t come to watch me. I could have died in childbirth and my man wouldn’t have been there. The burden is always on the wife’s shoulders. Her man is never there. You can’t even make love to your husband when you want to. You’ve got to wait for an off-day. What if you get your period? What if you don’t feel like it then? How often can you put that aside? Do you think a marriage can survive that? I need to be cuddled, tested, talked to, made love to, and if I don’t have those things I turn into a stone princess. I’m very sexual looking but I can be like ice when I’m near someone who doesn’t give off a sexual aura. I’m much more sexual than my husband. I need a man more than he needs a woman. And I want a man when I want one. That’s my ideal fantasy love. I love men. Men who are their own man. I don’t want a man who’s still growing up. My husband is the same person now that he was when I first met him. On exactly the same emotional level. He’s so goal oriented. He wants to be a senator. Ten years from now I’ll be a senator’s wife. Isn’t that funny? When he wants something he puts blinders on. That’s why he’s so successful. He’s disciplined and controlled. He’s never loose. He can’t be mussed. We play tennis, and after a few minutes, I’m a mess. He doesn’t have one hair on his head out of place. It’s not that he tries to be that way, he just is. He’s neat. Everything about him is neat. He’s the pinnacle of what everyone should be. Really, isn’t that awful? It makes life so boring. His image has been carried over on to me. We look alike so people think we are alike. But what have I ever done to make people think I’m so cherry pie? I’m not like him at all. I’m street smart. Emotional. Sensitive. I mean, he edits his thoughts. I can’t. It drives him nuts. I’m so uncontrollable he’s afraid of what I’m gonna say. I’ve been misquoted so often. I get so angry when I’m thrown into an article about him without my being talked to. He didn’t tell me you were doing a story on me, because he wasn’t sure I’d agree to it. When I found out, that old feeling clicked in me. I thought he set me up for it so I couldn’t refuse. He’s still reverberating from my wrath over the last story. Old news about the wives all hating me. A lot of Ken and Barbie shit. I told my husband, thanks a lot. Now, what are you gonna do about this? He said there would come a time. I said, when? My husband’s been in this town for twelve years and if people respected him as a man, they’d respect his wife, too&#8230;”</p>
<p>When the wife and her companion finally get up to leave, the maitre’d comes over to them. He apologizes to the wife for not having recognized her earlier. He is ashamed of himself, he says, Why, he watches her on television every morning. She forgives him with a smile, and then brushes his cheek with hers, her lips puckered into a kiss that caresses the air.</p>
<p><strong>THE HUSBAND</strong></p>
<p style="text-align: center;"><a href="http://www.bronxbanterblog.com/wordpress/wp-content/uploads/2012/03/garvey7_NEW.jpg"><img class="aligncenter  wp-image-81053" title="garvey7_NEW" src="http://www.bronxbanterblog.com/wordpress/wp-content/uploads/2012/03/garvey7_NEW-679x1024.jpg" alt="" width="543" height="819" /></a></p>
<p>The husband, dressed in a white baseball uniform with royal blue letters and red numerals, goes to the refrigerator in the clubhouse and withdraws a bottle of diet Pepsi. He does not bother to ask his guest, a bearded man in jeans, if he wants a soda, too. The husband scoops up some ice into a plastic cup and then pours the soda over the ice in such a way, the cup tilted at just the right angle, that the foam will not overflow the cup. Satisfied, he scissors his hair off his forehead and hands the cup to his guest.</p>
<p>In person, the husband does not look so boyishly soft as he does on television. He looks more rugged, manly, but in a Hollywood way, with a handsomely lined face. He is too handsome to be a long distance truck driver and not nearly scuffed enough to be a rodeo cowboy. Yet, his face has more character than one might expect, certainly more than that of the messianic Jim Jones, whom he closely resembles. The husband is sitting on a sofa in a small room off the clubhouse, watching a video tape of himself batting in a game. He stares at his image through narrowed eyes. Without taking his eyes off his image, he tells the man running the video tape to replay it. His image back-tracks like that in an old time comedy movie. Then it goes forward again, slower. He watches himself swing the bat. He fouls off the ball. Still without taking his eyes off his image, the husband says, “Not that far off. Yes. Not that far. Maybe move back in the box a bit.”</p>
<p>He speaks in a soft, droning, almost hypnotic voice, and it is not clear whether he is talking to anyone else in the room, or merely to himself. His image swings again. The husband says, “Hmmm. That’s it. That’s a training guide right there.” He nods his head and smiles. It is a small smile. Smug, almost. The smile of a man who is so obviously satisfied with himself, in a world of the dissatisfied.</p>
<p>The husband hops up the dugout steps onto the field and breaks into a trot towards first base while, around him, his teammates are taking pregame batting practice. He moves precisely, with a textbook stride, almost in slow motion. He is conscious of the way he runs and of the fact that he is being watched. His pumping arms are properly bent into L’s at his sides, and held away from his body a bit, like wings, as if to keep his shirt from wrinkling. He resembles a man trotting to catch a bus in a new silk shirt on a hot day.</p>
<p>A fan in the stands calls out his name. Without breaking stride, the husband glances back over his shoulder and bestows a blessing. He smiles. It is an odd smile, both humble and smug, and it is the same smile he shows in every newspaper and magazine photograph of himself. It is automatic, perfected, the smile of a man who is used to smiling often in public, even when the occasion does not demand it, just as a foreigner smiles too readily at things he does not understand.</p>
<p style="text-align: center;"><a href="http://www.bronxbanterblog.com/wordpress/wp-content/uploads/2012/03/52588555.jpg"><img class="aligncenter  wp-image-81260" title="52588555" src="http://www.bronxbanterblog.com/wordpress/wp-content/uploads/2012/03/52588555.jpg" alt="" width="600" height="375" /></a></p>
<p>Standing at first base, the husband takes ground balls during batting practice. He moves deftly around the bag, scooping up balls with studied nonchalance, and then pausing a moment to examine each ball. He looks for scuff marks or caked dirt that might cause the next ground ball to take a bad hop. If he finds a blemish he either tosses the ball into the dugout or else scrapes off the dirt with his fingernail before lobbing it back to his coach. He sets himself again in a classic first baseman’s pose, and waits for the next ball. He moves to his right, bends low and spears the ball. He moves with a certain stiffness, as if he has yet to loosen aching muscles. His are the movements of a man with a single focus of concentration, a man for whom nothing—running, picking up a ball, smiling—is natural or intuitive and everything is learned.</p>
<p>The husband trots over to the batting cage to take his swings. There is a crowd of people around the cage. Teammates. Opposing players in orange and black uniforms. Photographers with cameras slung around their necks. Reporters with tape recorders and steno pads. Television announcers wearing patchwork sports jackets and white patent leather loafers. The husband shakes hands with an opposing black player and makes a joke, “No socialism before a game.” It is a malapropism. He means socializing. He allows each writer a few moments for an interview; he poses for photographers; he stands for an interview with a television sportscaster. He greets everyone around the cage with good cheer and a smile. (“You should say something nice to everyone,” he has said.)</p>
<p>It is the same smile for each. Only his compliments vary. They are personal to each man. He asks one man what kind of gas mileage he is getting with his new car. He congratulates another on his daughter’s acceptance into a prestigious college. He compliments a third on a book he has written. (“I gave it to my wife,” he says. “She read it three times.”) Each person is slightly taken aback at his knowledge of their personal affairs; and then flattered that he, a star, has taken the time to bestow a blessing; and, finally, disturbed, although they are not sure why. It is, as if, like a good politician, he has memorized the voluminous file cards his advance men have accumulated on the personal lives of each constituent he is about to meet at a fund raiser.</p>
<p>Twenty minutes before the game is to begin, the husband is seated by his locker in the clubhouse. Around him, his teammates joke amongst themselves, ignoring him. (“I don’t understand how he does it,” says the wife. “His locker is between those of two players he doesn’t get along with.”) “It’s not so hard,” says the husband. “You have to learn to live with thirty players because you’ve got to play together.”</p>
