21 June 2007

The longest day of the year, for the wrong reason

It's June 21, theoretically the longest day of the year.

Up here in the Northern Hemisphere (sorry to my mates suffering through the cold Down Under and elsewhere), it is also the first 'official' day of summer.

The kind of day where you wake up humming a favourite song, wear your favourite clothes to work (if you can) and think of taking a long nap in the park with butterflies fluttering around.

It's been a gorgeous, warm but not hot, slightly breezy Carolina summer day. With not a cloud in the sky, to boot.

And, in keeping with my fine 'first day of summer' tradition (started in part with my fellow research and nursing partner in crime, Barbara, who took today off), I played my fave compilation Beach Boys CD ("The Sounds of Summer", released just a few years ago, to be exact) on the computer at work today. Still classic after all these years, and still mighty enjoyable to sing along with as I generate letters, reports, variances and such. And also the perfect backdrop to the day as I can't see outside (my office has no windows and used to be a file room closet). Great, classic summer music playing from the shoddy speakers would make the day go by quicker, I reasoned.

©The Beach Boys, 2003


Or so I thought.

Thirteen plus hours ago.

Yes, folks, your intrepid blogger is still slaving away on her day's extra work, and will be doing so (for a whole litany of reasons that I just got 'drafted' with) for the next few hours at the minimum. So the first day of summer was experienced this year by going to and from work, to and from a drive-thru lunch break, and to and from the UPS Store. Egads...and there goes the sunset.

So, that said...enjoy some great music and enjoy the remainder of your day.

We'll try it all over again tomorrow...I'm only working til noon. And, weather permitting, I then plan on taking a nice blissful nap under a shady tree.

18 June 2007

Not going quietly into the night, it appears

Although I was going to try and steer away from this for a few days, the infamous Mike Nifong continues to make news, even though he's been officially stripped of his license to practice law by the NC State Bar.

The recent developments with Mr. Nifong:

  • UPDATE, MONDAY MORNING: The official resignation letters from Nifong have been submitted, as promised, to both Governor Mike Easley and Senior Resident Superior Court Judge Orlando Houston. However, in a bit of a surprise as Nifong is nothing short of a legal and community pariah right now, Nifong stated in those letters he will stay the full 30 days he is allowed to do (even after being disbarred...unbelievable) and will actually leave his position of Durham County District Attorney on July 13, 2007. So, essentially, Durham County has as its District Attorney (and one of the highest legal persons in said county, or once was, anyway) a man who will no longer be able to even legally practice law in the near future. Oh, the insanity of it all, people.

    See the resignation letters submitted today (on Macromedia© Flash Paper):

    Nifong's resignation letter to Governor Mike Easley

    Nifong's resignation letter to Senior Resident Superior Court Judge Orlando Houston

    (All I could say earlier today was thank God I moved out of that county a few years back. Exactly how is justice served for the people during that 30 days? Just way too curious how this is supposed to help anyone right now.)

  • UPDATE, MONDAY AFTERNOON: Well, hold it the f*ck up, apparently the State of North Carolina doesn't have a plan in place. The above news is followed on its heels by a press conference also today with Governor Easley. In a not so reassuring moment, Easley stated that he (a) does not have the ability right now (barring a new law being passed) to remove Nifong earlier than the 30 days allowed even for disbarred District Attorneys, (b) that he had no specific candidates yet in mind to replace Nifong, and (c) that he would make a much more careful decision this go-around (Easley appointed Nifong to his current position in the first place). But at least Easley is on the right page now, I hope: and that page is for the immediate departure of Nifong.

  • UPDATE, MONDAY NIGHT: Well, in regards to the above...maybe someone's found some stronger, and bigger, legal boots to do the kickin'. Politicians local and statewide are chomping at the bit for Nifong's immediate removal (and blood, whichever comes available first), with Governor Easley and Superior Court Judge Houston especially incensed. News comes from WRAL-TV in Raleigh tonight that Judge Houston is appointing a Special Prosecutor to 'take over' the case against Nifong and has also signed an order removing Nifong from office, all effective Tuesday (tomorrow) morning. All this legal maneuvering will... it's hoped anyway...give Nifong that swift kick out of office so many people are clamouring for. And some semblance of order back to Durham, God willing.

