American Soccer day

Is Landon Donovan coming back to MLS? The chatter is definitely lively because he’s not pushing past Robson Ponte for regular starts at Bayern Leverkusen. If he does return, the destination will be about 400 miles south of Spartan Stadium. The Earthquakes made a deal the other day, sending their allocation that under the arcane MLS rules would have entitled them to Donovan’s services, meaning FC Dallas would have first shot. And Dallas supposedly has made a deal with the Galaxy that will put LD in the green and gold. For now my only hope is that the question doesn’t weigh on our star’s mind as he leads the American team against Mexico in today’s World Cup qualifier. Eek!

In Mexico City, meanwhile, the game is starting out very chippy with the hosts putting two into the net in less than three minutes after a scoreless opening half hour. Claudio Reyna is finally healthy and has reclaimed the captain’s armband from Donovan. Young defender Oguchi Onyewu, who plays for a Belgian club, seems to be struggling a bit in central defense in his second start for us. The US team have yet to put so much as a difficult shot on goal to their credit, passing in the final third definitely a problem for us; meanwhile DaMarcus Beasley picked up a yellow card in the 37th minute and so he is now out of Wednesday’s match at Guatemala.

Wow! Leading 2-0 in the 40th minute, Mexican coach Ricardo La Volpe is tossed with a red card for unacceptable persistent argumentative comments. Not really sure this will change the game in any way though. We have never won in this stadium, managing just a single scoreless draw in 21 tries, and the halftime score and the American effort so far gives no hint of breaking through.

Second half: A little better in the first few minutes culminating with a first strong effort in the 51st. Our defense is still very vulnerable to counterattacks, especially diagonal runs into the box. Then, in the 58th minute, success. Eddie Johnson controls the ball deep on the right and gets it to Landon, who makes a soft pass that Eddie Lewis drives past Mexican keeper Sanchez to get us on the board. Mexico tries to make a couple of substitutions but can’t get communications straight with the officials and the moment passes; a few minutes later they take off the man who scored their first goal, Borghetti, and then soon after they remove feisty striker Blanco and another midfielder. Lots of fresh legs and immediate payoff with two speedy runs into the box which fortunately end with bad passes.

We bring on Steve Ralston for Pablo Matroenni in midfield to add some offense in response, 20 minutes left. Carlos Bocanegra, defense, comes off for Pat Noonan, forward, 15 minutes left. The restart is a Mexican corner which they nearly convert, an eight yard shot barely missing to the right. 78th minute: they get a free kick from inches out of the 18 yard box after a very convincing dive and the blast is deflected by Kasey Keller’s fingertips, inbounds and then cleared up on a counter. Phew!

Still almost all the possession is Mexico’s and when we have the pelota they’re in very tight man marking defense, stifling. Eight minutes left. Brian McBride comes on for Steve Cherundolo, last American sub, another striker for defender switch. Mexico’s Medina is getting deep on the right, a lot, and crossing into the box but all of them are too long or finding an American head. Four minutes left. Tick tock.

JP Dellacamera keeps mentioning that the Americans would love to get a draw, duh, meanwhile they haven’t had a shot on goal in at least 10 minutes. They’re getting corner after corner, killing the clock. Three minutes of injury time left.

Two minutes in, we have the ball in and around their box and then Eddie Johns gambles and handles the ball over on the right. The linesman is yards away unobstructed and raises his flag. And that’s the last touch we get as the final whistles sounds seconds later.

The American team’s 16 game streak without a loss is over. All in all, slightly disappointing but not surprising. Some younger players got experience in a very difficult matchup, especially Onyewu trying to establish a partnership with Berhalter, and we will probably have the upper hand in the return match when Mexico travels to Ohio in September.

Feed to JavaScript?: In case you were wondering about the list of items on the right side of the main page here under the title ElseSaid, it’s a list of the 10 most recent pages on other sites where I’ve posted a comment (or possibly trackback) and then tagged the page with del.icio.us. An amusing experiment in republishing RSS feeds, basically, along with the newser pages I cobbled together last weekend. Newser and Feeds2JS are both built on top of the most excellent PHP library MagpieRSS. Do you like my made up word ElseSaid?

It being adigital world and all…

Mark Cuban, content owner, comes out against the MPAA/RIAA battalions ahead of Monday’s MGM vs. Grokster hearing at SCOTUS; in fact he announces in this post that he financed the EFF’s work on the case. I like reading Cuban’s blog because he’s one of the few truly wealthy people in the world who puts his opinions out in the ether regularly without first filtering the words through the PR/legal filter. Sometimes he runs on a bit, writing isn’t his primary skill, sometimes he talks too much about basketball and sometimes he’s just a bit too obviously biased by self-interest. Then you get entries like this one. Totally cool.

Feedback to the Yahoo! Groups UI team

[I can rarely resist adding my 3.14159 bits… even if my own site design lacks any sophistication or aesthetical appeal itself.]

Color and image-wise, the redesign is definitely nicer, much more sense of space, but the Groups home and My Groups pages don’t provide nearly as much information/links as the previous version. This is not so good.

My preference is to see all of my subscribed groups before any space is used for lower value content such as Editor’s Picks, Tips, Create a New Group. More wasted space: the group logos and the separate lines for Organize/View All Groups (the latter links to the same page as Manage up top after all) and for =owner …=moderator (both of which could be indicated right next to the name of the groups).

However, I’m also chuffed that after so long with no significant (visible) changes Yahoo! is putting some effort into a good service. Interesting, in a positive way, that several changes at ‘hoo!ville are happening concurrently.

