Cursed With Ambition

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Living in the World

I don't post about my job very often; that's by design.  I also don't post about my relationship with my future wife very much either.  Both for a lot of the same reasons.  Probably the biggest is that it could be dangerous.  I don't want to lose my job, or more importantly, my license to practice law.  And I really, really don't want to lose Audra.  So even though there are a lot of interesting and funny stories I could tell about these two very big parts of my life, I steer clear of those topics on this public forum.  This is somewhat surprising given my lack of discipline when it comes to most things, at least my my standards.

I've found myself in a lot of complicated and difficult situations in my job.  Situations where I can't trust, or don't believe, the people I have access to who are supposed to be the ones I can trust and believe.  At those times I'm left totally to myself, where I have to make the call and I know that I'll have to live with it.  For most young attorneys - at least I think this the way it works - they are insulated from a lot of front-line decisions by a more senior lead attorney who calls all the shots and bears the ultimate responsibility for anything that happens.  Not so with me.  For better or worse, I'm in a firm where the overhead numbers won't allow for that kind of insulation and security.  Either that, or everyone's just lazy.  So I've been on the front lines a lot in my young career.  I'm a cherry who's only been in country a few days and sent to lead deadly missions in the bush.

It's no accident that I'm in this situation.  In a way, I wanted it.  I've never accepted the leadership (or guidance or advice) of others very well.  My way is to throw myself in headlong and mostly get it right because of the tools I've got.  The parts I get wrong are usually only scratches and even then I am pretty resourceful at field dressing wounds.

A couple of days ago I was in a firefight and I was severely outgunned.  That's a bad feeling and hard for me to admit.  Opposing counsel, there were two of them, each had twenty years in the practice on me.  And one of them was a specialist in the area that the case revolved around.  My clients had the most to lose and they had been painted as the bad guys from day one.  To make matters worse, one of my clients, the most important one, had not shown up as he was supposed to.  I had promised everyone that he'd be there and it put me in a very bad position.

This was a mediation, which to a lot of people, and even a lot of lawyers, is a benign proceeding.  Not so, in my experience.  A mediation is like the committee work of Congress.  It's where the real shit gets done.  It's where the how much gets decided, and that's what it's all about.  Parties and lawyers alike are allowed to spew their bile and use their dirty tactics without the Rules and without a referee.  If a trial is a boxing match, mediation is a street fight.  Perhaps the worst part about it is the mediator, the neutral third.  The party line is that mediation is a fantastic development in the world of litigation.  It has proven very effective at settling cases, which, in theory, means that litigation costs for consumers of legal services should go down.  It means that there is less pressure on a taxed court system.  And it means that parties are allowed to control their own fates.  What is lost, I think, is the forces at play that cause cases to settle at mediation are fear and intimidation; mostly on the part of the mediator himself.  "Good" mediators are masters at subtle fear mongering and manipulation.  When they are in a room with a party and the party's attorney what they mostly talk about is how bad the case is for them and why they are likely to lose and what will happen to them if they do.  There is a euphamistic acronym for this:  BATNA - Best Alternative To A Negotiated Agreement.  Put in real terms:  what's going to happen to you if you don't whip out the checkbook today?  And, oh by the way - it's going to be real bad.

Experienced lawyers will sit back and allow the mediator to scare the hell out of their clients.  That makes it more likely that their client will pay enough to settle the case, which is good for the lawyer because it means, at the very least, if they are overworked like most lawyers, that they'll be able to get one more file off their desk.  And besides, by that point they've earned enough in fees on the case.  It's also good because the lawyer gets to look like he's done a good job when the final number comes in lower than the really scary number that the mediator has been throwing around.  Everyone wins, except for the client.

I can't play it that way.  At least not now, and hopefully not ever.  I spar with the mediator fiercely over why my client's case isn't as bad as they say and why the facts and the law of the case actually point to a much more favorable result.  Some mediators have given me some strange looks like, "Boy, don't you know how this game is played?"  I like to think that after we all leave and they break out the scotch that they laugh about me and quote from Platoon, "What we got here is a cru-sader!"  Maybe so, misguided and hopeless as it is.

What really sucks is to learn, after you've gone to bat for them, that your client is a lying thief.  It's one thing when they lie to the the other side, but when you find out (and you always do) that they've been withholding things from you, or worse, outright lying to your face, it's a real kick in the gut.  No one wants to believe me when I tell them to tell me everything, even if they think it's bad.  I guess no one believes that anyone is capable of representing someone who they think ill of.  When I think of that I think of a speech my first-year torts professor gave to my class.  He read a letter written by a Japanese prisoner of war during WWII who had been accused of heinous war crimes against American soldiers in the Pacific.  The letter was written to the American soldier who was legally trained and appointed in the field to represent the Japanese soldier at the military trial.  The letter was written to thank the American lawer and described how he had done his best to represent him and that even though he'd been found guilty and was sentenced to be executed, that he respected the effort and the impartial ability of the American lawyer to vigorously represent him despite the fact that the American knew that his buddies had been tortured and killed by this man, or others like him.  I still get goosebumps when I think about that story.

Someone once told me that I was a person of high integrity.  I don't know if it's true or not, but since then I've made integrity my ultimate fallback position. I've told clients many times when they've asked me to do something untoward that I just won't do it.  And I hope I never do.  I know every time I tell a client that I refuse to do something that I could lose the client, but secretly I hope that it builds respect in them for me, for their sake.  I always get a kick out of the puzzled looks I get that say, "But you are a lawyer.  I thought you were supposed to be a fucking scumbag."  I haven't had a client leave yet.

Anyway, I've had a rough week and I suppose this little piece is just my therapeutic venting.

Thanks for readin'.

March 13, 2009 at 10:05 PM | Permalink | Comments (1) | TrackBack (0)

It's a Fucked Year

No Marissa Miller in this year's SISE.

February 11, 2009 at 01:32 PM | Permalink | Comments (2) | TrackBack (0)

The Garage Sale Story

Sometime before Christmas, Audra and I decided to have a garage sale. There were a few reasons. One, the pain from our move over a year and a half ago was still fresh in my mind. I can't tell you how many heavy boxes of crap I hauled thinking the whole time, "I haven't seen, let alone used, the twenty pounds of shit in this box in years." It was also the first time for me dealing with a combined household so I was forever accusing Audra of owning tons of worthless shit. Of course, I was at least as bad or worse. It's funny how a lack of personal attachment to something allows you to see the truth in full focus about how dumb it is to hold on to certain possessions. But c’mon, how can you part with a titty mug?