    Oi. Vey.

    And transplants say nothing ever happens in this place. You just know John Grisham's somewhere making notes for a best selling tale about this one.

    Stay tuned as our local soap opera of infamy continues. Technically it's a toss-up as to who has the 'right' answer here...well, as it stands tonight. To paraphrase Margaret Mitchell: tomorrow is, after all, another day.
  • What Goes Around, Comes Back Around (and none too soon) UPDATED

    After what seems like eons to those who have followed this tawdry case from its beginnings, the decision yesterday of the North Carolina State Bar to strip soon-to-be former Durham County District Attorney Mike Nifong of his law license seems almost anti-climatic. It was a rough week for everyone involved last week...including those once accused of the crimes Nifong wrongfully pursued them of, who testified on the stand against him...and culminated in Nifong surprisingly resigning from office on the last day of his self-defense.

    The decision laid down by the panel overseeing the ethics charges came down harshly and sternly on Nifong. They essentially called him a liar throughout their final judgment. You can read the highlights of what rule violations had been brought...and Nifong was convicted of 27 of the 32 of them...here. To the surprise of some, Nifong's attorney stated Saturday that his client would not appeal the decision of the panel. (WRAL-TV has done a superb job in covering many angles of the trial, and has several videos of testimony within that coverage here.) Lord only knows where this leaves the state of justice within Durham County now.

    All of this brings us to the next phase of this saga (oh no, we're not done yet, folks)...who pays for how much of this, to whom, and how much money, all told, will actually change hands in the end. The dollars and cents battle is just beginning. Breitbart is reporting today that Nifong's future is dim, and that also his material possessions and wealth may be few. Will the civil (and perhaps even criminal) charges to be brought stop with Nifong, or perhaps spread also to the Durham Police Department, the County of Durham itself, maybe even back to Duke University?? Blame, and how much that blame should be, is just now starting to get assigned to the guilty party(ies). Time...and somebody's wallet...will surely tell.


    UPDATE June 18: Well...and this isn't all that surprising...you take Duke University off the future docket in civil court in regards to this case. From local Durham TV station WTVD: "Duke, Exonerated Lacrosse Players Reach Settlement" (complete with video). So that leaves Nifong, Durham County and maybe the Durham Police Department still in the line of fire, eh?

    13 June 2007

    A Good Sport's Success is Hard to Judge

    As many of you know, I am an unapologetic NASCAR® fan and have been for many years. Even before that, I went with my Mama and Dad to the local dirt and/or short tracks (meaning 1/2 mile in length or less) on the weekends. It's a sport that I love, full of drivers and characters and history that I'm proud to recall or know. And unlike other sports, if you follow NASCAR® long enough, you feel you 'know' those drivers and teams you support...it's like an extended 'family' you always want to succeed, be happy, and win. I get a lot of ribbing about my support even here and now: good friends who I speak with almost daily are stunned I even know, let alone follow, this sport. I guess I don't fit the 'image' of what a typical fan should be, or perhaps I should have 'outgrown' my past hobbies by now in their eyes. Any explanation is unnecessary to me: I just love the whole noisy, dirty, and 'everyman' appeal of it all.

    My recent trip to Lowe's Motor Speedway© in Charlotte (well, Concord, to be exact, right outside Charlotte) to see the Busch series Carquest Auto Parts 300® and Nextel Cup series Coca Cola 600® races over the Memorial Day holiday only reinforced this, as it was a rollercoaster of joy, recollection and awe for me. For years, I've limited myself to local venues like the times of old, and not making the sometimes long (and expensive) treks to the massive NASCAR® tracks. Needless to say, the massive crowds and hoopla surrounding the Memorial Day weekend races...complete with Presidential candidates, 2 blimps circling overhead throughout, Howitzer gun demonstrations on the front straightway, jammed parking lots, numerous driver-inspired apparel vendors, and the knowledge I had 165,000+ of my closest friends near me...took a little adjustment. And that was all before the cars even rolled out onto the track.

