Re: Idle Chatter

1006
Darkstar wrote:Cali

RE: Lobster --

Do you eat the green stuff? I think it's pretty good on some garlicky and crusty bread or crackers.

Good deal on the legs and wine-bottle trick. I've seen that before, and now that you've confirmed it will work, I will have to try it.
Nope, I rinse away the green stuff. A little "green stuff" almost tragically turned my wife off to the tail I had saved for her. I had to do a little surgical action on the cutting board to re-present. I know the green stuff has fans, but I am not one.

I do like the roe, when I happily find.

Re: Idle Chatter

1007
More than 2,000 purebred dogs in 185 breeds competed in the nation's most prestigious dog show at New York's Madison Square Garden and when it came down to a best of seven, Malachy, a Pekingese, was the last to enter the darkened ring.

The crowd at Madison Square Garden grew louder with every tiny step Malachy took, and he sure took a lot of them just to get halfway around the dog show ring. That was perfect for this Pekingese. Gave him more time to soak in the cheers and look around the stands at his adoring fans Tuesday night, the Associated Press reported.
Image
That thing won best in show. I stopped watching after the shih tzu didn't come in the top 4 of the toy group. The judges were obviously incompetant.

Re: Idle Chatter

1011
Hey, Civ, I just added $1750 dollars to my gambling bankroll play at the casino beside Frank Sinatra's old place on the North Shoe of Tahoe.

I actually took a cab home about 750 feet because I had more than a couple grand in my pocket. I tipped the cabbie well.


I offered to him that he should go back and pick up the blonde hitch hiking on the short trip home. I suspect he would have anyways, and hope and trust it all turns out well.


My wife loves to be awakened from slumber with a pile of gambling winnings


In actuality, I only shared with her that I won a grand.


Shhh....


I'm saving the rest of the lettuce to gamble in Reno on Saturday night.



The Rat Pack Tribute Band we saw up here tonight was awesome and special.


My wife loves the suite the GM I spoke with in the bar last month hooked me up with.


This place is big enough to get lost in, and I do need one more martini before I seek slumber with my wife.

I think she is ten steps down the hall from this room, with a slight move to the east to get there.


Getting there will be worth it.


She has strict instructions to wake me up at 10AM.


I LOVE Nevada.

Re: Idle Chatter

1012
I meant to say "Hey, Seagull" in that late Friday night/early Saturday morning post but of course I had a few martinis before hitting the keyboard. I did own up on the total winnings with my wife, and bought her a tanzanite with diamond accent ring the next day in downtown Reno.

She saw it in a window as we walked to see the black jack female dealers at Harrah's who essentially pole dance in rotation about once an hour and then go back to dealing black jack. I first visited the place when I visited with an old high school and college friend and his Dad when they visited out this way last November. I couldn't remember well which casino or bar we were in as I first witnessed. I usually stick to my lower rent place, and then The Silver Legacy and Eldorado. For my wife this weekend, I rationalized and presented the motivation for a 2nd visit/search this weekend that it takes a talented girl to be a good black jack dealer and also be able to pole dance well. Later in the day she commented, "I liked those dance moves you did as you asked the security guard where the girls were who deal black jack and also dance."


As we passed the window to watch the black jack dealing pole dancers she mentioned, "oh, there's a beautiful tanzanite ring, and I love tanzanite."

Knowing the area, I retorted, "hey, every girl needs a ring purchased with gambling winnings from a pawn shop in downtown Reno, especially a pawn shop right next to The Reno Arch." We went in and I asked one of the guys what might be the "ballpark price" of the white gold tanzanite ring in the front window. He bantered, "well, ballpark......maybe $50,000?" I laughed and said, I suspected that might be a bit high. He pulled the ring from the window and told me the price as my wife tried it on.

I've mentioned to my wife before that jewelry prices are very negotiable, whether in a jewelry shop or in a nice pawn shop. She's never believed me. He gave me his price and I asked "what's the best deal you can give right now for me to pay you cash and leave with the ring?" He came down 35% on the original price. I responded with "get me there out the door, tax and resizing included, and we've got a deal." He said, "can you go $10 more?," and I said "of course."



It's fun to barter, and my wife loves her ring. Even from a pawn shop in Reno.

I gave a little bit of my winnings from Friday night back on Saturday while playing at the casino in Reno who that has given me free rooms for the past 10 years. I still have open action on the Daytona 500. The casino hotel has had a change in ownership and I apparently now have a nice chunk of change in their new formula for allotting food from their restaurants and stuff. The girl in the player's club lounge said, even if you did not get free rooms, you'd still be able to stay here for two months for free.

I had planned to spend Saturday night at the piano bar in The Eldorado, but was touted on a comic performing at "Sammy's Showroom," in Harrah's. We had two martinis at the piano bar, and then moved on to see a smart comic named Adam Ray. Nice little show. More martinis, and smart humor from the warm up guy, and the lead comic.

It was a good weekend, it was free, my wife has a new ring and I have a few hundred dollars more than what I left with.