I resolved at that time that I wasn't going to move all of that useless stuff ever again. Plus, with Christmas coming and a wedding on the horizon that meant a bunch of gifts on the way. So we were going to be adding to the piles of stuff we already had. Every Christmas I estimate that I get about one cubic yard of gifts by volume. It's easy to see how, over the years, just from Christmas alone, you can accumulate things well beyond your ability to store or use them. And with the wedding gift bonanza it was going to be ten times worse.

Not only that, I’ve got a minimalist streak in me that I get from my father. I think he got his as a backlash effect from his father, who grew up during the Great Depression, which means that he doesn’t throw anything away. I mean anything. The man keeps those plastic six-pack holders. I kid you not. And that’s just the tip of the iceberg. It probably drove my dad crazy because he couldn’t find a simple screwdriver for the piles of milk jugs and bits or twine covering everything. As a result, he tries to keep the amount of junk to a minimum, as do I.

I also have a bit of the anti-consumerism bug in me. I fail miserably at this, I’m sure. I bet some person from Bangladesh would take one look at all of the shit I own and laugh his head off at the prospect of me being anti-consumerism. But I guess I mean “as compared to other Americans.”

Anyway, the answer to all of this was to have a garage sale. Not only could we get rid of piles of stuff we don’t want or use anymore, but we could make a little money too. We would also be clearing space for the gifts we were anticipating from Christmas and the wedding. We had decided that whatever we made we were going to put that directly in our wedding account. Some friends of mine recently had a garage sale and made a couple thousand bucks and an aunt had one where she made eight hundred. I knew we probably didn’t have as much stuff as they did, but still, making a few hundred dollars by selling unwanted crap made it worth doing.

So, right after Christmas we started going through everything we owned. The things that were going into the garage sale were getting piled in the garage. I immediately started rationalizing that I could upgrade a lot of items – compound bow, guitar, mountain bike – if I sold the crappy one I had. Of course, that’s a losing proposition and Audra convinced me that was the wrong approach, thankfully. Surprisingly, the exercise of going through everything I owned and deciding what to get rid of and what to keep gave me a sense of where I had been in life, where I was now and where I was going. I thumbed through old fly fishing magazines, flipped through clothes that I could remember where and when I’d bought them and sorted through all sorts of knick-knacks and trinkets that I’d accumulated from different places I’d been.

I agonized over certain items. The worst were my guitars. I had two – a Yamaha classical guitar and a Madeira acoustic. Neither were very expensive, but they were fairly old, especially the Yamaha, which was made from 1966-1974. My parents bought it when they were in college. I don’t think they ever learned how to play it. When I was in college I got interested in it and thought that I wanted to learn to play and I asked them for it. I tried to teach myself and I learned some chords and a few songs and riffs. I actually made up a few songs that I could play. I don’t have a good ear for music and I didn’t get very far teaching myself, but that guitar reminds me a lot of a certain period in my life so it was sort of symbolic to consider letting it go. The other one – the Madeira – had been left to me in 1998 by a roommate when he moved to Vermont to go to law school. It wasn’t an expensive guitar either, but it was easier to play than the Yamaha and I had enjoyed banging away on it every now and then. I got out of playing regularly even before I started law school, but I still liked having them around in case I was ever able to get serious about playing. Plus, I liked keeping the reminder of my early twenties around. In the end, I decided that I was past all of that and it was time to put my guitar-playing days behind me. It was a big step for me. I just decided it was a matter of being honest with myself. I was never very good at it and I would never have the time or devotion to get good at it. Playing guitar for me was something I tried in my search to discover who I was and what I was going to be. I walked down that path then chose another. It was something that never really took and never really became a part of who I was. Some people will have “guitar player,” in their obituaries but it wouldn’t be in mine. And I was okay with letting it go.

I had no idea how much the guitars were worth and I know that there are a lot of people out there who make money buying used instruments at garage sales for cents on the dollar because the owners simply have no idea. Well that ain’t me. I researched online and found both guitars. Each one was worth a maximum of $120. After thinking about it, I decided that the Yamaha wasn’t even technically mine since I more or less borrowed it from my parents. I asked my brother, Snake, if he wanted it since he is a guitar player. He said he did, so that was a done deal. I decided to ask 50% of the top market price for the Madeira and slapped a sign on it for sixty bucks.

There were a few other items that I really struggled with putting in the garage sale pile, but eventually I had gone through everything and Audra had too. A lot of things I was simply able to throw away. I got rid of four or five file boxes of papers from law school. Many things that were probably trash we decided to put in a “free” box thinking maybe someone would find a use for it. One day we spent a couple of hours putting price tags on everything. At that point, we still had a couple of drawers of stuff to go through, but we were pretty much ready. We just had to clear out the garage and set up tables and display everything.

I put an ad on Craigslist the Wednesday before our Saturday sale. I updated the listing on Friday so it would appear again. We bought a few signs and put them up on major thoroughfares around our neighborhood. Friday night I went to Home Depot and bought a couple of sheets of plywood and some sawhorses to use for tables to set things out on. I bought some big dowels that I hung from the rafters in the garage to hang clothes on. I arranged the sawhorse tables another plastic table we’d borrowed in a U shape around the walls of the garage. I put the best things toward the back so that people would have to walk past everything else to get to it. (Hey, I learned a few things about merchandising during my time in retail.) We set everything out and tried to group things by category. We had a sporting goods section and a kitchen section and an electronics section. All of the women’s clothes were in one area and the men’s in another. By the time we went to bed on Friday night just about everything was out and ready to go.

I had done some research online on “How to put on a successful garage sale.” My penchant for researching things like that is a result of law school and it drives Audra crazy. I even researched bowling before going out to play for only the second time in my life a couple of weeks ago. I knew a little bit about how garage sales worked because I’ve been a part of several in the past. There’s a whole garage sale culture out there and some people are deadly serious about it. I had a theory that there were people out there with shopping addictions and the healthiest way for them to feed their addiction was to buy stuff at garage sales. It was a lot cheaper than doing so at the Galleria. Others own their own secondhand stores and stock their shelves with items they find at garage sales. With ebay, I’m sure a lot of people troll for bargains on things they think they can mark up and make a profit selling online. For some, going to garage sales was a simple hobby – like treasure hunting. I have an aunt like that. She’s got some pretty amazing garage sale stories accumulated over a lifetime of garage-saling.

