Showing posts with label NBA. Show all posts
Showing posts with label NBA. Show all posts

Saturday, June 27, 2020

Space Jam Review


*I'd been meaning to watch this movie for about 24 years, but I guess life got in the way. Life got in the way of watching Space Jam, but no longer.   

*In the opening scene, kid Michael Jordan is shooting hoops at night until his father kindly tells him it's past his bedtime. Slight cringes as R Kelly sings "I Believe I Can Fly." Oh man, you gotta do a lot of awful shit to ruin "I Believe I Can Fly." 

*I'm stunned by the early death of Yosemite Sam, killed in cold blood by an alien with a ray gun. 

Update: Yosemite Sam is alive, molecular structure back intact and doing his thing. 

*The player with a name most like a Looney Toons character is Mugsy Bogues. I hope they paid him double.

*I'm pretty sure Bugs Bunny is pansexual. Cartoon, human, Michael Jordan--doesn't matter. He'll kiss anyone. Maybe he could settle down with Lola Bunny, but they'd need to have an open relationship.

*Kids take note: Spitting on the gym floor a bunch of times is hilarious. 

*In a shocking development that's making me wonder what kind of a God would let this happen, Foghorn Leghorn has been fatally incinerated.           

Update: Wait! He's OK. I just saw him walking off the court, good as new. 

*2020 parallels: When stars like Barkley and Ewing get their talent stolen by aliens, other players get fearful and resort to wearing protective masks to manage the threat. Unable to promise their safety, the commissioner shuts down the NBA indefinitely. Note to self: Pull conspiracy theory out of ass that Coronavirus= Space Jam and upload it to YouTube. 

*I'm not crazy about starting Daffy Duck at power forward. He's clearly not that powerful. 

*Kids again: Shooting double-barrel shotguns in a crowd and smashing friends with mallets also super funny. 

*The Monstars screwed up their roster by taking Shawn Bradley's talent when they already had Patrick Ewing at center. They should've picked Reggie Miller to have a shooting guard to match up with MJ. This is not a joke. Deal with it. 

*If Bill Laimbeer was one of the dirty players on the Monstars, he'd find a way to 100% murder Bugs Bunny, sending kids home from the movies in tears and destroying a franchise.

*They play "I Believe I Can Fly" twice! Are kids still allowed to watch this movie? Get Rihanna or Cee Lo Green to cover it in the damn Space Jam re-release already. Why doesn't anyone ever listen to me? 

*Happy ending. Dated cartoon characters and a McDonald's spokesman with a nice smile can never be defeated. Michael Jordan draws the defense but kicks it out to a wide open Porky Pig (who we all believed was dead) to swish home the buzzer beater in the director's cut.

*"Don't ever trust an Earthling." --Bill Murray  


Monday, June 17, 2013

The Cat Lady and the Munsons


1.) The Cat Lady

You might not have grown up in the same neighborhood as a Cat Lady, but in all likelihood, one of the neighborhoods next to yours had a Cat Lady. That was the case with me. I had to bike five blocks to my friend Willy's house to get a load of the Cat Lady on Adderley Street. Neighborhoods, like thermostats, so often change one degree at a time. And that single degree that separated Willy's neighborhood from mine permitted a habitat for an old woman whose ramshackle house was swarming with cats.


The Cat Lady (I never got her real name) lived across the street from Willy. One day we asked Willy's mom if there was a Cat Man in the picture for this Cat Lady, and she replied that, to her knowledge, the Cat Lady had never married. She had been willed a large sum of money, so the story went, but she spent it sparingly.

Willy's mom was one to adorn ceramic plates and coffee cups with phrases such as “Blessed are the meek.” She was an artist who made enough to get by and co-provide, along with her husband. She never begrudged the Cat Lady. Some of her neighbors felt otherwise; they instilled some anti-Cat Lady sentiments in their children. Rex Munson from across the street used to complain about her. Like all the Munsons, he was incensed by the Cat Lady's indifference to the fortune she supposedly had.