Again, it was a good weekend.
Last edited by Tribe Fan in SC/Cali on Mon Feb 20, 2012 2:57 am, edited 1 time in total.

Re: Idle Chatter

1014
seagull wrote:Cali

You spread around more "lettuce" than Cesar Chavez.

You may want to reconsider your HBO boycott. The new "Luck" series is right up your alley. Makes me want to go to the track.

Yeah, I do feel a little left out by not seeing the real time "Luck." A couple of the promos that I saw that showed the seemingly underworld-esque connection sort of turned me less motivated to go out of my way to watch it.

I gamble on horses, and I do have a "the fix might be in" filters on my handicapping.

Other good gambling news this weekend is that I DID NOT make it to The El Camino Real at Golden Gate Fields.

I didn't see the form to check out the board hitters and winner, but my pre-race thoughts would have been losers.
Last edited by Tribe Fan in SC/Cali on Mon Feb 20, 2012 3:26 am, edited 1 time in total.

Re: Idle Chatter

1015
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JimNY7LLm1Y



Perhaps the best rendition by a white guy of "Minnie the Moocher" I have ever seen.


He's one of the guys who performed at the show we saw at The Cal-Neva on Friday night. These guys morph and change the act on the fly.

We saw him in white tux and tails, 20 pounds lighter than is seen above, as his rendition is now presented as of Cab Calloway.


He was good Friday night, and I told my wife I knew he was classically trained.

I also told her my her my fave Cab Calloway was St. James Infirmary Blues.

I've since learned he was indeed classically trained, and later in the show he did perform as Cab Calloway and did St. James Infirmary Blues.

And here's "Frank Sinatra" doing Under My Skin

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lFjA0-783mA

Re: Idle Chatter

1016
Taipei Times

By Amber Wang / AFP, TAIPEI

Taiwan and China wage war of words over Lin’s heritage
Image
Fans of US NBA basketball player Jeremy Lin celebrate at Lin’s parents’ hometown in central Changhua on Friday.

New NBA sensation Jeremy Lin (林書豪) has sparked a war of words between Taiwan and China as the rivals seek to lay claim to being the New York Knicks player’s true ancestral homeland.

US-born Lin, whose parents are Taiwanese immigrants, has been hailed as “the glory of Taiwan” and inspired a feverish following in the nation after coming off the bench and powering the Knicks to a stunning run of triumphs this month.

His fans in Taiwan range from President Ma Ying-jeou (馬英九) to teenagers rushing to get a Lin haircut. The nation’s sports lottery has seen brisk sales as buyers place record bets on matches featuring him.

“It’s humbling, a privilege and an honor. I’m really proud of being Chinese, I’m really proud of my parents being from Taiwan,” Lin said in a recent interview.

However, there are also many across the Taiwan Strait who want to claim Lin as their own. His maternal grandmother is from China, and there are even outlandish calls for him to represent China in the upcoming Olympics.

“Lin is virtually a household name in China, like Yao Ming (姚明), and there is wave after wave of calls for him to join the Chinese basketball team in the London Olympics,” Xinhua news agency said.

Yao, China’s first global sporting icon, joined the Houston Rockets in 2002 as the first player from outside the US to be selected as the top NBA draft choice.

“Lin is making our China look good,” one message on China’s popular microblog Sina Weibo read.

“Lin is a legend in my family, even my mother who didn’t watch sports before now really likes him because he is Chinese and he can score,” another said.

Xinhua, which said Lin’s ancestors hail from Zhejiang Province, said that he would have to renounce his US citizenship to play for China.

“How to turn the calls into reality would require the Chinese basketball association to make concrete efforts to attract talent and Lin to [show] determination and seize the opportunity,” Xinhua said.

However, Lin’s family in Taiwan begs to differ.

“He is Taiwanese, a true Taiwanese and some remarks [that he is not] are wrong,” Lin’s paternal grandmother Lin Chu A-muen told reporters in Taiwan.

His uncle, Lin Heng-cheng (林恆正), said: “We are very happy and very proud of him. He is Taiwanese and his grandmother and many relatives live in Taiwan. These are indisputable facts.”

“Since Lin’s grandma and uncle all stress that their whole family, including him, are Taiwanese, isn’t anyone who deliberately says he is not sick?” a message on the -Chinese-language United Daily News online forum said.

The Lin phenomenon taps into a deeper yearning among Taiwanese.

Taiwan has anxiously looked to talent with Taiwanese roots in the fields of sports, entertainment and arts to help boost its international profile. Oscar-winning film director Ang Lee (李安) and fashion designer Jason Wu (吳季剛), both born in Taiwan and based in the US, are also dubbed the “glory of Taiwan” for their professional achievements.

“The ‘Linsanity’ in Taiwan reflects Taiwan’s insecurity and lack of confidence due to its long-time isolation in the international community,” Chinese Culture University political analyst George Tsai (蔡瑋) said.

“Taiwan needs a hero and an icon and wants to think of Lin as one of us, to share in his pride and fame, but he is more American than Taiwanese and there is no need to label him,” Tsai said.