We got up Saturday morning at 6 so that we’d have time to go get some coffee and eat some breakfast and still have time to put some things out last-minute. Predictably, just as I was getting dressed, the doorbell rang. It was a little before 7. I opened the door and a woman standing there in a navy blue sweatsuit asked me if we were having a garage sale. I said yes, we were, but it wasn’t starting until 8. She asked me if we had any furniture. I said that we had a little, not much. Then she asked, just to confirm, that we weren’t starting until 8. I wasn’t rude or defensive, but I stood firm and told her that we weren’t going to start until 8. I knew good and well that I could’ve let her in to shop and that was just what she wanted. But I also knew that letting early birds in was a slippery slope and that if I did I’d never get any breakfast. You have to be strong when you put on a garage sale. The early bird went away.

We got our coffee and breakfast and went out to the garage to finish putting a couple of things out. We decided to open the doors at 7:35. There must have been people parked around our house waiting and their ears must be tuned to listen for the sound of a garage door opener, for no sooner had the door gone all the way up than a line of people appeared trudging on the sidewalk toward our garage. I was quickly trying to finish hooking up a stereo we were selling (the online guides tell you to plug in electric things to show people that they work – I already had a TV/VCR combo going with The Little Mermaid showing). I never got the stereo all the way hooked up because one of the first guys who came in looked around quickly and said he wanted to buy all of the electronics. As I was unhooking the stereo and TV he looked around at other stuff we had and he explained that his brother just got out of a halfway house and was moving into an apartment and had nothing. He also bought a cordless phone and a microwave.

As this was going on this older Mexican woman was frantically making a pile of things she wanted in the middle of the garage. She nearly threw me bodily away from the work I was doing unhooking the TV to get at a mobile phone that was still in the box that we were selling for ten bucks. (Another online tip is that things still the original box sell much better. Fortunately, I keep a lot of the boxes things come in.) Incidentally, Audra and I had talked a lot about all of the things we were selling – the things we agonized over putting in the garage sale in the first place and the things we thought would never sell. That mobile phone was a 2004 Samsung camera phone. It was the first cell phone I ever owned and I kept it in a leather case the entire time I owned it so it was in fabulous condition. I still had the box, which looked brand new, and a car charger. I marked the whole package for $10 and I told Audra that it was a super deal and that it would probably be the first thing sold.

On the other side, I had some tighty whities that I had gotten as a gag gift for a birthday while I was in law school (someone had wanted to make a joke about legal briefs). I never wore them, I ain’t like that, but how was a prospective purchaser to know that they had never been worn? I would never, ever consider buying underwear at a garage sale, didn’t think anyone else would either and considered just throwing them away. Audra clowned me for putting them in. But you know what? Those motherfuckers sold too! To some old man who called them “shorts.”

The first wave of people, who had all gotten there before our advertised opening time, were the professionals. They moved quickly, eyes darting about, trying to snatch the best deals before the competition could beat them to it. I wish I had been able to watch more, but I was busy helping people load their takings and making change and whatnot.

I suppose our garage sale was pretty typical. We had many of the regular characters that you would expect to see at any garage sale – the illegal immigrant contingent, the handyman looking for tools, the gun guy, the musician guy, the thrift store owner and then a smattering of people who can’t really be classified into any particular group; they were just weird.

One of these weirdos was this fat awkward nerdy kid. He was over six feet tall and pudgy; wearing a Virginia Tech shirt that had some slogan on it about the shootings. He looked to be in high school, but he told us later that he was only in eighth grade. He brought his own bags, which caught my attention and made me immediately suspicious. (The garage sale sites say that shoplifting at garage sales is rampant.) The first thing he did was ask me if we had any “technical equipment.” I asked him if he meant computers and components and he acted patronizing about it like, “Duh, what else would I mean?” He didn’t seem too disappointed when I told him that we didn’t have any of that kind of stuff. He started looking around. He picked up a camping compass and brought it over to me and asked, “Does this work quite well?” He threw the “quite” in there as an attempt to be formal, I guess. I didn’t flinch and just told him that it worked. In my mind, though, I was thinking, “A compass doesn’t work quite well; it’s all or nothing. It’s a magnet, some fluid and the north fucking pole and that’s it.” Then he’s circling our garage picking up this or that and mumbling, mostly to himself.

At one point he picked up a pair of airline earphones. They were still in their plastic package, unopened, and we had four or five pairs of them. He held one pair up to me and said with some surprise, “These aren’t opened! You paid for these!” I guess he couldn’t understand why we’d pay for something and then not use them. “Well,” I said, “they probably came free with the ticket.” He furrowed his brow and responded, “No, they don’t come free.” Then he added, “I’m, like, an expert.” If there was any doubt before that I was dealing with a borderline retard, it had been erased by that statement. For one, who is an expert on airline practices? If anyone, certainly not this fat nerdy kid. For two, I knew for a fact that I had gotten them for free. I mean, I’m not an expert, but I was fucking there. I’m not a frequent flier by any means, but on the dozen or so flights that I’ve been on that were long enough for a movie, I’ve been given the earphones for free. I may have had to pay for them once. However, I wasn’t about to argue with this kid. It wasn’t that important and I didn’t want to provoke him.

He hung around for at least a half hour, picking up various things and telling me and Audra and whoever else would listen what he would build with them. I had some nice brass bathroom plumbing fixtures that I had gotten when I worked at a hardware store in Austin and he kept saying how he could build a steam pump out of them, whatever a steam pump is. Then he picked up something that had an electric motor in it and talked about “parting it out.” Eventually, I picked up enough clues from his mumbling and weird statements to figure out that he liked to build things out of junk. I was going to let it go, but he just kept talking about all the shit he could build and finally Audra took the bait and asked him directly what kinds of things he built. “Fuck me,” I thought, “Here we go.”

He got all excited as he started in on his hobby. He explained that he subscribed to a magazine called “Make,” which is like some kind of tinkerer hobbyists’ rag. By extreme coincidence, Audra and I had just watched a show on PBS the night before called “Make” and we mentioned that to him. He got even more excited and went on to tell us that the show and the magazine were produced by the same people. He asked us what episode we had seen and he knew the one. (It was the one where the guy builds a chair out of shopping cart.) It was obvious to me that he was a bright kid. Hell, in certain narrow fields he might have been a genius. But, like many of his kind, he was extremely deficient in other areas.

He took a grooming hair trimmer that was still in the box off one of our shelves and asked me, “Tell me the truth; has this ever been used?” It was like he expected me to lie. This told me that he was truly a garage sale veteran, even at his tender age. I told him that yes, it had been used, but only a few times. I wanted to throw in “but never on the pubes” but that would have been a lie. It would have been a funny joke, but I held back because his reaction was too unpredictable. He put the trimmer in his bag.