<p>Then he tells a sportswriter it would be best to conduct the interview in the concrete runway where they can have some “privacy.” They go out to the runway and sit on uniform trunks. Before the writer can even ask a question, the husband begins the interview in his soft, droning voice. A star, he is used to being interviewed. Immediately, he steers the interview in the direction in which he wishes it to go. He talks about his children. How he sent them to a Catholic school to get a Catholic base. How difficult it is for him to function like other fathers. Still, despite the burden of his stardom, his daughters are very well-adjusted. He and his wife try to be like other parents, he says, and then, “I can be a silly daddy, too, you know.”</p>
<p>He looks down and flutters his eyelids as he speaks. It is meant to be a humbling gesture, The Emperor Without Clothes, but it comes off only as contrived. Self-conscious in the extreme.</p>
<p>“I always try to do what I feel like doing,” he continues. “I’m not acting. This is not a concentrated effort. I am the same as I was ten years ago. Everyone has their own space and they have to decide how they want to use it. It’s natural to me to say, ‘Hello,’ to everyone. To wave to those little old ladies who haven’t missed a game. I look forward to seeing them. In life, you’re either a people person or a private person. I’m a people person. I like dealing with groups of people. I think I can get along with banker’s sons and blacks from the ghettos. When I retire, I’d like to go into politics.”</p>
<p>He talks for a few more minutes about his political ambitions, and then he begins to talk about his wife. Her 3.95 grade point average in college. Her energy. Her deep insight. Her talent for interviewing. The speed with which she mastered her talk show format. “It amazes me,” he says, truly amazed, and he goes on. He can’t stop. About his wife, he is compulsive.</p>
<p style="text-align: center;"><a href="http://www.bronxbanterblog.com/wordpress/wp-content/uploads/2012/03/Welk.jpg"><img class="aligncenter  wp-image-81059" title="Welk" src="http://www.bronxbanterblog.com/wordpress/wp-content/uploads/2012/03/Welk.jpg" alt="" width="423" height="419" /></a></p>
<p>It is Band Day at the stadium. A few minutes before the game is to begin, a dozen or so colorfully-uniformed high school bands assemble in front of a small conductor’s platform at the pitcher’s mound. The public address announcer introduces the guest conductor. It is Lawrence Welk! The fans applaud. Welk, smiling, wearing a powder blue blazer, white slacks and shoes, leaps out of the home team dugout as agilely as any young player. He walks briskly towards the pitcher’s mound. His hair is slicked back into a stiff pompadour, and he looks remarkably fit for a man in his seventies. The public address announcer calls attention to this fact, to Welk’s age—seventy-seven. The fans applaud louder. Welk breaks into a trot.</p>
<p style="text-align: center;"><a href="http://www.bronxbanterblog.com/wordpress/wp-content/uploads/2012/03/la_sab_mvpstevegarvey_576.jpg"><img class="aligncenter  wp-image-81196" title="la_sab_mvpstevegarvey_576" src="http://www.bronxbanterblog.com/wordpress/wp-content/uploads/2012/03/la_sab_mvpstevegarvey_576.jpg" alt="" width="403" height="524" /></a></p>
<p>“Isn’t he amazing, folks, seventy-seven years young!” says the public address announcer. Welk is running now, as fast as a seventy-seven-year-old man in patent leather loafers can run on slick grass. When he reaches the pitcher’s mound, he is exhausted, but still smiling. Two men grip him by each elbow and propel him up the platform. . . .There is something disturbing about Lawrence Welk’s vitality, about his show of vitality—at seventy-seven. It is not enough for him to be remarkably fit at that age—an age when most men are tending a lone orange tree behind their mobile home in St. Petersburg, Florida—he is compelled to show us how fit he is—at seventy-seven. He intends to remind people of what they will never be, to remind them of how dissatisfied they should be in the face of his obvious satisfaction with what he is. He is gloating in the same way many people feel that the husband is gloating over the successes of his life—his wife, his children, his talent, his image, his future. To make matters worse, the husband is satisfied with himself so soon, at thirty-one! He seems so positive he is the best he can be, that he strives only to protect the delicate balance of his perfect life without ever questioning the worth of what he’s created. It is an enviable state, and those who have not reached it resent him for implying that this is their failure. But he doesn’t. Unlike Welk, the husband does not intend to rub our noses in his perfection. He is merely a simple man who has worked very hard at being what he thinks he should be, and now he is single-mindedly compelled to maintain the standards he has set for himself.</p>
<p><strong>THE PROBLEM</strong></p>
<p style="text-align: center;"><a href="http://www.bronxbanterblog.com/wordpress/wp-content/uploads/2012/03/garvey3_NEW.jpg"><img class="aligncenter  wp-image-81052" title="garvey3_NEW" src="http://www.bronxbanterblog.com/wordpress/wp-content/uploads/2012/03/garvey3_NEW-1004x1024.jpg" alt="" width="562" height="574" /></a></p>
<p>“My husband is a very warm, gentle, understanding, considerate&#8230;father. His controlled traits pay off with our children,” she says. The wife, dressed in a peach-colored, velour jogging suit, is sitting cross-legged on the print sofa in the den of her house. A bearded man in jeans is sitting in a chair beside her. He is leaning towards her, his elbows on his knees, his hands folded in front of him. There is a tape recorder on the coffee table in front of her, the microphone aimed at her. She does not look at the microphone as she speaks, nor does she look at the man to her left. She stares straight ahead, through unseeing eyes, as she speaks in her brusque, whiny, yet absolutely unemotional voice.</p>
<p>“We don’t talk baseball or my show, anymore,” she says. “Just the children. We’re not good in certain areas. I’m not as affectionate as I used to be and he, he’s so jumbled up in his career and his outside interests&#8230;When I say, ‘Let’s talk about it,’ he says, ‘Whoa! Is this gonna be the same old stuff? How unhappy you are?’ I say, ‘Oh, forget it, then!’ Maybe relationships are just bound to deteriorate gradually, I don’t know? Don’t get me wrong, we’re not serving papers, or anything. It’s just&#8230;I wonder, are marriages ideal anymore? I mean, I’m out here in the land of fantasy and I see relationships come and go and I don’t know whether or not it’s worth it to cash in on something stable in order to find something more fulfilling. That’s why I want to try everything to make this thing work. During the off-season we’re going to Europe. I really hope in the next year my husband can develop to keep my interest. I want to see if what I feel in love with is still there&#8230;</p>
<p>“Sometimes, though, I feel I’m banging my head against the wall. I’m trying to get him to see other possibilities, that the way he sees things is not the only way. But he’s so satisfied with the way he is. He’s stayed the same all these years. He does everything the way people wish they could do them. He can’t break that mold. It’s really him. He’s a nice guy. He gives and all, but&#8230;ah, I want electricity, a spark, some idiosyncrasy&#8230;Now catch this act. It was so stupid. A few days ago we had three hours to ourselves. We’re driving in the car. He says to me, ‘Where do you want to go to eat?’ I mean, I’d love my man to say, ‘I’m taking you here and then back home to make love.’ Now, I could have said that, but it wouldn’t be the same. I want him to be smart enough to arrange his meetings around me. I don’t want him to have to be told. I don’t want to teach him anymore. Oh, he tries, but he can’t be something he’s not. He has no interests other than baseball. He doesn’t understand music, or art. Those LeRoy Neiman prints? They all look alike to me. And he’s not a sexual guy. Sometimes he teases me. He walks around the house with this great body, and when I try to focus love and attention on it, it’s not there. I’m a girl who needs a regular sex life&#8230;I’ve reached the point where I don’t care anymore. Then again, maybe it’s me? Maybe it’s not his problem, but mine? Maybe I haven’t told him exactly what I want? Maybe this will pass and I’m just going through a cycle? Sometimes I think I’m distorted, that what I want can never be. I told my husband he should have married another girl. I don’t want to sell him short. I don’t want to downgrade him; he has no choice because of the structures of this sport. When we have our little fights, I say, ‘How do you fight with a sport?’ How do you do that?</p>
<p>“I’m open now, because I’m angry. I’m tired of that Ken and Barbie shit. I never questioned before. I was always busy with the children. The suburbs drove me nuts. I had to get out. That’s why I went back to work. Maybe my job will be a way out. I don’t want to give up what I’ve got unless I can go to something else. I don’t want to drag my kids around during my indecision. If I can tolerate it, if I can live within the confines of this marriage, I’ll stay. I’m not wanting for anything. It’s convenient. No, it’s not even that. That’s not enough. Maybe some miracle happens to help you make up your mind? Sometimes I wonder if I met someone would a relationship develop. I haven’t had any affairs yet, but I wonder what it would be like. Someone who is his own man. I’m untapped. No one touches me. There’s no mentor in my life. Someone to tell me to shut up. I get so depressed. I have too much time to think. What am I doing here? Life is going on around me and I’m not participating. My security is to go out and then come back. I can’t keep doing this. Everyone tells me how lucky I am. If I divorced my husband I’d have to get out of town. He’s a god here. Where would I go without my husband? Do you know what a price it is to be told that? A real kick. I mean, just because he doesn’t beat me or anything, it doesn’t mean. . . .”</p>