The mass-circulation Apple Daily newspaper said the public had every right to be proud of Lin’s Taiwanese ancestry and while it was “annoying” that China claimed him as its own, Chinese were also right to admire him.

However, it stressed: “We should not force him to identify himself as Taiwanese or Chinese, as his nationality is American and he is an American.”

And not everyone in China itself agrees with the attempts to adopt Lin as Chinese.

“I think Lin is an American and has nothing to do with China. It’s funny and ironic to claim that he is winning glory for China,” another message on Sina Weibo said.
“Every day is a new opportunity. You can build on yesterday's success or put its failures behind and start over again. That's the way life is, with a new game every day, and that's the way baseball is.”
-- Bob Feller

Re: Idle Chatter

1017
Taipei Times

Jeremy Lin is Taiwanese, family insists

By Shih Hsiu-chuan
Image
New York Knicks point guard Jeremy Lin brings the ball up court in the 2nd half against the Sacramento Kings at Madison Square Garden in New York on Wednesday.

The family of basketball sensation Jeremy Lin (林書豪), who announced he would visit Taiwan to take part in a basketball camp after the NBA season wraps up, is adamant that he is of Taiwanese heritage, the New York Times reported yesterday.

Lin Chi-chung (林繼宗), Jeremy Lin’s 63-year-old uncle, said in an interview in Taipei that there was no doubt that the Harvard--educated younger Lin, as well as his family, are Taiwanese.

“For sure, they are Taiwanese,” Lin Chi-chung said. “I spoke to Jeremy Lin’s father, who is my younger brother, and he said: ‘Make sure you point this out,’” he told the Times.

Both of Jeremy Lin’s parents were born in Taiwan and hold dual citizenship of the Republic of China (ROC) and the US, he said. Jeremy Lin was born in California and has US citizenship, but he has been offered dual citizenship in the ROC as well by the Ministry of Foreign Affairs, his uncle said.

Lin’s uncle said he and Jeremy Lin’s father were eighth-generation descendants of immigrants from Fujian Province, China, who moved to Taiwan in 1707. They were part of a large wave of Fujian migration from which most of Taiwan’s current residents are descended, the Times wrote.

A senior official in Zhejiang Province, China, suggested over the weekend that Jeremy Lin’s ancestral home was there because his maternal grandmother grew up in the province before moving to Taiwan in the late 1940s.

Ministry of Foreign Affairs spokesman James Chang (章計平) yesterday said in response to media inquiries that there was no record of Jeremy Lin ever applying for ROC citizenship.

“We have checked with the Bureau of Consular Affairs. The government has never received an application from Jeremy Lin for ROC citizenship,” Chang said.

Even though Jeremy Lin has US citizenship, he is eligible for ROC citizenship because both of his parents retain ROC citizenship and because Taiwan allows dual citizenship, he said.

Chang denied that the ministry had offered Jeremy Lin ROC citizenship, saying it was up to the basketball star to apply for it.

Meanwhile, Jeremy Lin has said he plans to return to Taiwan after the NBA season to take part in a basketball camp in which he helped out last year.

Lin said on Wednesday, after helping lead the New York Knicks to a 100-85 victory over Sacramento, that he was looking forward to his trip to Asia.

“I have a strong passion for the game and a strong passion for Taiwan,” Lin said. “Last summer, it was one of the highlights of my summer, so I’m going to do it again.”

Knicks games have become an Internet sensation because of Lin, a former Knicks bench-warmer who was given a chance to play and responded with the most points in his first five starts of any NBA player since 1976.
“Every day is a new opportunity. You can build on yesterday's success or put its failures behind and start over again. That's the way life is, with a new game every day, and that's the way baseball is.”
-- Bob Feller

Re: Idle Chatter

1019
I love this Jeremy Lin story.

He supposedly worked out this past summer at a club where I once visited the juice bar.

I predict we will all forget about Jeremy Lin within the next year.

If charged, I could wrangle up more than one Asian girl who could testify I have nothing against Asians.

:-)


Nothing against Jeremy, but I think we all know the NBA of 2012 and years before is designed and meant for those of the deepest colors to perform, fluff their game, and try to gain attention in a sport that all comes down to the last 3 minutes of every game....many if not most, scripted.

The modern minstrel show.

Boring, and demeaning.

That's why Jeremy Lin is the easily accepted and adopted and trumpeted "flavor of the week."

I'm not out to change the world, but that's how I feel when I get wrangled in to watching any NBA game.


For the record, College Basketball is worthy and great in my book.

Black, Asian, Hispanic, or White.

Good thing I do not work for CBS or ESPN.

Jimmy the Greek got hosed.

Re: Idle Chatter

1020
I don't want to burden my wife or kids when I die.




They have strict instructions to cremate me and maybe occasionally fake a sneeze on my ashes on the visit to a a horse track, ball park, beach or National Park.

Or, wherever their will might sneeze.

Meanwhile, until that is all done, I plan to reap my love needs upon my wife.


:-)


The Indians are going to win it all in 2012.

I might be wrong, but I'm putting $$ on it.