    Believe it or not, it wasn't always this way nor this larger than life. Many drivers who are famous and successful in NASCAR® now, I also remember once scraping by back in Missouri and Arkansas on horrible, dusty dirt tracks with virtually no crowds...Rusty Wallace and his brothers Mike and Kenny, Kenny Schrader, Mark Martin...to name a few. These are men of whom I have followed their careers (in some cases) before I could even climb the stairs in the grandstand because my legs were far too short to reach. In one capacity or another, these men were still plying away at their chosen trade in Charlotte. Rusty's a retired legend, but is an TV commentator now, and his son (!) is now also racing professionally. Rusty's brothers have a hard time getting to make it to the 'big' races on Sundays, but still compete as they can in the Busch® series (like the AAA 'minor league' level of NASCAR®) races. Kenny Schrader will still race anybody, anything and anywhere, but has lost a bit of the edge and quickness I remember so well. And Mark Martin (my fave of all of these, who became my hero at age 4 when he kissed my then-golden curls at post race) is still highly competitive but is only running a limited number of races this year. Even in a world where the stopwatch is reset numerous times throughout a day, a weekend, a pitstop even...aging still marches on undeterred. Lord knows I've changed; I'm not sure why I can't readily accept they would, too.

    It's easy to get lost in the memories at these things if you're a fan, a situation I couldn't escape as I thought about how much my Dad would have loved to been there. There was always going to be one more race...a big one that Dad and I were going to attend together, excited daughter and enthused father sharing a mutual love for racing. Some really good and big and rowdy place where we could cheer on our heroes in public without Mama nagging us about being too loud for the neighbours. It never happened, though, and to some degree I think that's why I stayed away for so long. (As utterly ridiculous as that sounds, especially as I live in the middle of NASCAR® country, but oh well...) It seemed 'improper' somehow to go enjoy something myself when he couldn't attend now. Maybe it was the 10th anniversary of his death, maybe I just did it without thinking about him this time...who really knows why I went this year when I skipped so many other chances. And it was good to go, although I don't think Dad would have recognized the current landscape. I sure didn't for awhile.


    Welcome to Speedway Avenue, across from Lowe's Motor Speedway. This was hours before the race on Saturday, and actually this was as 'slow' with fans as it ever got.

    I'm sure I'll get some flak on this, but here goes: I don't know this sport anymore. I honestly don't, and that admission comes rather quietly and hesitatingly. For all of the effort that has been put into making NASCAR® the fastest growing spectator sport in the world, I'm not sure if there is a place any more for 'old school' fans like me. Even the big races I remember from my youth were never this commercialized. One used to be able to bring the family and meet the drivers and see the cars before the races, but instead this time I ran a gauntlet of commercial product hawking to make QVC jealous. I turned away almost all of the sellers and product tents I passed from my distant parking spot to the grandstand and still had shampoo, salad dressing, detergent, and foam pillow samples in my backpack when I finally sat down. If I had been playing along, I could have taken in much, much more and also heard the recruitment speech from damn near all branches of the US military. Along that walk in, I passed I don't know how many dozen souvenir trailers for each and every racing team (and most were just for specific drivers)...something that's been there all along, but just not so over the top as it is now. You don't just 'walk' from your parking space to the race track any more; instead, you walk through a gravel-paved mall.

    A baby doll tee for the girlfriend with Matt Kenseth's number? Sure.

    A lighter with Jeff Gordon's logo and image? No problem.

    An orange rain slicker representing Tony Stewart? Right away. Is that cash or credit?


    (Right) One of Tony Stewart's (Home Depot© #20) merchandise trailers; Jeff Gordon's (DuPont© #24) in the background.