<p>She falls silent for a moment. She is still staring straight ahead. Throughout her monologue, the tone in her voice has remained constant. Brusque. Unemotional. Confusing to her listener. How can she reveal such intimacies without the nuances of felt emotion? Does she feel nothing? Or is it simply that there is some strange lack in her, some inability to communicate her deepest emotions in conventional ways? She does not cry. Her voice does not falter. Her expression never varies. In fact, at times, she flashes her brittle smile precisely at that moment one expects her to cry. She reveals everything—trivialities and intimacies—on the same note. It is the single note of a Public Persona, of one who is used to smiling in front of a camera, or the public, no matter what the mood of the moment may be. It is, as if her nature had been formed in some Charm School where she was taught always to smile, to be nice, to express herself in a pleasant way. Now, at thirty, when she is feeling unpleasant emotions, she knows of no other way to express them. It is her curse. She will always be misread. She will always appear to be cool, aloof, unfeeling, no matter how deeply she feels. She is like her husband. Their style will always be misconstrued as a lack of substance.</p>
<p>She begins again. “Sometimes, half-kiddingly, I say to my husband, ‘If I ever left you, would you always be my good friend?’ He says, ‘No,’ and then a little later, ‘O.K.’ He’s like a brother to me. What I’m hoping—if I don’t get involved with a lover somewhere—is that&#8230;I’m going to have to&#8230;” She falls silent again. She is still staring straight ahead. Her face still has that perfectly composed look, only now; she is trying very hard not to cry. She forces back her tears with a weak laugh and a brittle smile before she can continue, “&#8230;we’ll have to be good friends for awhile&#8230;maybe we can&#8230;I mean, sometimes, I’ll catch a vignette, it’s like I’m wearing 3D glasses, and suddenly I’ll see something we’re doing together, and it’s all right again. Maybe we’re at a show, or playing tennis, and I’ll say to myself, ‘Oh, that’s it! That’s fine!’ But then it goes away and a few nights later I’m sitting home alone, crying, thinking, is this the future for me? To gut it out&#8230;”</p>
<p><strong>THE COUPLE</strong></p>
<p style="text-align: center;"><a href="http://www.bronxbanterblog.com/wordpress/wp-content/uploads/2012/03/396790770_tp.jpg"><img class="aligncenter size-full wp-image-81198" title="396790770_tp" src="http://www.bronxbanterblog.com/wordpress/wp-content/uploads/2012/03/396790770_tp.jpg" alt="" width="400" height="300" /></a></p>
<p>It is dusk in Calabasas Park. The bearded man walks up to the front door of the house on the bluff at the end of Park Vicente, and rings the door bell. The husband appears, smiling, and welcomes him inside. The husband is wearing a V-neck sweater and gray slacks. He leads the bearded man to the family room where he has been watching television. They sit down on a sofa, and, after a few words of small talk, the husband returns his attention to the television. He is now watching a program, whose premise, in imitation of the Superstars competition, is to find the best bar bouncer and the best belly flop diver in the country.</p>
<p>A huge black man (Mr. T), who claims he was Leon Spinks’ former bodyguard, is the last contestant in the bouncer competition. Mr. T has a shaved head, a goatee, and a ring through his nose, and he looks like someone who should be hanging by one hand from the Empire State Building. A bell rings and Mr. T dives over a fake bar, picks up a dummy and heaves it, head first, through a plate glass window. Then Mr. T crashes through a door, splintering it, and rings a bell. His time is recorded and he is judged the winner. He is interviewed by Bruce Jenner.</p>
<p>After a commercial, during which the husband is still silent, the belly flop championships begin. A man in a straw boater and a tuxedo climbs up onto a diving board and leaps off into a pool. He lands with a splat on his stomach. The audience around the pool cheers wildly. The next contestant, a man in a red t-shirt, dives off the board and as he is suspended in mid-air, his arms outstretched like wings, he bursts into flames. The flames are doused when he hits the water. The bearded man can’t keep from laughing at this. The husband looks at him for a moment, and only then does he smile.</p>
<p>The wife appears, holding the daughter with the broken wrist. The daughter, a beautiful blonde child with pouting lips, is sobbing with pain. The husband says to the bearded man, “Well, let’s get the interview over. We can do it in my office.”</p>
<p>But before he can raise, his wife snaps at him.</p>
<p>“Oh, Garvey, you make me sick,” she says. “Stay right there!” She goes over to the television set and turns it off. “Did you offer him a drink, at least?”</p>
<p>The husband jumps up and asks the bearded man if he would like a Pepsi. He goes to the kitchen to get one. While he is gone, the wife says, “Sometimes, he just&#8230;I mean, he leaves the dumb TV on when you’re here. I hate that. And then he pulls that interview shit&#8230;” She shakes her head.</p>
<p>When the husband returns with the Pepsi, the wife hands him their daughter for a few moments. The husband is very careful in the way he holds his daughter. While his wife and the bearded man talk, he sooths his daughter with his voice. Soon, her eyes fill with sleep. He gently presses her head to his chest. Finally, the wife tells the bearded man she had best put her daughter to bed, and then get to bed herself in order to get up in time for tomorrow morning’s show. The husband hands her the child, and the wife and child go upstairs. The husband looks down at his sweater. His sweater is wrinkled from the warmth of his daughter’s body. With the palms of both hands, he smoothes away the wrinkles, and then sits back on the sofa.</p>
<p>“This is the first year, she’s been out working,” says the husband. “She’s sacrificed a lot for my career. I’d like her to have a job of more importance than mine, not so much for her to be a success, but so she’ll be happy. I love the woman very deeply. I have this sense of injustice because of what I do. It’s been draining to her. You see her now in a period of frustration. The things she’s told you, she’s told you out of emotion. Deep down she knows there’s nothing I can do about my job. She used to do a lot of things with me but now she doesn’t have time because of her job. I do things alone or else I try to fit my schedule into hers&#8230;</p>
<p>“We’re not so different from most people, really. People would see that if they just didn’t take into account our appearance. We’re just two people who love each other and who have gone through a lot&#8230;I hope&#8230;maybe&#8230;it’s just a cycle she’s going through&#8230;what do you think?”</p>
<p>When the bearded man tells the husband what he wants to hear, the husband smiles. It is unlike his other smile. It is a smile of absolute vulnerability. The husband is genuinely infatuated with his wife, in the same way a porcelain collector is infatuated with an exquisite piece—a ballerina poised on one toe as she is about to pirouette. He has loved her in the same way for ten years, and now that that is no longer enough for her, he is confused.</p>
<p style="text-align: center;"><a href="http://www.bronxbanterblog.com/wordpress/wp-content/uploads/2012/03/tumblr_loz7snFL831qa4xsro1_500.png"><img class="aligncenter  wp-image-81213" title="tumblr_loz7snFL831qa4xsro1_500" src="http://www.bronxbanterblog.com/wordpress/wp-content/uploads/2012/03/tumblr_loz7snFL831qa4xsro1_500.png" alt="" width="450" height="602" /></a></p>
<p>Finally, the bearded man gets up to leave. The husband shakes his hand at the door and tells him he is sure he and his wife will resolve their difficulties. The bearded man says he is sure they will, too. The husband opens the front door and the bearded man steps outside into the darkness. It is night, now, and strangely quiet. There is not even the sound of crickets in the hot stillness of this arid land that was not meant for human habitation. The bearded man gets into his car, and as he pulls out of the driveway, he sees the husband, a silhouette, framed in the doorway by the light at his back. The silhouette waves once, and then turns its back and closes the door.</p>
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		<title>Lethal Weapon</title>
		<link>http://www.bronxbanterblog.com/2012/03/06/lethal-weapon/</link>
		<comments>http://www.bronxbanterblog.com/2012/03/06/lethal-weapon/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Tue, 06 Mar 2012 17:39:47 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alex Belth</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[1: Featured]]></category>