He looked around a while longer and put a tie of mine and a shirt belonging to Audra’s dad in his bag. Eventually he came over to me and told me he was ready. I said cheerfully, “Okay, let’s total you out.” I stated the dollar amount of each item as I lifted it out of the bag. It came to $10.60. He opened his wallet (an orange leather one that he had gotten from a garage sale) and pulled out a ten-dollar bill. I could see in his wallet that he had a bunch of ones so I expected that he was going to give me eleven dollars. I called over to Audra to bring me forty cents change. He handed me the ten and then fumbled around in his wallet. He mumbled something about exact change and having a two dollar bill. I was holding the forty cents waiting for him to figure out the combination of bills he was going to give me. Then he put the ten back in his wallet, picked up his bag and held out his hand to accept the change and said, “Okay, thank you very much.” I just kind of looked at him for a second and then told him, “You haven’t given me the money yet.” He became immediately apologetic. “Oh, oh, I’m sorry.” He pulled out his wallet again and fished out a ten and a one and handed them to me. I gave him the forty cents. “I’m sorry about that. I thought I did.” He picked up his bags and walked out of the garage. I watched him walk down the street.

Now, I’m a person who usually gives people the benefit of the doubt. I’m a glass-half-full kind of guy when it comes to people. But I feel pretty strongly that this fat nerdy kid tried to fuck me over. I thought it over for a second and walked over to Audra and told here what had happened. My mind raced and I came to the conclusion that the kid makes a hobby of going to garage sales and pulling the “hand you the twenty then ask for it back and demand change for the twenty” trick everywhere he went. He probably read about the con on some Spy vs. Spy bullshit nerd website. I wonder how many people had fallen for that. If you think about it, the odds are probably pretty good that he could get away with it. People like us running garage sales aren’t jaded retail store managers who deal with shoplifters and thieving employees all the time and prosecute them as a simple matter of course. We’re not used to dealing with people stealing from us. This isn’t a business; this is our home. People, as a rule, want to avoid conflict. So even if they suspected something like this was happening to them, they are likely to just let it go to avoid the confrontation. What this fat turd didn’t bargain for was that I thrive in conflict. I defy the odds on that one and I called his ass out without a second thought.

The second reason this trick might work a lot of the time is the confusion factor. Things get busy during a garage sale. There are as many as a dozen people in a confined space and you are being asked questions and trying to total people’s purchases and make change and do all of the math right. In the back of your mind you are trying to watch everyone to make sure people aren’t just walking out with an armload of stuff without paying. There’s a lot going on and it would be easy to get confused. The confusion increases the benefit of the doubt factor. So even though you might suspect that someone was ripping you off, because you knew you were busy and confused you might just chalk it up to that. Not me. When it comes to transactions and money, especially in that setting, I’m not going to get distracted. I knew I never had the money in hand. Period.

Again, I think my experiences as a lawyer helped me out here. I’m used to people, usually other lawyers, trying to sneak little details into deals or conveniently forgetting to tell me about some issue that would tilt the deal in their favor. The difference between a favorable and unfavorable outcome is sometimes razor thin and I know this. So I am very careful about shit like that and the odds of somebody sneaking something past me are pretty low.

Another weirdo was this shifty little Arab guy. He came in and quickly picked out a coffee maker that we had, still in the box. We had it marked for $4. He asked us to take $3. Now, the haggling thing is probably the worst part about hosting a garage sale. I don’t really like haggling and neither does Audra. We had marked the prices on things to be lower than we thought we could get in part because we didn’t want to haggle. Of course, the shoppers don’t know that so they are going to haggle anyway. We had decided the night before that our rule was that we weren’t going to mark down any prices until after noon. It wasn’t even 9 when this Arab dude came in. We told him that we weren’t doing any markdowns until after noon. But he persisted. Eventually we let him have the fucking coffee maker for $3. Then he picked up a Timex Ironman watch that I had (still in the box). The price tag was still on the box for $69.95 and I had it marked for $5. The watch was dead because it needed a battery and I had even put a label on it telling people that. Five bucks was a steal for this watch, but this guy asked us to take $3. “No,” I said, “That was a seventy dollar watch! We’re just giving it away for $5!” (The online guides say that you should mark your prices at anywhere from 20-10% of retail value of the item.) He didn’t give up and kept asking for a lower price. “$3?” I shook my head. “$3?” he asked again. I shook my head again and told him again about our no markdowns until noon policy. “$4?” This guy was relentless.

I wouldn’t have given it to him for $4 except that we had had an African couple in before who looked at the watch. They had asked for a discount on it and we’d told them no. They’d been persistent too but we didn’t back down and they walked without buying it. That caused me to rethink the markdown policy. We should have marked our prices a full dollar more on everything to give us more room to bargain. Live and learn.

So now the guy had our coffee maker and my watch, originally priced at $10 total, down to $7. Then he went for the guitar. He asked me if it was a good guitar and I told him that it was in perfect condition, that it wasn’t very expensive new but that I’d seen it for sale online for $120 – all true. I could tell from some of the things he was saying that he didn’t know shit about guitars. He asked me to mark it down to $50 and I told him flatly, “Absolutely not. That guitar is worth every bit of $60 and more.” The fat nerdy kid chimed in, “That’s a good guitar. I’d be sorry to see it go.” “Thanks, kid,” I thought. The shifty Arab put the guitar down and looked around at our other stuff. But he went back to the guitar and picked it up. He pleaded with me, “Please, I am a teacher. I want to give it to a student.” I’m thinking, “Teacher? Is that a basis for charity?” Fuck that. This squirrely motherfucker was just trying to fuck me and I was starting to get sick of him. So I told him, “I’ll tell you what, I’ve got this digital tuner that I’ve marked for $5 that I think should go with the guitar. I’ll throw it in for free if you pay $60. But that’s it.” “$55?” he says, just a bit sheepishly. Shameless motherfucker. “Fine,” I said, disgusted. He asked me to write “Sold” on the tag on the guitar, which I did.

We totalled up all of his items and it came to $71. “$70?” he asked. Unbelievable.  I let him have it just to get the wretch out of there. Then the icing on the fucking cake – he hands me $15 and tells me it’s a “deposit” because he has to go get the rest of the money. I looked at him, incredulous. After all that and he wants me to hold this shit for him so he can go get the money? I said to him, “I’ll take your deposit, but I’m putting that guitar back in case someone else wants to buy it.” He says, “But it’s sold.” That’s when I looked him in the eye and told him in my most menacing tone,”It’s not sold until I have the money.” And he knew I meant it. "You have one hour to get back here."  I half expected him not to come back, but he did, and he gave Audra $55.