    I have no idea exactly when it happened, but the racing I once knew in person and thought I still saw on TV has been replaced as a merchandising and product placement circus in real life. The few discounted items were the ones of past victories and championships and stats...items that would have been gobbled up in minutes in the days of yore. No, the hot winners were the ones not boasting an accomplishment or even of a place or time. Rather that feature an image everyone buys into: mostly a stylized number set in bold colors that could be selling toys just as easily...nothing distinguished them as a race mementos, or hell some had nothing to do with racing, period. And that, frankly, as a long-time fan, was depressing to witness. We've not only sold out the sport to God knows how many companies, but we've sold out the pride the fans had in wearing something specific to their driver's loyalties and accomplishments. That hollowed out, 'the-Gap®-as-NASCAR®' mentality stuck with me through that whole weekend and even on my return. I found myself searching for something bigger than a bumper sticker that said something like 'I was at the 2007 Coca Cola 600®'...and I found nothing. Image, it appears, is everything. Stats are far less important now; but instead selling whatever people will buy...whatever that is...rules.


    43 cars competing. 165,000 watching in attendance at the track, millions more watching from home. Pre-race laps before the Coca Cola 600®.

    Furthermore, I'm not sure my fellow fans at these races are 'my people' anymore, either. I sat in a quiet (read: mostly over age 40) crowd in Turn 1 on the night of the Coca Cola 600®. Public Safety had their hands full even there: we had no less than two fights between rival fan groups (Jeff Gordon vs. Dale Earnhardt, Jr.) which resulted in 4 people being thrown out for that, then another 2 people tossed for public intoxication (a high mark to achieve as Lowe's Speedway will let people bring in their own coolers and most everybody did but very few were tossed for being drunk), then 3 more removed for doing modified keg stands in the aisle, and then a female fan escorted out for repeatedly showing her tits (complete with neon orange paint, no bra) to a presumably grateful Tony Stewart every time he passed her by on a caution lap. And these were the people seated in front of me; security seemed to be working overtime in all sections to the left, right, and above as well. True, as it was happening, it was comical and so "Saturday Night's Alright (For Fighting)", to a point...like a large honky tonk full of people looking to get laid or drunk or a fight or all three. But after the first hour or so, it also got a bit more than just simply distracting and/or amusing to the real racing fans who couldn't see while security did their jobs. These seats weren't cheap, but all of the extracurricular crap going on around them sure became that way. This isn't the racing I grew up on and have supported locally. And for the life of me, I'm hopeful this isn't indicative of what makes the tour with the NASCAR® circuit each week (although I suspect from talking to some 'regulars' it is).

    (Left) The results of the first fight of the evening in my section, 22 laps into the race. The hatred between some Jeff Gordon fans and some Dale Earnhardt, Jr., fans spills over a lot into the grandstands.

    There was a time, perhaps long gone now, when fans came to these races and could skip all of this nonsense...and could enjoy the action that was occurring on the track, as it was intended. There were plenty of those 'good' fans there in attendance in Charlotte, no question. But the constant 'something' going on in the stands (and I'm ignoring fan fights, as that has always happened), detracts from the overall experience. I'm contemplating taking in another race this summer relatively nearby to see if Charlotte was just some 'beginning of summer party' fluke. If that goes well, I'll be more than willing to give Charlotte another try again for the fall race in October. But if it doesn't go well in Richmond, I'll doubt I'll go back to Lowe's. I don't think I'm being a prude or anything here, but I'm a racing fan...and if I can't see and enjoy the race at the big tracks, why go at all?

    So, the end grade for the weekend was about a 'C'...and it pains me to state the grade. Unfortunately, it's earned. And that's not aimed primarily at Lowe's; they probably did the best they could since so many people were there and a great percentage of them were drunk or had been drinking by race time. (And I enjoy a beer as much as the next person, so absolutely no judgments there.) Nope, instead it's aimed at the dear sport I love so much...NASCAR®...and how far off course it seems to have ventured in recent years. If NASCAR® truly wants to go as mainstream, international and multicultural as its leaders say they want it to, they're going to have a tough time of it based upon what I witnessed. My loyalty is, and should not be, measured in the dollars and cents promoters can get from me...but rather how great the experience was for me, and how badly I want to go back to see the next race...and the next...in the future. True, today's NASCAR® 'is not my father's NASCAR®' (to paraphrase an old campaign slogan), but the jury's still out to see if it deserves to be mine.