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		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.bronxbanterblog.com/?p=80956</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[From the Pat Jordan archives here&#8217;s &#8220;Bad,&#8221; a piece he wrote on Rorion Gracie. It...]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>From the Pat Jordan archives here&#8217;s &#8220;Bad,&#8221; a piece he wrote on Rorion Gracie. It originally appeared in the September, 1989 issue of Playboy.</p>
<p style="text-align: center;"> <a href="http://www.bronxbanterblog.com/wordpress/wp-content/uploads/2012/03/Helio-Gracie.jpg"><img class="aligncenter size-full wp-image-80963" title="Helio-Gracie" src="http://www.bronxbanterblog.com/wordpress/wp-content/uploads/2012/03/Helio-Gracie.jpg" alt="" width="460" height="276" /></a></p>
<p>Rorion Gracie is willing to fight to the death to prove he&#8217;s the toughest man in the west.</p>
<p>The toughest man in the United States holds no official titles and has had only one fight in years. He lives with his pregnant wife and four children, three small sons and a baby daughter, in a modest ranch house on a tidy little street of similar homes in Torrance, California. He is 37, tall and skinny at 6&#8217;2&#8243;, 165 pounds, and he does not look very tough. He looks mor like Tom Selleck than like Mr. T. He is dark and handsome like Selleck, with wavy black hair, a trim mustache and a charming, self-deprecating smile. He spends more time in the kitchen than his wife does and wears a woman&#8217;s apron. He has an idiosyncratic high-pitched laugh. He picks up a yellowed newspaper with an account of one of his father&#8217;s fights, adjusts his bifocals and reads. &#8220;&#8216;The most savage, stupid bloody desires of the audience were satisfied,&#8217;&#8221; he says. Then he laughs. &#8220;Heh-heh!&#8221;</p>
<p>&#8220;I never spank my sons,&#8221; Rorion says, &#8220;because my father never spanked me.&#8221; He spends as much time as possible with his sons. He drives them to their soccer practice in his station wagon. He spends the day with them at the beach.</p>
<p>Rorion once fought a kick-boxing champion and made him beg for mercy in less then three minutes. Before the fight, the kick boxer had stood in his corner of the ring and flexed his muscular arms. He cut the air with savage kicks. The crowd oohed and aahed. Rorion, skinny and stoop-shouldered, stood in his corner and waited. Two minutes and 15 seconds after the bell sounded, he was straddling the kick boxer on the mat in such a way that, if the kick boxer had not surrendered, Rorion would have &#8220;choked him out.&#8221;</p>
<p>Rorion has made a standing offer to fight anyone in the United States, winner take all, for $100,000. So far he has had no takers &#8211; for one simple reason. Rorion&#8217;s fights are fights to the finish with no rules. His fights are merely street brawls in a ring bounded by ropes. Kicking, punching, head butting, elbow and knee hits are all fair play in a Gracie fight. Only the accouterments of a street brawl &#8211; broken bottles, ash cans, bricks &#8211; are missing. The only purpose of referee serves in a Gracie fight is to acknowledge his opponent&#8217;s surrender when he taps the mat with his hand or passes out from a choke hold.</p>
<p style="text-align: center;"><a href="http://www.bronxbanterblog.com/wordpress/wp-content/uploads/2012/03/grace2.jpg"><img class="aligncenter  wp-image-80958" title="grace2" src="http://www.bronxbanterblog.com/wordpress/wp-content/uploads/2012/03/grace2.jpg" alt="" width="518" height="680" /></a></p>
<p>Rorion (pronounced Horion, in the Portuguese way) is a master of a kind of no-holds-barred jujitsu practiced by his family in Brazil for 60 years. Gracie jujitsu is a bouillabaisse of the other martial arts: judo (throws), karate (kicks, punches), aikido (twists), boxing (punches) and wrestling (grappling, holds). Its primary purpose is defensive; i.e., to render attackers immobile. Rorion believes that since most real fights end up on the ground 90 percent of the time, Gracie jujitsu is the most devastating of all martial arts, because it relies on a series of intricate wrestling-like moves that are most effective when the combatants are on the ground. All a jujitsu master must do is avoid his attacker&#8217;s kicks, punches and stabs until he can throw him to the ground and then apply either a choke hold to render him unconscious or a hold in which he can break his attacker&#8217;s arm, leg, back or neck. A jujitsu fight is like a chess match, in that the winner is usually the one who can think the most moves ahead of his opponent.</p>
<p>Jujitsu originated in India 2000 years ago, travelled to Japan (via China) three centuries ago and was introduced to Brazil through Rorion&#8217;s family 60 years ago, when a touring Japanese master taught Rorion&#8217;s uncle some basic moves. His uncle taught Rorion&#8217;s father and the two men grew enamoured of it, as only two small men with monstrous egos could. They took Japanese jujitsu a step further than their teachers by introducing techniques that required less strength than Japanese style and would make their family the most feared and famous in all of Brazil. Rorion&#8217;s father, Helio, once fought an opponent in the ring before 20,000 screaming spectators for three hours and 40 minutes, nonstop, before the police finally separated the bloodied combatants. In another ring fight, he so savaged his opponent with kicks to his kidney that many attributed his subsequent death to the fight. When a rival martial-arts teacher once accused the Gracie family of fixing its fights, Helio, surrounded by a taunting crowd, confronted him on the street. He had broken the man&#8217;s arms and ribs before the police arrested him. He was sentenced to two and a half years in jail for that beating, but the president of Brazil, a fan of the Gracie family, pardoned him within a week.</p>
<p>Rorion laughs and says, &#8220;Heh-heh! My dad kicked his butt.&#8221; He is sitting in the den of his tidy little house, sifting through the many newspaper and magazine articles written about his family, while his sons wrestle, jujitsu style, on the floor.</p>
<p>Rorion holds up a photograph of his father in a kimono taken when Helio was 34. He is small, slim man at 5&#8217;8&#8243;, 135 pounds, with slicked-back hair, an aquiline nose and a pencil-thin mustache. He is hip-tossing his older brother, Carlos, in an open filed. &#8220;That was the year my dad read a Reader&#8217;s Digest article that said a boxer beat a jujitsu guy,&#8221; Rorion says. &#8220;Heh-heh! My father offered to fight five boxers in one night. At various times, he offered to fight Primo Carnera, Ezzard Charles and Joe Louis. He put up sixteen thousand dollars and told Louis he&#8217;d fight with Louis having no gloves, just taped hands. No one took up his challenge.&#8221; Rorion shrugs. &#8220;Louis was on vacation and here was this little bee buzzing in his ear and giving him no peace. Heh-heh!&#8221;</p>
<p style="text-align: center;"><a href="http://www.bronxbanterblog.com/wordpress/wp-content/uploads/2012/03/helio-gracie-painting.jpeg"><img class="aligncenter size-full wp-image-80959" title="helio gracie painting" src="http://www.bronxbanterblog.com/wordpress/wp-content/uploads/2012/03/helio-gracie-painting.jpeg" alt="" width="540" height="720" /></a></p>
<p>Helio reigned as the self-proclaimed toughest man in the occidental world for 25 years. He fought 14 fights in the ring and lost only two of them, one to Japanese master Kimura and the other to a much younger man &#8211; in fact, his protege &#8211; when Helio, at 42, was out of shape. Helio is 75 now, the patriarch of a family of nine children, including seven sons, and 18 grandchildren. Rorion has a photograph of his father at 73, still fit, gaunt-faced, with his aquiline nose and menacing pale-blue eyes. He is posing in his kimono with three of his sons, Rorion, Relson and Rickson, in their kimonos. Father and sons are standing identically &#8211; legs spread, arms crossed at their chests, eyes glaring at the camera &#8211; underneath a seal of the Gracie Jujitsu Academy, which Carlos and Helio founded in Rio in the Twenties. Helio&#8217;s sons have all taught at the academy at one time or another. They are black belts. They are bigger than their father, darker, but the look in their eyes is only a parody of their father&#8217;s truly menacing look. Except for Rickson. He has his own look. Not menacing but devoid of emotion. The blankness of the supremely confident. Rickson is 29, as muscular as a bodybuilder, with a Marine&#8217;s crewcut, the high cheekbones of an Inca Indian and a square jaw. If Rorion is amiably handsome, Rickson is devastatingly handsome. Noted photographer Bruce Weber devoted 36 pages of his book on Rio (O Rio De Janeiro) to the Gracies and Rickson. Rickson as a baby being tossed high into the air by his father. Rorion and Relson as small boys on the beach, Rorion hooking his leg behind his brother&#8217;s before throwing him to the sand. Rickson, in bikini shorts, on his back on a mat in a ring, his legs wrapped around the hips of a muscular black man, also in bikini shorts, who is trying to strangle him.</p>