Sometime between when the shifty Arab left and came back to pay, Audra came over to where I’m standing and asks me, “Where’s my bag of rings?” I don’t know what she’s talking about. “My bag of rings. I just put them out. They were right here.” She pointed to a spot on a table where the “jewelry department” was located. I told her that I never saw them. Her face gets flushed and she says, “If someone took them either they just left or they are still here.” The shifty Arab had just left and the only people who were still there were the fat nerdy kid and a couple of Mexican immigrant women who were in the back looking at clothes. At that time I didn’t figure the fat nerdy kid for a thief and there was little opportunity for the Mexicans to have taken them since they had just walked up. That left the shifty Arab. Audra was convinced that he had taken her bag of rings. I explained that there was nothing we could do about it because we hadn’t seen him do it and he was long gone anyway. I postulated that he had taken the rings straight to a pawn shop to get the $55 he was going to bring back to us. There were some silver rings in the bag, but fortunately they weren’t worth a whole lot. Audra said she would have marked them at $10 total, so it wasn’t a great loss. But still, it pissed us off, especially to think it was the shifty Arab.

There were a few other characters that showed up, but none as notable as the fat nerdy kid and the shifty Arab. We sold 75-80% of what we put out, including many items that we never thought would sell. The afternoon was pretty slow, but we had a few stragglers right up until 3 when I finally closed the garage door. We loaded up what remained and took it to Goodwill. Then we took the plywood and sawhorses back to Home Depot. (You gotta love the Oriental Rental.) We counted up our profits and we’d made nearly $500! All told, a pretty interesting experience.

February 09, 2009 at 09:59 AM | Permalink | Comments (4) | TrackBack (0)

The Ill-Advised Social Filterless Post

I like crass humor, what can I say?

  1. I recently thought that it would be really funny in a breakup letter to an ex-girlfriend to say, "So long, and thanks for all the pussy."  (The basis of the quote is from the Hitchhiker's Guide in case you are wondering.)

  2. I ran across this and I can't stop laughing about it; especially the part about the silverware:  "There are very few people who look good in red lipstick, and those people usually juggle for a living. I once met a girl who was able to pull it off, so I let her buy me dinner. Later that night she was making out with my wang, when I realized that all that lipstick was rubbing off. So I evacuated my moan-maker from her face hole, took some silverware for my trouble, and snuck out of her tent."  (From thebestpageintheuniverse.net)

  3. Facebook continues to amuse.

  4. I also cracked up at this line:  "If he'd managed to fish out his dick, there was a good chance he was already urinating."  It's from here.

Anyway, sorry about this post (especially to you, babe - I'm an embarrassment, I know).  Maybe someday I'll grow up.

February 06, 2009 at 10:36 AM | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack (0)

Redeye Update: 2/2/2009

  1. Some people are going to take this as a sexist comment, but it's really not:  I'm sorry, but Pat Summit is just about the most unattractive person I have ever seen.  (The first is probably this female child I saw once when I was a kid sitting in the car waiting for my mom at H-E-B in Victoria.  She walked by and I actually gagged.  No kidding.  She was so ugly I referred to her as the Seventh Son.  Snake and Llogg, do y'all remember that?)  Don't get me wrong, it's not because Summit is a woman's basketball coach.  I happen to think Title IX was a great thing.  No, she's just mannish, yet, supposedly not a lesbian.  Hmmmm...not sure I'm buying that.  Anyway, with that stunt last season (or was it two seasons ago?) when she donned that cheerleader outfit during the Bruce Pearl love fest, bitch nearly ruined college cheerleaders for me.  I got no use for her; 1,000 victories or not.
  2. I haven't weighed in at all on the inauguration or Obama's first days or any of that.  I think having an African American president, especially one with some Muslim heritage, is a significant milestone of maturity and tolerance in our country.  Honestly, it is shocking that we would elect someone to the highest office in the land with a name like Barack Hussein just a few years after the most heinous attack on our country in history by Islamic fundamentalist lunatics.  It gives me heart, though, because that means that people can read beyond the name and understand a bit more depth than I have traditionally given to the public at large.  The political divide is still alive and well, however, and conservatives and Republicans are still mouthing off on their ignorant and misguided (and failed) agendas.  What's really sad is that now they've gone and elected a black leader of the party.  What kind of political strategy is that?  Reminds me of that scene in 'O Brother Where Art Thou' when one of Pappy Lee O'Daniel's campaign advisors suggests they should get themselves a midget to prance around on stage just like their rival in the election has.  Do they seriously expect for this move to bring back the party?
  3. The Super Bowl.  I hate professional football these days.  Too much mass marketing, too scrubbed and polished and scripted for my taste.  What are people cheering for, anyway?  A brand?  Some company's job is to field a football team and that team's sole value is as entertainment.  The team is just a product.  All of the hype and excitement is just marketing.  Why not root for Pepsi to beat Coke?  I've made these arguments before.  But, but, but, what I do like to see is that these players still want it.  They want to win.  They really want it.  So the playoff games, especially, are real.  The Super Bowl has been so overhyped and overproduced that I think it must be hard for the players to focus and play the actual game like it should be played.  Every now and then they manage it.  I didn't watch a second of the pre-game BS.  I watched a little of the first half and most of the second half and none of halftime.  I tried to treat it just like any other football game on a Sunday on my couch by myself.  No big "have-to" party or anything.  For me, it was just like any other game; except with better commercials.  I didn't really care who won.  My though process was that, on the one hand the Cardinals were the underdogs.  On the other hand, the Steelers had three former Longhorns (Limas Sweed, Casey Hampton and Tony Hills.  The Cards only had one - Lyle Sendlein - and a dude from my hometown of Victoria (Jerheme Urban).  Then again, he spells his name J-E-R-H-E-M-E.  So, I guess I wanted the Steelers to win.  The win put the Steelers ahead of the Cowboys for most all-time Super Bowl wins.  But, Jerry Jones.  So, Steelers, but I really didn't care.  It turned out to be a pretty good game.  The best part was the spectacular show put on by Larry Fitzgerald and Santonio Holmes (although I strongly disapprove of the name, Santonio).  It was a good game.  It's over.  I observed.  BFD.