We'd put a game of catch on hold and gape at the lonesome Cat Lady as she lurched and labored toward the bus stop. On one such occasion, Rex slugged the football with his fist.

“That lucky old bag...” he griped, shaking his head and coveting.

I was too young to appreciate the humor.

We watched her shamble around the corner, out of view. Then something strange and magnetic happened: The six of us were compelled to gather in a huddle. Those among us were either summoned or summoning. The effect was the same. To children on the brink of puberty, there is no human-noise more compelling than: “Psssssssstt.”

It was agreed upon that we should take a look inside the Cat Lady's home while she was away. We reasoned we'd be exploring rather than breaking and entering.

To add some intrigue and suspense to the mission, we slunk past her house and followed the gravel driveway to her garage. It was a small structure composed of worn and peeled siding. The door was chained shut by a Master-lock. We crept around to a window that was bug-ridden and sheeted in dust. One by one we peered in. When it was my turn, I strained my eyes and made out the shadowy form of a bed.

“She lives in there now,” Willy explained. “The cats took over her house.”

I reeled, shook my head, and cupped my hands against the glass again. Sure enough, there was a kerosene heater inside. I considered the nights of bitter cold that would eventually come, shivered at the thought of how she must survive the winter: surrounded by that worn and peeled siding, beside a smelly fire, hidden beneath a mound of blankets, for five months. Alone.

It was too much. I jerked my head away, toward daylight and friends. Despite the pleasant weather, I was still shivering. When it came time to ascend the rickety steps into the Cat Lady's back entryway, I felt conflicted. Rex turned the knob and cracked a Grinch-like smile, for the door was unlocked. My guts sunk heavily. I kept my mouth shut and considered aborting the mission.

“Last one in's a chicken-shit,” Rex declared.

The matter was settled for me, but two others expressed their misgivings and opted out. Tyler feared his father's wrath should we get caught; he seemed to have horrid visions every time he blinked. Lucas cited religious reasons that still remain unclear. Willy's little brother Calvin fussed with his jean shorts and tangled with trepidation. Our gazes met for a second and I gave him a quick, understanding nod.

Rex shoved against the door until a barrier of trash yielded enough room for passage. He slithered inside, followed by Willy. I was next, dreading all the germs but pushing forward, anyway—and that made Calvin the De facto “chicken-shit.”

“Hey! At least I'm doin' this,” he called out.

Tyler and Lucas fled to the latter's home for lemonade and Super Nintendo. The rest of us were determined to snoop around. We sought answers from this spinster who'd left civilization without so much as murmuring goodbye. How did she succumb to this cat uprising? We searched for clues left behind by this ghost who somehow lived among us.

The closest I ever got to walking on the moon was walking atop the rubbish in the Cat Lady's house. The stench notwithstanding, the sheer elevation of the garbage made me queasy—and Neil Armstrong had no equivalent to the surreal feeling I had as I climbed the trashy summit into the kitchen. During our tour, we leaped from one flimsy plank of cardboard to another—landing-spots that must have been strategically placed by the Cat Lady herself. (Years later this strikes me as a pretty ambitious move for a shut-in: to even bother laying down a big piece of cardboard here and there to plateau the heap of squalor you've amassed in your own home.) Feral cats with coats like defiled carpet-samples hissed at us as they backpedaled. Countless trash bags spewed their contents: shards of Coke bottles and light-bulbs, mold-consumed bread, soiled rags and tissues once coated in fluids that had long-since hardened, coffee-filters splattered and laden like neglected diapers, newspapers from decades ago and yellowed mail that had decidedly become the junk kind. Clothing that would never be worn again was strewn everywhere, and so were impotent cans of Pledge and Lysol.