<p>&#8220;Zulu,&#8221; says Rorion. &#8220;A street fighter. He was thirty pounds heavier than Rickson. He threw Rickson out of the ring four times in their fight.&#8221; Rorion gets up to put on a video tape of Rickson&#8217;s fight with Zulu for the title of the toughest man in the occidental world. A grainy image flickers on the screen. Zulu is sitting astride Rickson, on his back. He trying to gouge out Rickson&#8217;s eyes. Rickson keeps twisting his head left and right to avoid Zulu&#8217;s stabbing fingers while, at the same time, he is kicking his heels in the sides of Zulu&#8217;s back where his kidneys are. Rorion laughs and says, &#8220;Heh-heh! After the fight, Zulu was pissing blood for weeks.&#8221;</p>
<p>The two men, locked in combat, roll toward the edge of the ring. The crowd surges forward. Hands reach out and slap at the combatants. The referee kicks at the hands, trying to drive the crowd back, while he grabs the combatants&#8217; legs and pulls them back to the center of the ring. A rain of crushed paper cups descends on the ring. The referee kicks the cups out of the ring like a soccer player.</p>
<p>&#8220;Wild people, huh?&#8221; says Rorion. &#8220;Brazil is a violent country. Watch here.&#8221; Rickson stops kicking Zulu&#8217;s kidneys, locks his legs around his hips and rolls him over so that now he is on top. He unleashes a barrage of bare-fisted punches to Zulu&#8217;s face. Zulu tries to block the blows with his hands.</p>
<p>Zulu manages to roll Rickson over now so that his is on top of him, close to the edge of the ring again. Before Zulu can set himself, Rickson twists Zulu&#8217;s body so that Zulu is lying on top of him, both men facing the overhead lights. Rickson gets Zulu in a choke hold and squeezes. Zulu&#8217;s eyes begin to roll back in his head.</p>
<p>Rorion, smiling, turns off the video and says, &#8220;I used to change Rickson&#8217;s diapers. Now he&#8217;s the best in the world. Heh-heh!&#8221; It amuses him that he is the toughest man in the United States and yet he is not even the toughest man in his own family. &#8220;Rickson has never been beaten,&#8221; he says. &#8220;No on will challenge him after Zulu. It&#8217;s been three years. The Gracie family is the only family in history that will fight anyone with no rules. The Gracies don&#8217;t believe in Mike Tyson. Rickson issued a public challenge to Mike Tyson, but he has not responded.&#8221;</p>
<p>All the while Rorion has been talking. His three sons have been grappling on the floor, like monkeys, in a silent parody of their father and uncle Rickson. Their names are Ryron, Rener and Ralek. Nearby is his daughter Segina. Rorion has two daughters by a previous marriage in Brazil, Riane, 12, and Rose. Rorion believes that the letter R has mystical powers. He also shuns common names, like Robert, because they carry their own associations. &#8220;An original name has only the aura you give to it,&#8221; he says. It is a belief, one of many, that Rorion inherited from his father, whom he worships almost as a god. (Rorion&#8217;s other siblings besides his brothers Relson, 36, and Rickson are brothers Rolker, 24, Royler, 23, Royce, 22, Robin, 15, and sisters Rherica, 20, and Ricci, 12.)</p>
<p>Rorion&#8217;s beliefs were fashioned out of Helio and Carlo&#8217; devotion to jujitsu, not merely as a martial art but as the cornerstone for a way of living that encompasses every aspect of a man&#8217;s life, from morality and sex to diet. Rorion, for instance, eats only raw fruits and, occasionally, vegetables, and only in certain combinations as prescribed by his uncle Carlos, a nutritionist. His back yard is a greengrocer&#8217;s market of boxes of apples, watermelons, bananas, mangoes and papayas he has bought in bulk. A typical Gracie meal might include watermelon juice, sliced persimmons and a side of bananas, and the talk around the Gracie dinner table between Rorion and his wife invariably concerns such questions as whether apricots should be combined with mangoes at a meal. His sons have only a passing acquaintance with foods other than fruits. They have had chicken maybe three times in their lives, and once, at a friend&#8217;s birthday party, they were given lollipops, which they began smacking against the side of their heads because they didn&#8217;t know what they were.</p>
<p>If the Gracie family&#8217;s belief in the efficacy of fruits and the letter R seems nutty, if harmless, then their devotion to warrior values such as courage, honour and chivalry borders on the fanatical. Gracie men do fight at the drop of an insult, with predictably savage results. When Carlos and Helio returned home one night and found a robber in their house, they offered him the choice of fighting or going to jail. He chose to fight. In minutes, his screams woke the neighbourhood: &#8220;Jail! Jail! Jail!&#8221; When Uncle Carlos fought, he was not content merely to beat an opponent, he also wanted to teach him a lesson, or, as Uncle Carlos likes to say, &#8220;He&#8217;s gonna get to dreamland all right, but first he must walk through the garden of punishment.&#8221;</p>
<p>Rorion laughs and shakes his head. &#8220;Uncle Carlos was a bratty little kid. WHen he saw a Japanese guy carrying heavy loads of laundry, he liked to trip him. Heh-heh! He was very aggressive.&#8221; When Carlos found opponents scarce for his ring fights, he advertised for them in the newspaper under the headline that read, &#8220;IF YOU WANT A BROKEN ARM OR RIB, CONTACT CARLOS GRACIE AT THIS NUMBER.&#8221;</p>
<p style="text-align: center;"><a href="http://www.bronxbanterblog.com/wordpress/wp-content/uploads/2012/03/IKF37-1991-08-Cov.jpg"><img class="aligncenter  wp-image-80960" title="IKF37 1991-08 Cov" src="http://www.bronxbanterblog.com/wordpress/wp-content/uploads/2012/03/IKF37-1991-08-Cov.jpg" alt="" width="539" height="747" /></a></p>
<p>Rorion Gracie first visited the United States in 1969, when he was 17. He bummed around New York, L.A. and Hawaii for a year. He worked in a restaurant and on a construction site, where he slept. &#8220;I was always the first one on the job in the morning,&#8221; he says. When his finances got precarious, he panhandled on the street. After years of being protected in the Gracie bosom in Rio, he learned to live on his own. &#8220;I grew a lot,&#8221; he says. &#8220;Trouble only comes to test our reactions.&#8221;</p>
<p>When Rorion returned to Brazil at the end of 1970, he went to college, got a law degree, though he has never practiced law, got married, had two children and then got divorced. In 1979, he decided it was time to cut the Gracie umbilical cord and return to the States for good to establish Gracie Jujitsu in the States.</p>
<p>&#8220;I felt there were more opportunities in America to spread the work of the Gracie myth,&#8221; he says. &#8220;I felt that in Brazil, the Gracie family had reached the top and I didn&#8217;t want to stay there and live off of my father&#8217;s fame.&#8221;</p>
<p>The Gracie myth in Brazil began with George Gracie, a blue-eyed Scottish sailor who settled in Brazil in the early 1800&#8242;s. His descendants were bankers, diplomats, rubber-plantation barons and confidants of Brazilian emperors. A different kind of fame commenced with Carlos and Helio, whose fights were the stuff of legends. Helio was the first jujitsu master in the occidental world to defeat a Japanese master, Namiki, in 1932. He challenged any and all comers to fight in the ring with him, without rules, to the death. He fought a man to the death, only to have him surrender after four minutes. A newspaper story the following day said that the man had chosen not to die and dubbed him &#8220;The Dead Chicken.&#8221; Helio fought Fred Ebert for 14 rounds of ten minutes each, until the police climbed into the ring to separate the two combatants, who had broken noses, lost teeth, welts over their eyes and blood streaming down their faces. The fan rioted at the halting of the fight. When Helio challenged a famous Brazilian boxer known as The Drop of Fire to a fight to the death, more than 20,000 fans showed up at the stadium. Only The Drop of Fire never showed, and overnight, the press dubbed him The Drop of Fear. Once, Helio dived into the turbulent, shark-infested Atlantic Ocean to save a man from drowning and was given his nation&#8217;s Medal of Honour for his heroism.</p>
<p>Finally, in early 1951, Helio choked to unconsciousness Japan&#8217;s number-two master, Kato, in a fight in Brazil that earned him a shot at Japan&#8217;s premiere jujitsu master, the toughest man in all the world, Kimura. The fight took place in October of 1951 before thousands of Brazilian fans. kimura, 80 pounds heavier than Helio, agreed to the fight only if Helio, who had a reputation for never surrendering, would promise to tap the mat in surrender if his position seemed hopeless. &#8220;kimura was a gentleman,&#8221; say Rorion, &#8220;and he didn&#8217;t like to go to sleep at night dreaming of the sound of broken arms.&#8221; The fight lasted 13 minutes. Kimura got Helio in a choke hold and noticed blood coming out of Helio&#8217;s ear. &#8220;You all right?&#8221; Kimura said. &#8220;Yes,&#8221; Helio said. &#8220;Good,&#8221; Kimura said, and grabbed Helio&#8217;s head and began to crush it like an overripe melon. Carlos threw in the towel.</p>
<p>The next day, Kimura appeared at the Gracie academy to invite Helio to teach at the Imperial Academy of Japan. Even though Helio wasn&#8217;t scheduled to fight, Kimura could not guarantee his safety in Japan, where the fans often threaten to kill non-Japanese masters to maintain their monopoly of that martial art. Helio refused the offer. None of the current Japanese masters have dared venture to Rickson&#8217;s home turf of Rio.</p>