February 03, 2009 at 04:03 PM | Permalink | Comments (8) | TrackBack (0)

And at the End There is an Iron Fist

One thing that I really enjoy is taking the mysteries out of life.  Reducing unknowns.  Learning.  See, ignorance leads to fear and fear leads to unhappiness.  So the more you know, the happier you can be.  Plus, knowledge is empowering.  When you know more about the world around you then you are more likely to be able to function well.  There are a few basic things that I think most people should know to make them more comfortable in the world.  One of those is how a piston engine works.  Almost everyone drives a car, but few people know how the car is actually propelled.  Same with a computer.  People should know basically how a computer works.  People should also know the basics of how government and law works.  Now many subjects like these are too complicated for anyone to fully understand, even someone highly educated on the very subjects.  Fortunately, for you to gain the comfort, power and happiness that comes with the knowledge of certain things, you only need to know the basicas.  Our educational system should, at the minimum, provide that much, but it doesn't.  Too often we are educated on the theory of how things are supposed to work, but not how they actually work.  For that reason, people graduate from high school, and even college, terribly misinformed about how the world actually works.  So, when people graduate from high school or college they spend at least a couple of years desperately hanging on to what they think the world should be like before they realize that they've been lied to all of their lives and embrace the horror that a lot of what they've been told is untrue.  (I'm not suggesting any sort of conspiracy, here.  What I'm suggesting is an incompetence or ineffectiveness in the conveyance of ideas.)  People then have to spend several more years learning about the real world.  Think of how much time has been wasted.  What could we accomplish if, at age 18, you were spit out of the education system well informed and well adjusted?  For that reason, I would be highly in favor of an educational system that more resembles what I think of as technical or vocational schools.  Of course, I also think we should do away with other fallacies like Santa Claus and the American Dream, to name just a couple.  "What's wrong with the truth?" I always say.  Would Christmases have been any less happy if I had known all along that my parents were responsible for the shitload of new toys I woke up to in the morning? Or that they had done that as a traditional part of our culture based on the generous acts of a Scandinavian bishop named Kris Kringle, or some shit?  I highly doubt it.  See, I fear no truth; even if it's horrible, and no one else should either.  What I fear are lies and fallacies that are shielding us from the truth.

I once suggested to someone that despite advances in our culture, everything still boils down to who can kick who's ass.  I mean like physically.  The person I told that to told me that that was barbaric.  I didn't disagree, but that's the way it was as I had it figured.  For example, take Bill Gates.  He's the richest guy in the world and he wields enormous power because of it.  But physically, he's a weak-ass pussy.  If someone were to put him in a choke hold or hold a gun to his head, he's powerless.  All of that money and power doesn't do him a bit of good at that moment unless he's able to buy his way out of the situation.  So, it's not really who has the gold who makes the rules, it's who can kick the guy's ass who has the gold that makes the rules.  (Of course, in the case of militaries, it takes gold in the first place to be able to build the ability to kick-ass, but that's another issue.)  Most social constructs don't allow people to resort to physical violence to get what they need or want, but when things reach a point the social constructs are out the window and fists or bullets start flying.

Two things started me thinking about this stuff.  One is that I'm reading Charlie Wilson's War right now.  I have already seen the movie and I got the book for Christmas.  The thing that I love about the story is that it proves something that I really believe in - that great things don't happen in some far away place to other people.  They happen right here; to people like you and me.  The ablity to do great and wonderful things exists in almost everyone and the first step to getting people to do great and wonderful things is to make them believe that they can.  You can write a great novel.  You can make an awesome movie.  You can be a rock star.  You can change the lives of the people around you for the better.  Anything.

The second thing is that yesterday I went out and took some property from someone as part of a lawsuit.  As a lawyer, I've learned a few things about the way the law and government work.  Almost every time I seize a bank account or property in a lawsuit the people respond with some variation of "You can do that?"  Yes you can fucking do that!  Otherwise, what is the point of suing someone if you can't enforce the results?  The phrase "law enforcement" has taken on an entirely new meaning to me.  People think that lawsuits are about lawyers and courtrooms and judges and papers, but they aren't.  They are about a law enforcement officer with a gun and a badge who is going to come to your home or place of business and take your shit.  At the end there is an iron fist.

January 16, 2009 at 09:24 AM | Permalink | Comments (3) | TrackBack (0)

2008 Retrospective - 2009 What to Watch For Amalgamated

Is it too late for a New Year post?  Well, fuckit.

By all accounts, 2008 sucked.  From a CNN perspective, I guess it did.  Gas prices got anger-inducingly high, the economy tanked (so I read), we found out about the mortgage bubble, the bursting of which created a credit crisis.  Locally, Hurrican Ike wreaked havoc on coastal communities to the east and northeast of Houston.  We, ourselves, lived without electricity for a week, which turned out to be not that bad.  Notable deaths of the year included Sir Edmund Hillary (first known person to reach the summit of Mount Everest), Bobby Fischer (American expat grandmaster chess player), Heath Ledger (actor - Dark Knight, Brokeback Mountain), Roy Scheider (actor - Jaws), Gary Gygax (creator of Dungeons & Dragons), Charlton Heston (actor - Ben Hur, later as the "Cold dead hands" spokesman of the NRA), Sydney Pollack (actor, producer, director - Out of Africa, Tootsie, Eyes Wide Shut, Michael Clayton), Robert Rauschenberg (American artist), Bo Diddley (musician), Tim Russert (newscaster and political commentator), George Carlin (comedian),  Estelle Getty (the oldest Golden Girl), Michael DeBakey (pioneering heart surgeon), Bernie Mac (actor and comedian), Paul Newman (actor - Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid, Cool Hand Luke, The Color of Money), Michael Chrichton (author - Jurassic Park).

On the positive side of things, the Olympics in Beijing showed a new openness and spirit of world community in China and the election of Barack Obama became a major milestone in the history of the United States signifying great strides toward the end of racial divisiveness in the country.  And hey, the Longhorns had a great year going 12-1 and winning the Fiesta Bowl.

On a personal level, 2008 was the year of my engagement. (Technically I got engaged in 2007, but I was engaged for the entire year of 2008.)  2008 was also the year that I successfully completed the Texas Water Safari, which would go up there with "graduated from college," "passed the Texas Bar Exam" and "made a documentary film" on my life's achievements list.  I became an uncle for the second time when my nephew Elliott was born in August.

In 2009, the biggest event by far is going to be my wedding in May.  That's a pretty big deal.  There will be a lot of events and happenings associated with the wedding to look forward to as well.  Beyond that, I plan on attempting the Texas Water Safari again in June.  Anything else major that happens in 2009 will be a surprise, I guess.

So, here's hoping that 2008 wasn't too bad for you and that 2009 turns out well for you.