    11 June 2007

    Most Places Just Have Soap...and Other Sightings

    So when I haven't been home working on resurrecting Frankenputer's connections, I've been out trying to enjoy the summer. Namely, that means enjoying good music and even better friends with some hot food and cold beer.

    Saw the dear boys, Hercules Mulligan (complete with sample now!), over at the Hibernian in Cary again (after a one month respite due to my Spanish classes) last Wednesday. Chris M and Zack were dragging a bit, having survived the previous weekend's Fiddlers Convention in Mount Airy. (And, yes, non-locals, Mount Airy is the town associated with the TV classic, "The Andy Griffith Show".) Something about dead strings and all...LOL...per 'the celloist'. The fellas have incorporated some new songs into the set and are progressing along well. It was great to see them again after missing their two previous gigs. They play again at the Hibernian next Wednesday, June 20, and with any luck around 8pm.

    The previous weekend, WR and I met up for a lunch and brew near NC State University over in Raleigh. Sadlack's, to be exact...a site which also houses its share of live music. (WR and I missed that night's gig, but did spot the 2-3 15 year olds setting up to play, with their parents in tow.) While WR and I discussed the defeating effects of second mortgages, employer mismanagement, and the aborted proposed light rail system for the area over some tasty sandwiches, Nature called. Although it might also have been the Shiner Bock.

    Upon entering the ladies' room, two things of genius in this little sandwich shop stood out: (a) blackboard paint on the walls (why this is not used in super-popular and graffiti-prone bathrooms everywhere I'll never know), and (b) an ode to Fire Alarm Woman (not to be confused with The Cult's "Fire Woman" song). We stood there, this other female patron and me, and stared at the old girl. Unashamed, she was, but also fitting in with all the miscellaneous phone numbers scrawled around elsewhere in the room. Whereas I don't take my camera everywhere with me (amateur photog or not), I did feel compelled to go fetch it from its bag and then make a second trip to get the Woman's pose. And, despite the artist's take on it, I can only agree about the buggy eyes...her nose isn't that red, nor that big, at all. That, or Santa has different motives...

    The Hottie of Sadlack's Lav, Fire Alarm Woman

    10 June 2007

    Tabloid Frenzy "Summertime" Groove

    "Doin' Time" by Sublime
    Video from YouTube, as always


    Heard this yesterday...as 'background music' to one of the TV entertainment show's discussion of the Paris Hilton legal fiasco...and just had to smile to it again. This song from them incorporates one of my favourite songs ever, especially when done by Janis Joplin...George Gershwin's "Summertime"...and a nice reggae-infused tale of some serious modern woe. I love Sublime, and miss that beat, miss the words, miss the experience of just diggin' their sound. To those not acquainted with this now-defunct band from Southern California and the tragic demise of their lead singer to heroin abuse, check out some history.

    So, after finally getting operational again with this computer, I'm just choosing to lose myself in the lyrics and rythym tonight (I have even pulled down the band's one album I own, the self-titled hook fest). And the TV, about poor, poor Paris' fate, drones on in the other room. Perhaps all the coverage and breath being wasted on this 'starlet' (using that term very loosely, I know) is yet another sign of the impending fall of Western civilization. I'm sure Paris' continued celebrity and improved mental health means a lot to those people in the world that have real problems, for instance. But since Paris now takes priority, I guess we've solved/denied all of those?? No matter, it's all so out of whack it's went far beyond being mind-numbing. We've made this idiot, after all.

    "...Summertime...and the living is easy...". If only.

    I'm Back...after some sleep

    Okay, I'm (and the Blog) are back. Far too late (as it's been a week now) I know, but it's taken a small act of Congress and some DSL rewiring in the apartment walls to make this work again (and I just couldn't post from my neighbour's computer every night).

    So, this just now completed, I am going to sleep for a bit. And then tomorrow...Sunday...I start again with all of my updates in earnest.

    Thanks for the patience from all and for all the emails from those who checked in with me on the status.