<p>&#8220;The Brazilian youth had no idols before my father,&#8221; says Rorion. &#8220;They felt there was nothing important known about Brazil. My father gave them hope. Something to believe in.&#8221;</p>
<p>Rorion was 27 when he decided to come to the States to spread the word of the Gracie myth. He felt that the seed of Gracie jujitsu would flourish in the fertile soil of America, where men are bigger and stronger than in Brazil. He felt that American men could become a kind of master race of jujitsu warriors. Furthermore, he felt that men, and their women, too, were tired of their world image as the wimps of feminism. As proof, he could point to the popularity of such American movie actors as Sylvester Stallone, Arnold Schwarzenegger and Chuck Norris, who personified in their movies the kind of macho warrior that bore the striking resemblance to the roles assumed by Gracie men in real life in Brazil. Only the Gracie men did not need bazookas and machine guns.</p>
<p>Rorion moved to Southern California in 1979 and began to spread the word of Gracie jujitsu while trying to support himself in a strange country. He took a job cleaning houses. He met a woman whose husband was a movie producer. &#8220;You should be in movies,&#8221; she told Rorion. Her husband took him to Central Casting and soon he was appearing as an extra in such TV series as Hart to Hart, Starsky and Hutch and Hotel. Rorion left the housecleaning business and set up a jujitsu mat in his garage, where he began to teach students. The youngest was the four-year-old son of a movie producer and the oldest, a 75-year-old retired Marine general. When a movie producer saw his fight against Ralph Alegria, the kick boxer, he hired him as a consultant for Lethal Weapon. Rorion choreographed the final fight scene between Mel Gibson and Gary Busey in that movie. Then he met Chuck Norris and began to teach him jujitsu for his movie Hero and the Terror.</p>
<p style="text-align: center;"><a href="http://www.bronxbanterblog.com/wordpress/wp-content/uploads/2012/03/bio-rorion.jpg"><img class="aligncenter size-full wp-image-80961" title="bio-rorion" src="http://www.bronxbanterblog.com/wordpress/wp-content/uploads/2012/03/bio-rorion.jpg" alt="" width="260" height="461" /></a></p>
<p>While he waited for Gracie jujitsu to catch on in the States, Rorion busied himself with his movies, his students, demonstrations for law-enforcement agencies and colleges and an occasional challenge from a beach bully. He issued a $100,000 challenge, winner take all, to a fight to the death. Finally, a few months ago, a producer called to tell him about a documentary movie he was filming on the martial arts. A kick boxer in that movie, who claimed he was &#8220;the baddest dude in the world,&#8221; had put up $100,000, winner take all, to fight anyone. Rorion accepted the challenge immediately and then told the producer, &#8220;First you better tell him who he&#8217;s going to fight.&#8221;</p>
<p>Rorion laughs and says, &#8220;I sparred a few times with him before. I was very gentle with him. I took him to the mat a few times, showed him some nice choke holds and he tapped the mat. Heh-heh.&#8221;</p>
<p>The next day, the producer called back and said that the kick boxer would fight Rorion only under the following rules: Rorion had to put up the entire $100,000, the fight would consist of ten rounds of five minutes each and the two combatants could not stay on the mat for more than a minute at a time. Rorion laughed. &#8220;But that is not a street fight,&#8221; he said. The producer never called him back.</p>
<p>In the den, Rorion passes his time browsing through the many books, newspapers and magazines with stories about the Gracie family. He holds up pictures of his father fighting Kimura and studies them. &#8220;See here,&#8221; he says, &#8220;the choke.&#8221; He memorizes that choke hold and the many facts of Gracie history: the names of long-dead ancestors; the dates of famous fights; the nicknames of vanquished opponents; Dudu, The Elephant, The Drop of Fire, The Dead Chicken, Zulu. He glances at his young sons in kimonos, wrestling on the rug. They grapple, silently, trip one another, tap the mat, stand, begin again. He looks outside to the garage, where two men in kimonos stand in front of the closed door. One man opens it to reveal a spotless, empty room with a grey mat on the floor. There is a photograph of a gaunt, mean-eyed old man, his arms folded across his chest, underneath a seal that reads ACADEMIA GRACIE. The two men step inside onto the mat. They are barefooted. They face each other, plant their legs wide, like crabs, and begin to circle each other like ancient warriors. They circle and circle, looking for an opening on this peaceful day on this quiet street in Torrance.</p>
<p><em>This article appears with permission from the author.</em></p>
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		<title>I Ain&#8217;t &#8216;Fraid of No Ghosts</title>
		<link>http://www.bronxbanterblog.com/2012/02/09/i-aint-fraid-of-no-ghosts/</link>
		<comments>http://www.bronxbanterblog.com/2012/02/09/i-aint-fraid-of-no-ghosts/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Thu, 09 Feb 2012 14:27:13 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alex Belth</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[1: Featured]]></category>
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		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.bronxbanterblog.com/?p=79748</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[&#8220;If you were a ghost, would you rather hang out in an empty house with...]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><em>&#8220;If you were a ghost, would you rather hang out in an empty house with other ghosts, or with people and have a good time?”</em></p>
<p style="text-align: center;"><a href="http://www.bronxbanterblog.com/wordpress/wp-content/uploads/2012/02/dan-aykroyd-ghostbusters-570x427.jpg"><img class="aligncenter size-full wp-image-79751" title="dan-aykroyd-ghostbusters-570x427" src="http://www.bronxbanterblog.com/wordpress/wp-content/uploads/2012/02/dan-aykroyd-ghostbusters-570x427.jpg" alt="" width="570" height="427" /></a></p>
<p>Case you missed it, here&#8217;s <a href="http://www.nytimes.com/2011/12/11/magazine/the-dixie-ghostbusters.html" target="_blank">Pat Jordan&#8217;s little essay for the Times magazine on the Dixie Ghostbusters</a>:</p>
<blockquote><p>Except for the eerie flickering of our flashlights, we batted away low branches and overgrown shrubs of the old cotton plantation in total darkness. There was no moonlight. It was, Grady Carter noted, “a perfect night for ghosts.” At that point his nephew Andy held up a hand and pointed into the woods. “I heard voices,” Andy said. We all stopped. Chris Carter, his cousin, whispered, “I see a red light.” “The spirits of dead slaves,” Grady confirmed. “A demonic orb.”</p>
<p>Grady, 66, is the winner of three purple hearts in Vietnam; his son, Chris, 41, is a former long-haul trucker; and Andy, 46, is a former bodyguard. Now all three Carter men are Twisted Dixie, a team of paranormal investigators — or, to use their less preferred term, ghostbusters. For fees upward of $2,000 per demonic possession, they camp out at night in clients’ houses, barns, businesses or woods and “document paranormal activity,” Andy explains, referring to “ghosts, demons, poltergeists.” Twisted Dixie grosses a little more than $50,000 a year, sometimes charging fees for long investigations and sometimes working on spec at famous sites like Fort Sumter and the Burt-Stark Mansion in Abbe­ville, S.C. — often called the birthplace and the deathbed of the Confederacy, and the home of Twisted Dixie. No matter the job, they always work at night because, they say, that’s when ghosts tend to whisper.</p></blockquote>
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		<title>Taster&#8217;s Cherce</title>
		<link>http://www.bronxbanterblog.com/2012/01/06/tasters-cherce-390/</link>
		<comments>http://www.bronxbanterblog.com/2012/01/06/tasters-cherce-390/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Fri, 06 Jan 2012 14:36:24 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alex Belth</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Arts and Culture]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Food Memories]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Pat Jordan]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Taster's Cherce]]></category>
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		<category><![CDATA[pecan pie]]></category>
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		<description><![CDATA[Three days ago I received a package from Pat Jordan. Twenty pounds of pecans from...]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p style="text-align: center;"><a href="http://www.bronxbanterblog.com/wordpress/wp-content/uploads/2012/01/pecans.jpg"><img class="aligncenter size-full wp-image-78128" title="pecans" src="http://www.bronxbanterblog.com/wordpress/wp-content/uploads/2012/01/pecans.jpg" alt="" width="640" height="640" /></a></p>