January 13, 2009 at 09:22 AM | Permalink | Comments (2) | TrackBack (0)

Texas Football 2008: Fiesta Bowl and Season Recap

First of all, I'd just like to thank my Lord and Savior Jesus Christ because without him, none of this is possible.

Second of all, did I nail this motherfucking season, or what?  If you recall my preseason prediction post back in August, I said 12-2 with a final #4 ranking.  I also said we'd lose to Tech and Missouri in the regular season.  Well, we ended up 12-1 with what will probably be a #2 or #3 final ranking.  We did lose to Tech, though not by the score I predicted, but we beat Mizzou.  We didn't go to the Big XII Championship Game because of the three way ties.  I even had us going to the Fiesta Bowl and winning, which we did.  I was even pretty close on a lot of the scores:

Mine                                                              Actual

Texas 48, Florida Atlantic 10                            TX 52, FAU 10

Texas 52, UTEP 18                                        TX 42, UTEP 13

Texas 33, Arkansas 20                                    TX 52, Ark. 10

Texas 60, Rice 13                                            TX 52, 10

Texas 24, Colorado 21                                      TX 38, CO 14

Texas 18, Oklahoma 14                                    TX 45, OU 35

Missouri 36, Texas 20                                        TX 56, Mizzou 31

Texas 52, Oklahoma State 35                            TX 28, OSU 24

Texas Tech 45, Texas 21                                    TX 33, TT 39

Texas 51, Baylor 17                                            TX 45, BU 21

Texas 42, Kansas 13                                           TX 35, KU 7

Texas 28, Texas A&M 12                                    TX 49, TAMU 9

Big XII Championship:  Texas 35, Missouri 27         ------------------

Fiesta Bowl:  Texas 28, Wisconsin 20                    TX 24, OSU 21

On the Fiesta Bowl

It was a great college football game.  Lead changes, excitement, all of that.  It was not a great game for Texas.  Being favored, it was a lose-lose in the perception battle that is the college football championship crowning system.  By all rights, we should have beaten them by 20 and the game should have been in hand in the 3rd quarter.  Still though, Texas overcame the adversity of playing a game that the team felt they were above, which is a significant psychological hurdle.  My hat is off to Mack Brown for having the team as up and ready to play as they were.  I place my hat back on my head and then take it right back off to Colt McCoy.  The guy took a terrific pounding (Did you see all of those replays where he is just getting absolutely crushed?) and managed to lead the team from behind and clinched the win with a super drive and perfect touchdown pass on a perfectly called and executed play.  The guy is really, really tough.  He's a winner.  More on him in the recap section of this post.

It was troubling that the Ohio State offense was able to run the ball so effectively against our #2 ranked run defense.  The commentators astutely pointed out that they earned that ranking against offenses that primarily threw the ball, making the high ranking much less impressive.  Wells is an NFL-caliber back and Pryor bears a scary resemblance skill-wise to The Messiah VY, but still, Muschamp.  I thought our young defensive backs did well enough - they've overachieved all year - but they still gave up a lot of big plays.  (That touchdown pass to Pryor I'm still wondering what Gideon was doing.  Turn around!!  What, did you notice that Pryor had a booger or something and that distracted your attention from the fucking play?  Stop looking at his face!  Look for the goddamned ball!  Bat it away!  You are right fucking there!)

Still, all of the negatives aside (Oh, and can we please get a fucking unsportsmanlike penalty in the last seconds of the game and give them a realistic chance of scoring?  Can we, please?  Fuck!) it was a great win that should propel the program to a preseason top five and another prime position to compete for the Nat'l Title next season.

Season Recap

Here's the synopsis of the season:  Colt McCoy, Colt McCoy, Colt McCoy, Colt McCoy, Colt McCoy, Colt McCoy, Colt McCoy.  Seriously, without him we're like 7-4 at best.  I remember looking at who was on the roster and in the recruiting hopper when VY announced for the NFL and thinking, "We're fucked."  Colt was only a 3-star recruit and I think Jevan Snead was the same - maybe he was a four-star guy, I can't remember.  Anyway, they were skinny white dudes who looked weak as hell (McCoy) and punkish (Snead), respectively.  I thought that we could endure 2 seasons of quarterback mediocrity while we relied on the running game and defense.  Who knew?  McCoy better than VY?  I would have slapped you if you had suggested it back then.  What is even more impressive about the season he had is that he did it without a strong supporting cast on offense.  The offensive line is very good, but I don't think there's a first rounder in there.  We had no, I repeat, no tight end.  You know that stone hand that Hell Boy has?  Well, Peter Ullman has two of those.  We'll have Irby back next year, hopefully, so that will add a completely new dimension to the offense that we simply haven't had this year.  In addition to no tight end, Colt had no dependable running game or game breaking running back to take the pressure off.  I really expected one of the backs to emerge as the No. 1 guy at some point in the season.  That never happened, although the coaches basically went with the senior in Ogbannaya after he had one good game because they just had to make a decision.  That worked okay, but much of the success running the ball was probably because teams were scheming against the pass so much.  Lastly, he had no prototype NFL caliber receiver.  Quan and Shipley are extremely sure-handed, were durable, ran good routes and, best of all, had an almost extrasensory sync with Colt, but Roy Williams they are not.  Either the traditional recipes for offensive success and the traditional molds for the best players are not the only way, or Colt just did it all on his own.

One thing is for sure, we are in the Golden Age of UT Football.  We've only won one Nat'l Championship and one Big XII title in 11 years under Mack Brown, but over that same span we have won more games than any other Div. 1 program.  BCS bowl games and top 10 rankings are almost a given.  It's easy to focus on what hasn't happened (more titles), but almost any other school in the nation would happily trade places.  A few other programs have had similar successes, Oklahoma being one of them, but it doesn't get much better than where it's at right now.

January 06, 2009 at 02:02 PM | Permalink | Comments (7) | TrackBack (0)

The BCS Stands for "Steaming Pile of Shit That Soulless Corporate Types Who Run College Football Make the Fans Eat" and Other Stories

  1. Fuck the BCS.  No seriously, find its orifice and insert the biggest and most painfully shaped phallus you can find (preferrably heated to 1000 degrees) and reapeatedly ram the shit out of it unitl it is literally fucked to death.  I vow that I will not watch a college football game in 2011, and I will start a boycott movement to encourage others to do the same, if there is not at least an 8 team playoff in place for that year's season.
  2. The above isn't just about Texas getting jobbed.  The whole system is just ridiculous.  I could accept it if there was a logical or moral reason, but there's not.  It's all about money, plain and simple.  Any conference commissioner or university president who says otherwise is a money-grubbing soulless liar.  I just can't continue to follow a sport, as much as I love it, that determines it's champion in such an offensive way and lies to its devotees so shamelessly.