In the living room we gaped at grime-encrusted knickknacks of fishermen and sad clowns. I spotted crushed games of Life and Sorry and an antique vacuum lying kaput in the corner. Its rubbery bag was bloated. Its chrome had been reduced to tiny dots amidst all the rust. We surveyed the end of the world and its dearth of redemption. We breathed fitfully through our mouths and gagged our noses as we pointed and hooted at the cat droppings littered throughout.

We marveled at all the crap until we got bored.

“Let's get the shit out of here.”

That was Rex again. He cussed more than the rest of combined, and though he may very well never amount to much, to this day I give him credit for that suggestion.

As I've mentioned, he belonged to the Munson clan. They were not exactly known for breakthrough moments in wisdom.

2.) The Munsons

White Kids Dunking...



^Spud Webb, a black man dunking.^

Rex was a participant in the Slam Dunk Contests we had during those summers in the mid-'90s. The events were held on a modest slab of concrete in Willy/ Calvin's backyard. The hoop was adjustable, and so we lowered it to a height of about 8 feet, for slam-dunking purposes. To that same end, we procured two mini-basketballs that were easily palmed.

Our slam dunk excitement was brought on by ideal circumstances. The best player at the time, Michael Jordan, was also a sensational dunker. Ho-hum dunkers like Bird and Magic had retired from the NBA. They gave way to a new breed of high-flying freaks whose M.O.'s were posterizing chumps and then losing to MJ's Bulls in the playoffs. Finally, the sprites in NBA Jam paired superhuman leaps with a tempo that catered to our Mountain Dew dependencies.

In retrospect, few things are sillier than prepubescent white kids charging a hoop and exclaiming in the high-pitch of Mickey Mouse. “Clyde Drexler!” “Shawn Kemp!” “Spud Webb!”

More Stories, and Additional Stories is the name of that eBook.

Sunday, June 10, 2012

The Day Job Basketball League




The NBA is the third-most successful professional sports league in America, but even so, a sizable chunk of SportsCenter addicts despise the Association. I'm not a naysayer of the NBA. It puzzles me that so many fans prefer college basketball to its pro counterpart, as if the sport becomes infinitely worse when played by the most gifted athletes the game has to offer. These same detractors of pro-basketball rarely have such biases against Major League Baseball or the NFL, and so I began to wonder why the NBA is so often viewed with contempt.

A common critique of the NBA is that its players seem so selfish and conceited, but oddly enough, these same off-putting qualities apply to the me-first, “diva” wide-receivers of the NFL, which still flourishes in spite of—or maybe because of—the self-indulgent antics of some of its superstars.

I don't get what's so repellent about the NBA. I have friends who obsess over March Madness. Every year they fill out tournament brackets with great attention to detail. The Final Four pretty much makes their genitals tingle. And, in spite of that apparent fondness for the game of basketball, these friends wouldn't watch the NBA Finals unless they were paid to do so. Any alternative that is vaguely athletic appeals to them more than the NBA does. They'd rather watch a hulking Swede launch a keg over steep wall in his effort to earn the honor of 1991's World's Strongest Man than catch a glimpse of Kobe Bryant draining a clutch jumper to send game seven into overtime.

What gives? I am thoroughly stumped. Maybe Michael Jordan's retirement ruined the NBA for so many. In all likelihood, the league will never be as entertaining as it was from the rookie seasons of Magic and Bird (1980) until Jordan's last game as a Bull in 1998. Or maybe it was all the fault of Allen Iverson for griping about practice and heaving dozens of ill-fated jump-shots when he could have easily passed the ball to a teammate from 1996 until 2010. Or perhaps the blame is owed to the league's conviction that college degrees are totally overrated.

Regardless of the reasons, the game of basketball itself is not the source of the NBA's defamation. The most glaring complaint about a given sport is that it is dull, which is typically attributed to a lack of points. Basketball, to its credit, provides plenty of points as well as a steady and sometimes frenzied flow of action.


