When people ramble about the ills of the internet I think of Sheehan Quirke. He’s a man who wouldn’t be here without the internet. He’s a man who makes the internet great. This video is one example.
The internet is his fuel and platform. Without it we’d be robbed of his curiosity and wonder.
A few nods to Wes Anderson in this video also. I saw it.
there’s the sheer beauty of it for athet, you know know all the sports have great athletes but for sheer grace and speed, for for, the combination of power and grace there’s nothing like what happens say in the infield when a beautiful double play is turned to see Ozzie Smith made plays at short stop that that were balletic in a way that nothing, and I mean nothing that happens in those other games matches
– David Bentley Hart
No one. And I mean no one, speaks baseball the way David Bentley Hart does. The details, the passion, the reverence.
All in time for Spring Training.
That from the new documentary DBH: Cutting Forms from Mystery:
Go back? he thought. ‘No good at all! Go sideways? Impossible! Go forward? Only thing to do! On we go!’ So up he got, and trotted along with his little sword held in front of him and one hand feeling the wall, and his heart all of a patter and a pitter.
– Bilbo Baggins
Notice how Tolkien flips “pitter-patter” in the final line. Small technique for avoiding a cliche.
Sit back and let our favorite retired professor Malcom Guite read the passage to you:
Tolkien, J.R.R.. The Hobbit: 75th Anniversary Edition. United States: Houghton Mifflin Harcourt, 2012. pp66
You won’t be surprised given my proclivity to sailing, and poetry, and the occasional pipe, that it’s Ratty, is the figure with whom I identify most strongly. Although there’s a bit of Moley in me as well, I think.
Edgar Davids was one of the first players I talked to in my capacity as coach of Juventus. I liked him a lot, and I told him so immediately: “I like the way you play, your aggression, your determination, your decisiveness. It’s clear that you never yield the initiative, that you’re a fighter, a battler.” I went on to catalog his physical endowments, his skills, and his natural gifts. He just stared at me and never said a word. More than a stare, he glared at me, like I was a turd he’d accidentally stepped on. He listened, closemouthed. Finally, when I stopped talking, he enunciated a concept: “You know, I can play football too.” True, though technique was never his strong suit.
– Carlo Ancelotti
Surprising to read that Ancelotti felt technique wasn’t David’s strength. Ancelotti is correct, David’s tenacity and battling spirit stood out above all, but Davids also continued that Dutch tradition of exceptional technique.
Ancelotti, Carlo., Alciato, Aleesandro. Carlo Ancelotti: The Beautiful Game of an Ordinary Genius. United States: Random House Digital-Wholesale, 2010. pp145
But I would say this, having lived through pandemic and lock-down, If you keep your wits about you, I mean my productivity went up a great deal, partly it’s what led to this book, so maybe that’s related. There’s less to do.
Tyler Cowen
From Russ Roberts latest conversation with Tyler Cowen:
This quote reminds me of’ “No” sign that hung above Oliver Sacks’ desk.
How can we shape our days to have less to do, to get more done?