  3. There are a million people out there who have all spent too much time thinking about it who have proffered their "playoff plan" complete with arguments why it is good.  I haven't devised the perfect college football playoff system because I'm not going to spend the time to do it.  The right plan is out there taking into consideration all factors and giving them each appropriate weight.  Motherfuckers in charge just pick one and put it in place.  Before 2011.

  4. If the bowls have to die, so be it.  They are from a bygone era and a bowl for a bowl's sake doesn't have any meaning today.  College football has evolved to a point where it needs a playoff system and the bowls are (one of the things) standing in the way.  They should become a nostalgic bit of history in college football.  The Gipper and shit.

  5. The irony here is that I think OU and Florida are the two best teams in the country right now as far as off-field observation can tell you.  (Note the HUGE qualifier.)  I like Texas against either of them, though, and I'd really, really, really like to see it on the field.

  6. Colt for Heisman.  Even though it would be a nice consolation prize for the program, I worry that if he wins it that psychologically he won't have as much to play for next year when we have another chance at a national championship run.

  7. While we're at it, we need to clean house in D-1.  There are too many teams.  Normally, I wouldn't care about that.  I like Cinderella stories and all, but fans of Utah, Boise St., BYU, TCU, Hawaii and all of the rest who whine and complain every year about the unfairness of being left out of the BCS bowls make me laugh.  One Boise St. vs. OU game aside, these chumps are not in the same league as the major programs.  They needlessly complicate the issue when their bloated record was built on victories over even bigger chumps.  Every team in the WAC, Sun Belt, MAC and many teams in the Mountain West and C-USA should be demoted to a lower division.  That would leave close to 70 teams in the top tier.

December 09, 2008 at 08:49 AM | Permalink | Comments (13) | TrackBack (0)

The BCS Rant

You know, if Blake Gideon's breadbasket didn't have a giant hole in the bottom of it or if Earl Thomas' body-eye coordination hadn't failed him for three tenths of a second at the end of the Tech game this post wouldn't be necessary.  Beyond that, if the Big XII had the ability to account for all tiebreaker possibilities or even just copy their sister conferences who have conference championship games, this post wouldn't be necessary.  For that matter, if we just had a goddamned playoff this post wouldn't be necessary.  But, alas, we don't live in a perfect world.  That seems to be my curse and that of us all.

By now, everyone knows all of the macro- issues.  I don't want to rehash those things because they are the effects of underlying causes.  No, I want to get into the molecules of the thing. 

Let's agree that the point of all competition is to reach the apex, to be the best after beating the competition.  The apex, and the path to get there, are defined by the rules of the competition.  In an individual football game, the best is the team that can score more points than the other team.  In a season, where the broadly recognized ultimate goal is to be crowned National Champion, the way in which you accomplish the goal is convoluted and shitty.  Let's review:  for your team to play in the National Championship game they have to be ranked No. 1 or No. 2 in the BCS Rankings.  The BCS Rankings use a complicated formula consisting of data from two national polls and five sets of computer rankings, which in themselves use a complicated set of factors given varying degrees of weight and apply high level math.  First, the polls.  These are the AP and the Coaches Poll.  The AP poll consists of mostly writers, I think, who cast ballots listing the top 25 teams in order.  The Coaches Poll is just that - football coaches, but not all of them, list their rankings from 1-25 on a ballot.  The AP ballots are public but the Coaches ballots are not until the final week of the season.  The biggest complaint against the polls is that they tend to follow regional biases.  For example, a newspaper guy from New Jersey is more likely to rank east coast teams more favorably than a writer from LA and vice versa.  Because the ballots are public (mostly), this reins in some of the bias, but even then there is enough subjectivity involved that any voter can drop or raise a team 4-5 slots without having to answer for it.  That can make a big difference where the margins are so narrow, as they are this year.  The coaches have even more incentive to do anything but rank the teams objectively.  Bottom line is that the polls invite politicking and have a history of bias and lack of objectivity and they are therefore a wholly inaccurate method for selecting a champion of anything, much less of something so followed as college football.

Next, the computer rankings.  People used to bristle at the notion of a computer selecting, or even being part of the formula of selecting, a national champion in football.  I think as people grow more comfortable with computers some of the closed-minded resitance goes away, but there's still something really wrong with it.  First, there's no way that a computer can take into account everything that goes into being a champion.  Being a champion of sport, especially one so physical as football, is visceral and completely human.  You may be able to quantify and reduce to numbers certain aspects of what that means, but a computer simply cannot grasp, or worse, redefine, what it means to be a champion.  Sport is a human endeavor, after all, and to simply turn it over to a calculator instead of doing the math in our heads is cheating.

By analogy, the BCS is much like saying that in order to win the blue ribbon for the best baked apple pie that you have to be the best apple grower.

So, really, the essential problem is how do you define a winner.  Right now it is defined as the team who can end the season as the number one ranked BCS team.  Not the best team.  Not the team that won every game they played.  Not the team with the best players.  The system rewards the team that is the best at the BCS system, which really may not have very much to do with football at all.  The system rewards all sorts of things like scheduling chump teams, having a likeable coach, being from a conference without a conference championship game, being from a major conference, publicity and hype among other things that have nothing to do with the actual play of the teams on the field.  Of course, the system rewards good play and winning as well, more than the other factors even, but when the margin of separation between teams is razor thin, those other factors have to make up the difference.

College football crowns its champion in a way not only different from every other major college and professional sport in the world, it differs vastly.  And what's worse, college football has attempted to redefine what it means to be a champion by introducing all of these non-football factors.  Tournaments and playoff systems are the most widely utilized method of crowning a champion for most sports.  Granted, playoffs and tournaments aren't perfect and they reward only certain characteristics as well, but at least it's consistent, widely recognized as valid and it leaves very little room for questions.

College football fans are being sold a bill of goods and it's high time something changed.  For any college president or conference administrator to say that keeping the current system in place is about anything other than money is to insult our collective intelligence.  That in itself, is enough to leave it behind for me.  The only way to inflict change is to hurt the bottom line and the only way to do that is to incite a boycott of college football.  We could do it.  It would take a huge effort, but we could do it.  I'd say boycott college football in 2010 (we've got to give them a year to set it up) if they don't institute a playoff system.

For this year, it's lost.  I will forever mark this year's season and champion with one enduring symbol:

 

Asterisk

 

December 03, 2008 at 03:10 PM | Permalink | Comments (7) | TrackBack (0)

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