<p>Three days ago I received a package from Pat Jordan. Twenty pounds of pecans from the pecan trees in his backyard. Unshelled. The son of a bitch didn&#8217;t have the decency to include a nutcracker although he had a few suggestive hints how the wife and I could get them open. He did attach a note, however:</p>
<p>&#8220;To Whom it May Concern:  Send pralines and pecan-bourbon pie to Susan and Pat Jordan, Abbeville, S.C. ASAP.&#8221;</p>
<p>My pal.</p>
<p style="text-align: center;"><a href="http://www.bronxbanterblog.com/wordpress/wp-content/uploads/2012/01/pecan-pie-a.jpg"><img class="aligncenter size-full wp-image-78129" title="pecan-pie-a" src="http://www.bronxbanterblog.com/wordpress/wp-content/uploads/2012/01/pecan-pie-a.jpg" alt="" width="520" height="347" /></a></p>
<p>[Photo Credit: <a href="http://simplyrecipes.com/recipes/pecan_pie/" target="_blank">Simply Recipes</a>]</p>
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		<title>The Horse Lovers</title>
		<link>http://www.bronxbanterblog.com/2012/01/03/the-horse-lovers/</link>
		<comments>http://www.bronxbanterblog.com/2012/01/03/the-horse-lovers/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Tue, 03 Jan 2012 15:08:02 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alex Belth</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[1: Featured]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Arts and Culture]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Banter Gold Standard]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Games We Play]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Magazine Writers]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Other Sports]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Pat Jordan]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Television]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Writers]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[bluegrass]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[cbs]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[cheryl ladd]]></category>
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		<category><![CDATA[the horse lovers]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[tv guide]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[Fresh direct from the vault, here&#8217;s the original manuscript version of a story that Pat...]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Fresh direct from the vault, here&#8217;s the original manuscript version of a story that Pat Jordan did for <em>TV Guide</em> in 1988.</p>
<p><strong>The Horse Lovers</strong></p>
<p><strong>By Pat Jordan</strong></p>
<p style="text-align: center;"><a href="http://www.bronxbanterblog.com/wordpress/wp-content/uploads/2012/01/bluegrass.jpg"><img class="aligncenter size-full wp-image-77870" title="bluegrass" src="http://www.bronxbanterblog.com/wordpress/wp-content/uploads/2012/01/bluegrass.jpg" alt="" width="403" height="250" /></a></p>
<p><em>Prologue</em></p>
<p>The movie is “Bluegrass,” a four-hour, CBS-TV mini-series. The actors are Cheryl Ladd, Brian Kerwin, Anthony Andrews, Mickey Rooney, and Wayne Rodgers. The setting is Lexington, Kentucky, Bluegrass Country, where thoroughbred racehorses are bred and trained on rolling pastureland that is zoned strictly for horse farms. The time is late fall. The grassland is turning brown. The leaves on the trees have faded from bright orange to the color of mud. The horses graze quietly in the pasture until another horse intrudes on their meal. They twitch, rear up, and gallop after the intruder, snorting out their hot breath into the damp, cold air. They curl back their lips, baring teeth, and nip the intruder on the flanks before slowing finally and then stopping to graze again.</p>
<p>The fictional plot concerns the efforts of Maude Sage Breen (Ladd) to fulfill her dream of breeding a Triple-Crown thoroughbred. She is thwarted at every turn by her ruthless neighbor, Lowell Shipleigh (Rodgers) and aided by her recovering alcoholic trainer, Dancy Cutler (Kerwin). It is Dancy who wins Maude’s love in a romantic joust with the mysterious Anglo-Irishman, Michael Fitzgerald (Andrews). What unites them all, however, hero, heroine, and villains alike, is that they are all horse lovers.</p>
<p><em>Scene One</em></p>
<p>A cold, blustery day at Crestwood Farms outside of Lexington, Ky. Brian Kerwin and Charles Cooper, a black actor from Cincinnati, are huddled in the equipment barn trying to keep warm while waiting for their cue from the Broodmare Barn up the hill where, today, history will be made. The birth of a foal will be filmed for national television. Kerwin and Cooper sip coffee from Styrofoam cups while speaking in hushed reverential tones as if they were expectant fathers in a hospital waiting room.</p>
<p>“Oh, shucks, Miss Scarlett,” says Kerwin, smiling, “I don’t know nuthin’ bout birthn’ horses.” Kerwin, with a veterinarian’s help off camera, is expected to aid in the birth of the foal. “They told me that if it’s a breech birth I have to reach up my hand into the mare and turn the foal’s head around,” he says. He shakes his head at the mystery of what he is about to partake in. Cooper tries to reassure him.</p>
<p>“I aided at my wife’s delivery of our son,” Cooper says. “It was a Caesarian birth. All I could do was stroke her forehead.” He flutters his long eyelashes. “It was a beautiful experience.”</p>
<p>Kerwin nods with admiration. Both men look down at the dirt floor, shuffle their feet. Kerwin begins to talk about the breeding sequence he was involved in filming a few days ago. He had to help a stallion insert his penis in a mare while the crew filmed the scene. “It was all very tastefully done,” He says. Cooper nods in perfect understanding.</p>
<p>Just then, a woman enters the barn. “It’s time,” she says to Kerwin. He crumples up his coffee cup and discards it in a trash barrel. Then he smoothes the sides of his reddish hair. His lean face is bruised and cut. Make-up applied today, after last night’s flight sequence staged at a roadside tavern.</p>
<p><em>Scene Two</em></p>
<p>Flashback to midnight of the night before. &#8220;Little Jim&#8217;s Tavern&#8221; out on Georgetown Road next to &#8220;The Slumber Inn Motel.&#8221; The dirt parking lot, which is usually crowded with rusted Chevys and battered pick-up trucks, is dominated this night by the huge vans of the film crew. Two police cars, their lights blinking, guard the road as if for intruders.</p>
<p>Inside, the small, cave-like, drinking man&#8217;s bar is strangely lighted by colorful neon signs that the crew has placed on the bar&#8217;s usually blank, concrete walls. The middle of the small room is dominated by three cameras and their crews and bright spotlights aimed toward a corner of the bar where the fight sequence will be staged. The actors are settling into their places for last minute instructions.</p>
<p>At the other end of the bar, in darkness, the bar&#8217;s regulars, farm hands, construction workers, and long-haul truck drivers, are loitering around, drinking beer and bourbon, smoking cigarettes, and shooting a few games of pool with Jimalou, the bar’s regular, plump, blonde waitress. “My father owns this place,” she says, as she leans over the pool table and sights the eight ball. “He always wanted a boy.”</p>
<p>Bonnie, the regular barmaid, is pouring drinks for the regulars as she is expected to do for the actors when the scene begins. Bonnie has short, dark hair, lots of blue eye-make-up, and she talks out of the side of her mouth, just as one would expect a barmaid in a roadside tavern to talk. Bonnie is a barmaid. Tough, funny, caustic.</p>
<p>&#8220;What&#8217;s the difference between <em>being</em> a barmaid and <em>playing</em> a barmaid?” she says. “Simple. I get it right the first time.”</p>
<p>“Bonnie’s the reason we come her,” says Marshall, a regular. “She makes us feel at home.”</p>
<p>“Sure does,” says D.B., tilting back his cowboy hat. “Abuses us just like our wives.&#8221; Everyone laughs out loud. One of the film crew looks back at the laughing regulars as if they were misbehaving third graders. He is a very short, bald, finicky-looking man with a red beard. He puts his hands on his hips.</p>
<p>&#8220;Quiet, puhleeeze!&#8221; he says. Then he turns toward a man who is smoking a cigar. &#8220;An no cigar smoke in here,&#8221; he adds.</p>
<p>&#8220;You&#8217;re kidding?&#8221; says the man. &#8220;In a bar?&#8221;</p>
<p>&#8220;No cigar smoke in <em>this</em> bar!&#8221; says the red-bearded man. Just then one of the crew turns on the smoke machine. Smoke billows into the bar until visibility is zero. Bonnie fakes a few coughs and flaps her hands at the smoke.</p>
<p>&#8220;It&#8217;s never <em>been</em> this smoky in here,&#8221; she says.</p>
<p>&#8220;And we never had a fight in here·, either,&#8221; adds Jimalou.</p>
<p>The second assistant director, a woman, begins to wave her clipboard wildly in the smoke to get the extras&#8217; attention. &#8220;Everyone, everyone, to their places, please!&#8221; she calls out. &#8220;Have we had everyone?&#8221;</p>
<p><span id="more-77868"></span></p>
<p><em>Scene Three</em></p>
<p style="text-align: center;"><a href="http://www.bronxbanterblog.com/wordpress/wp-content/uploads/2012/01/16861a.jpg"><img class="aligncenter size-full wp-image-77872" title="16861a" src="http://www.bronxbanterblog.com/wordpress/wp-content/uploads/2012/01/16861a.jpg" alt="" width="300" height="402" /></a></p>
