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Moneyball Trashed

| October 25, 2011 | 0 Comments
I have not seen the movie “Moneyball,” but I want to.  Unfortunately, I rarely see first run movies these days.  But I read the book and liked it a lot.  I thought Michael Lewis was smart and insightful in his theme and analysis.  And I have heard good things about the movie.  Everyone I know who’s seen it has given a good review.  So, my expectations for the movie were high, whenever I get around to seeing it….until now.

Brilliant author David Maraniss has demolished the movie in today’s Washington Post.  Maraniss brings real street cred to his opinions, having written the definitive biography of Roberto Clemente.  So, he knows baseball.  He divides his critique of the movie into two parts.  First, the movie is false in attributing the miracle that was the 2002 Oakland Athletics to Billy Beane and his statistics.  Second, basing success on numbers and wins misses the entire point of baseball.

Frankly, I’m more persuaded by his first point.  Maraniss utterly contradicts the point of the movie in trashing the “old ways” of baseball which is based on guts and emotion, versus Billy Beane’s as the new way, based on facts and statistics.   In so doing, the movie ignores the true heroes of that season who were barely mentioned in the movies.  His case is powerful.

And that is the deceit of the movie, one that the writers, directors and actors had to know. Why were the A’s successful that year? The main reason was that they had three of the best starters in the American League — Tim Hudson, Barry Zito and Mark Mulder — pitching for them. All three were drafted on the recommendation of the team’s scouts, who are portrayed in the movie as morons who just don’t get it. Zito, the A’s first-round pick in 1999, won the Cy Young Award in 2002 with a 23-5 win-loss record and a 2.75 earned run average. Hudson, selected in the sixth round by the A’s in 1997, went 15-9 in 2002 with a 2.98 earned run average. And Mulder, picked in the first round by the A’s in 1998, went 19-7 with a 3.47 earned run average.

Yet Zito and Mulder are not mentioned in the movie, while Hudson is shown only fleetingly, blowing an 11-0 lead.

While I sympathize with the idea that the beauty of the game should outweigh a single-minded obsession with winning, I find that view naive.  Like it or not, winning is everything.

But the injustice of the movie, as described by Maraniss, is what will stick with me.  What must it be like for Hudson, Zito and Mulder to have the history of that season written for all time without including their contribution?  I can only hope that Maraniss’ passionate protest can be included in the public record as a strong rebuttal.

While I still want to see the movie, I will look at it through different eyes, thanks to David Maraniss.

Thank You James Fallows

| October 15, 2011 | 0 Comments

For exposing another example of shoddy journalism.

http://m.theatlantic.com/politics/archive/2011/10/false-equivalence-reaches-onionesque-heights-but-in-a-real-paper/246754/

The familiar lament of a disfunctional Washington without explanation.

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Location:Wellington Dr,Chevy Chase,United States

False Equivelancy

| October 11, 2011 | 0 Comments
Jeffrey Sachs has a new book that I love without reading it, because its title communicates a point I believe fervently.  The book is titled The Price of Civilization and it makes the point that government and the taxes that support it are the price we pay for living in a civilized society and it’s a price worth paying.  Fundamentally, it is a repudiation of the “no taxes, ever, ever, ever” of the Republican party.

But Paul Thomasch in his article about the book starts in piece this way:

In “The Price of Civilization” he contends that as Democrats and Republicans bicker over how to reignite the faltering U.S. jobs market, both sides have it wrong and that what is needed is greater investment in education, better health care, more civility and fewer Gulfstream jets.

Helloooooo??  What about that indicts “both sides?”  He says both sides get it wrong and then lays out the Democratic prescription.  What is up with that?  It looks to me like the familiar technique by pundits, writers and other commentators whereby they have to declare “both sides” wrong so they can establish themselves above and apart from these bickering politicians.  But when they do that they effective absolve the true perpetrators of any blame, i.e. the Republicans.

I will grant to Mr. Thomasch the possibility that Sachs book is the offender, not he.  But I wish people like him would simply call it like it is and not try to rise above it all.
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The Best Video of the Trip

| June 20, 2011 | 1 Comment

Getting a taxi in the evening is extremely difficult in Paris. We ended up giving on the Champs Élysées and taking the subway at 11:30 pm.

Earlier in the evening, as we were leaving the Eiffel Tower, Martha didn’t even try for a cab. She secured one of those motorcycle rickshaws and the four of us crammed in, the three ladies in the open seat in the back with me squeezed in the front with the driver. Here’s the very short video I took at the backseat as we began careening away.

YouTube Video

Location:Rue Saint-André des Arts,Paris,France

Eiffel Tower Sparking

| June 20, 2011 | 0 Comments

Stunning sight.

YouTube Video

— Post From My iPhone

Location:Port de Suffren,Paris,France

Getting mooned along the Seine

| June 20, 2011 | 0 Comments

Missed most of it. You can see them lifted their draws.

YouTube Video

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Location:Port de Suffren,Paris,France

"The most romantic bridge in Paris"

| June 20, 2011 | 0 Comments

According to the tour guide.

YouTube Video

— Post From My iPhone

Location:Port de Suffren,Paris,France

Cruising beneath a 400 year old bridge

| June 20, 2011 | 0 Comments

YouTube Video

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Location:Port de Suffren,Paris,France

Rockin’ on the subways

| June 20, 2011 | 0 Comments

Feel like I’m on the “A Train.”

YouTube Video

— Post From My iPhone

Location:Rue de Rivoli,Paris,France

Yet Another Paris Church

| June 20, 2011 | 0 Comments

Another Church, just blocks from St. Roch, has pretty poor curb appeal, but an impressive interior. Don’t even know the names of the church, but clearly the church serves the Polish community.


— Post From My iPhone