NBA-detractors don't purely hate basketball; they just believe the game is played shoddily by overpaid glory-hogs. A possible solution to the apparent NBA problem is to form a league composed of refreshingly ordinary men with day jobs.

In the Day Job Basketball League, no millionaires would be allowed, and furthermore, doctors, lawyers, celebrities, CEOs, politicians, drug-lords, and everyone who earns enough money to qualify as a rich guy would be excluded, too. My proposed alternative to the NBA, the DJBL, would pay its working-class grunts $15,000 per season—a welcome chunk of supplementary income to peasants like you and me—under the condition that they maintain their day jobs while playing games on the weekend. 23 games would be played during the regular season, the top four teams would qualify for the playoffs, and members of the championship team stand to earn $100,000 (which is roughly a fifth of the league minimum in that other b-ball league).


The DJBL consists of ten teams: Barbers, Cops, Exotic Dancers, Janitors, Mailmen, Mechanics, Migrant Workers, Painters, Reporters, and Teachers. Open tryouts throughout the nation will determine the premier ballers of each vocation.

Allow me to elaborate on the strengths and weaknesses of each team in the DJBL.


1.) Barbers

Overview: It's foolish to deny that race is a factor in basketball, and awfully hard to overlook the strong contingency of barbers who excel at talking trash and gushing about hoops in the mostly black neighborhoods of major cities. Led by a handful of swaggering street-ball standouts accustomed to honing cross-over dribbles and reverse layups on playgrounds from Harlem to Chicago to Englewood, the Barbers boast the flashiest team in the DJBL.

Strengths: Moxie; mastery of insults and psychological warfare; highlight-reel-worthy fast-breaks since half the players can actually dunk.

Weaknesses: Shaky transition defense; chaotic half-court offense; three gangling white barbers somehow made the team.


2.) Cops

Overview: With a stern and disciplined approach, the Cops benefit from one of the most physically fit starting-fives in the league. They are probably the DJBL's most polarizing team since—as we learned from the trial debacles of Rodney King and O.J. Simpson—everyone seems to have strong feelings about cops. Whether those convictions manifest as cheers or jeers is up to the fan. I'm torn on the matter because I have a couple cops in my family who are both decent and conscientious men, but on the other hand, I think weed should be legal.

Strengths: A methodical and patient half-court offense; permissible police brutality on defense and in the low-post; deft execution of an alley-oop play cleverly named “21 Jump Street.”

Weaknesses: Outright police brutality on defense and in the low-post gets them in foul trouble; tear-gas disallowed as a means of handling hostile crowds on the road; too many oafish mall cops take up space on a bench that is constantly in danger of snapping in half since the mall cops are so astoundingly fat.

3.) Exotic Dancers

Overview: Aesthetically pleasing to festive finances and horny co-eds, this roster of hunks relies on style over substance and brawn in lieu of strategy. During halftime, they also rely on a staff of makeup ladies, manicurists, and beauticians. Owing to their gaudy swagger and occasional prissiness, the Exotic Dancers are probably the team most akin to an NBA squad. They can score in bunches, but they defend laxly against penetration to the hoop and, well, every other kind of penetration, too.

Strengths: Showmanship; ability to bed women said to be “on the rebound” translates to highly skilled rebounding of the basketball to both members of the team who understand how metaphors work; defenders sometimes get distracted by their shimmering, dreamy eyes, allowing them to net uncontested layups that hurt almost as much as the wounded heterosexuality of a Barber or Cop.

Weaknesses: Showmanship can be a detriment, too, as when the point guard has the ball stolen out of his hands during his trademark pose as the Greek titan Atlas; hands slicked with moisturizer lead to poor ball-handling and subsequent turnovers; leaping ability dragged down a bit by weight of mammoth packages.

You heard me! Mammoth packages. OK, More Stories, and Additional Stories--to reiterate--is the name of that eBook the kids have been talking about so damn much.