<p>The following day at Crestwood Farms. Cheryl Ladd, chewing gum, is standing in the cold outside the Broodmare Barn, waiting for her cue to go inside and assist Kerwin with the birth of the foal. She is a petite woman dressed in worn· jeans and scuffed cowboy boots and she might actually pass for a farm woman if not for her vividly bleached, yellow hair. She is biding her time by telling a small group of people about her love for horses which goes back to her childhood days in Huron, South Dakota, when she was Cheryl Stopelmoor. She has six horses of her own, now, and a Scottish husband and two children, all of whom also love horses. She tells a story about one of her horses who almost lost a hoof when he got it caught in a barbed wire fence. The others scrunch up their faces in pain at that story, but Cheryl’s face remains impassive, her voice flat and uninflected, as befits someone who is used to pain and suffering and even death on a farm.</p>
<p>“We saved the hoof,” she says, snapping her gum. “Of course he walks a little funny now.” The others smile and nod with relief. Cheryl offers around some sugarless gum just as two real farm hands walk by.</p>
<p>&#8220;How many broodmares you seen foal?&#8221; says one farmhand.</p>
<p>&#8220;Thousands,” says the other. &#8220;But I never seen sucha fuss as this.”</p>
<p><em>Scene Four</em></p>
<p>Inside the Broodmare Barn. An empty stall, littered with yellow hay, is brightly lighted. The camera crew has aimed two cameras at the empty stall. Technicians are making last minute adjustments, fluffing up the straw. In another stall, in darkness, the Broodmare&#8217;s big belly sways pendulously as she waits, unsuspecting.</p>
<p><em>Scene Five</em></p>
<p>Outside the barn. Everyone is hushed, reverential, expectant. The second assistant director; Cheryl’s stand-in; a CBS female executive; and another woman, are all standing close to the closed barn door. Their ears are pressed against the door, waiting for word of the birth of the foal. Their faces have that rapt, maternal look of expectant mothers.</p>
<p>Arthur Fellows, the. co-producer of this movie, is standing a little apart from the women with a smile on his face. He is a short, tanned, man with a ring of white, friar’s tuft around his bald head. Arthur is a horse lover, a too. He owns 36 horses, he says. He breeds them, trains them, and races them, which is why he is so excited about this movie.</p>
<p>“I told CBS about the breeding sequence,&#8221; Fellows says. &#8220;They got a bit worried. I tried to reassure them it was all done very tastefully. After all, what could we do? The stallion was all worked up. We couldn&#8217;t just pull him off the mare and yell &#8216;cut’ as if he was an actor?&#8221; Fellows goes on to say that it was very difficult to find a mare in foal at this time of year. Most quality horses foal in the spring, he says. Only &#8220;cheap&#8221; horses, who mate in the pasture, foal in the late fall. Still, he was able to find three mares in foal. Two of the three had their foals unexpectedly, before this birth scene was scheduled to be shot. This is the crew’s last chance to film this historic event, the birth of a foal, and so there is an element of nervousness, coupled with excitement on the set. “It&#8217;s going to be a beautiful scene,&#8221; says Fellows, smiling.</p>
<p>Suddenly, the veterinarian bursts out of the barn and hurries to his car. He returns with a syringe. “The mare’s not ready yet.” The vet says to Fellows. “I’m gonna induce labor.” Fellows nods and the vet disappears into the barn, where all the actors and crew have taken their places.</p>
<p>The group of women presses their ears again against the barn door. Fellows smiles at them, and says, &#8220;Women have this thing about horses.&#8221; He quotes a line from the script of &#8220;Bluegrass,&#8221; which says that all true lovers of horses are 14-year-old females who want to delay their sexuality.</p>
<p style="text-align: center;"><a href="http://www.bronxbanterblog.com/wordpress/wp-content/uploads/2012/01/mi176.jpg"><img class="aligncenter size-full wp-image-77874" title="mi176" src="http://www.bronxbanterblog.com/wordpress/wp-content/uploads/2012/01/mi176.jpg" alt="" width="491" height="338" /></a></p>
<p><em>Scene Six</em></p>
<p>The newly-born foal, pink-eyed and breathing erratically, is lying on the straw in the stall while Cheryl Ladd, kneeling beside it, lovingly strokes its flanks, still coated with its mother&#8217;s blood, and the camera crew films the scene. The hushed silence is broken only by Cheryl&#8217;s flat, uninflected voice, &#8220;Is the camera rolling?&#8221;</p>
<p>&#8220;Yes, Cheryl,&#8221; says Simon Wincer, the Australian director. Simon, too, is a lover of horses. He made his reputation with a horse film called ‘Phar Lap,’ and then made another called &#8220;The Lighthorsemen,&#8221; and now he is making “Bluegrass.”</p>
<p>&#8220;I&#8217;ve done my share of horse movies,&#8221; Wincer says. &#8220;You have to have great patience with horses. Sometimes it’s hair-raising. Stallions can be moody and impossible some days. You just have to try and try again.” He smiles. “After all, you can’t just write them threatening letters as if they were actors.”</p>
<p>Wincer turns to the vet and asks him if the foal is a male or female. The vet goes over to the foal and examines it.</p>
<p>“lt&#8217;s a filly,&#8221; he says. Everyone smiles. The foal was supposed to be a colt for the purposes of the movie plot. That fact seems not to bother anyone on the set, however, for everyone continually refers to the foal as &#8220;he,&#8221; and not &#8220;she.&#8221; What does bother Wincer, however, is the fact that the foal has not stood up yet.</p>
<p>&#8220;I thought they stood up right away,&#8221; Wincer says to the vet.</p>
<p>The vet shakes his head. “Usually within an hour,&#8221; he tells Wincer. &#8220;But this foal is very emaciated. I don&#8217;t know whether he&#8217;s gonna make it.”</p>
<p>The foal is still breathing erratically. Her limbs twitch in spasms, and its pink-rimmed eyes keep closing as if longing for an endless sleep. Cheryl continues to stroke its flanks, while looking at it lovingly. Someone suggests that she try to help the foal stand. Cheryl gets up, straddles the foal, and tries to pull it to its feet. The foals spindly legs stick out at odd angles, and the moment Cheryl lets go, it collapses on its side again. Cheryl looks at her hands. They are coated with blood. Someone throws her a towel and she wipes off the blood. Then she kneels beside the foal again.</p>
<p>Everyone waits in silence for the foal to stand. Endless moments pass. The crew keeps filming. Cheryl keeps smiling at the foal. Behind the cameras, the vet says, in a stage whisper, &#8220;We weren&#8217;t really sure when the foal was conceived. You can’t tell with these cheap horses. We may have been off quite a .pit on the mare&#8217;s due date.&#8221;</p>
<p>Finally, Wincer decides that too much film time has been wasted waiting for the foal to stand. He decides to play the next scene without the foal. The vet and a crew member pick up the foal by her legs and carry her, upside down, like a side of beef, to a darkened stall at the end of the barn. They lay the foal on the straw next to her standing mother. The mare nips at her foal’s flanks, a mother&#8217;s instinct to make the foal stand and suckle. But the foal is too weak. She twitches at her mother’s nip and then slides back into sleep.</p>
<p>In the brightly lighted stall, Cheryl is still half-lying on the straw, staring, lovingly, down at the patch of bloody straw where the foal had been. Kerwin is kneeling beside her, staring at the empty place, too. The cameras are filming them only from the shoulders up. They begin to recite their lines. They comment on how healthy the little foal looks, how sturdy he is, how someday he&#8217;s going to win the Triple Crown, and as they do, the real foal, who was born prematurely so that her birth could be filmed for this movie, lies twitching and gasping for breath in her darkened stall.</p>
<p><em>Scene Seven</em></p>
<p>Outside the Broodmare Barn. People are milling around, waiting for the day&#8217;s shooting to end inside the barn. Suddenly there is a thunderous applause from inside the barn. One of the women rushes inside and asks if the foal has finally stood. &#8220;No,” says a crew member. “We were just applauding because we’re breaking for lunch.”</p>
<p>&#8220;Oh,” says the woman. She goes over to the darkened stall where the foal is lying, her belly heaving and collapsing as she struggles for breath.</p>
<p>Cheryl Ladd walks behind the woman and says, “He’d be all right if everyone would just stop staring at him. He just wants to get some sleep.”</p>
<p>Cheryl steps outside and is greeted by a beaming Fellows. “Wasn’t that a great shot of the foal&#8217;s birth?” he says. “A great shot.”</p>
<p><em>Epilogue</em></p>
<p>Later that night, the actors and crew returned to the Broodmare Barn in another attempt to film the foal standing. They got the foal to its feet for a brief moment and filmed the scene. Then they returned her to her stall. She lay on her side on the straw. Someone threw a blanket over her to keep her shivering body from freezing in the cold, night air. Late that night, the vet returned and fed her intravenously. The next day the foal was taken to a hospital, where she died.</p>
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