[via Wes]

This Divided State

I am still wondering(*) how the person involved found me but in recognition of the effort, here’s a shoutout: This Divided State is a new documentary by Steven Greenstreet about the outroar in Utah when, just before the recent election debacle, Utah Valley State College invited Michael Moore to speak on campus. MormonWorld being, of course, a hugely Red state so five months later, state legislators remain angry enough to punish the school.

* Practically, probably through a Google search on some combination of movie and political words, but the bigger question is the decision process the PR person used to decide it was worth her time to bother with my contact form to send a message, even if the message was just copy & paste of a new press release. Which, by the way, isn’t even posted on their site so I can’t link to it. In short, they’ve announced a series of screenings on college campuses across the country over the next six weeks, good for them, and the specifics are on the main page but no specific permalink, oh well. Closest for me is Berkeley.

Marketdroids

I realize that the people consumers deal with at big companies on customer services and sales issues are just handing out replies written for them and generally have no ability to influence the answer. Still, I have a hard time reconciling the cognitive dissonence in the email I received today from Comcast in response to my question about how to add Gol TV to my subscription. Apparently, despite the ridiculous amount I already spend to get a package that already includes most of these channels, I can only get Gol TV by purchasing a $4.95 per month 10 channel sports set. Asking why–foolish, I realize–I couldn’t just get the one channel, Comcast’s answer was:

“Sometimes certain stations are only available within certain packages.

At Comcast, the customer is and always will be the most important part of
our business!

Thank you for choosing Comcast.

Sincerely,
Your Comcast Customer Care Specialist”

Now you tell me, but doesn’t sentence two directly contradict sentence one? Ugggh!!! Karl, you need to talk some sense into your colleagues!

Tonight’s movie: Cop Land

Years go by and I watch movies a second or third time, making me wonder why it isn’t more highly regarded, didn’t do better at the box office. James Mangold’s Cop Land, originally released in 1997, is exactly that kind of film. Roger Ebert’s review, for instance, damns the film with half praise but aside from one or two things I disagree with him and the conclusion he made.

To me, the gold nugget is Sylvester Stallone. I know, I can hardly believe it either. Other than Demolition Man, which I think was more impressive to me for the science fiction angles and Wesley Snipes, and the first Rocky Sly’s had a great career but never shown us quality acting. In Cop Land, though, I’m reminded of Tom Cruise playing the grey haired bad guy in Collateral, that Stallone’s heavy-lidded, slumbering physicality is perfect to the role.

Some not-so-nice New York City cops have finagled a loophole in the residency requirements and set up a little enclave in the shadow of the George Washington Bridge, houses with nice yards and quiet streets. Being not so nice, though, generally catches up to movie characters and indeed happens here. Plus, they totally underestimate Stallone’s sheriff, condescendingly assuming because he’s deaf in one ear and not able to qualify for the NYPD that he’s not a good cop.

And maybe at the start of the film he isn’t. That growth is the driving arc here. Mangold’s made a couple of good ones since, Identity and Girl, Interrupted. He wrote and directed this movie, to me the messy bits around the edge give the picture life and energy. Mangold has two releases this year according to IMDB: Joaquin Phoenix in the Johnny Cash biopic Walk the Line (November 18) and modern western 3:10 to Yuma (no announced production or release dates), definitely looking forward to them.

Lots of star power here, Stallone is the sleeper in the crew: Robert De Niro, Harvey Keitel (always a good bad guy), Ray Liotta (twitchy, line crossing), Janeane Garafolo, Robert Patrick (give him a mustache and a short haircut and he’s much badder than in X Files), Annabella Sciorra, Peter Berg, Michael Rappaport, Cathy Moriarty, John Spencer, Malik Yoba, Edie Falco, Debbie Harry and Method Man.

definitely recommended

Solar Death Ray: “The Solar Death Ray is made of 112 mirrors mounted on a platform 4 feet wide and 6 feet tall. Each mirror is a square roughly 3.5 inches on edge. All these mirrors focus the sun to a single spot 5 feet, 6 inches from the mirror platform. A wooden fork extends from the mirror base to the area near the focus and serves as a mounting point for Solar Death Ray targets.”

Liverpool hit by striker crisis. Probably the least painful time for the remainder of the season this could have happened, with two weeks off until the next match and Baros’ suspension not affecting the subsequent Champions League match in Italy, but one really has to wonder where this will lead. As in down the EPL table and right out of any European qualification for next season. As of now, the only strikers who can play against Bolton on 2 April are Anthony Le Tallec and David Raven and I don’t believe either has ever started a regular game for the Reds.

Today’s lovely commute

Had a bit of excitement this morning driving north on Rengstorf in the left lane to 101 and work. The 10 year old Jeep in front of me was being driven porrly by a woman; her left blinker was on for about a mile though she never turned, her speed was erratic and she occasionally veered slightly to one side or the other. I thought she was on a cell, drinking coffee or some other slightly distracting non-driving activity but can’t really say for sure.

All of which had me paying an extra level of attention which turned out to be a good call when, just before we reached the Costco intersection, the woman rear ended a nice 2001 or so maroon Camry. Hard enough to snap the Toyota’s trunk open and send some plastic flying. Didn’t see any blood spurting.

There was a lot of traffic around us but after a few seconds the right lane cleared and the driver behind me and I could shift over and get passed. Neither driver looked incapacitated or to be screaming in pain so I drove on.

A very pragmatic lesson in why defensive driving is always a good thing. Other drivers are outside your sphere of control and can’t be trusted to do the right thing, make the right choice; tow truck drivers and doctors are nice people to have around but better to never need them.

Today’s movie: The Battle of Algiers (La Battaglia di Algeri)

Had been recommended this 1965 French movie some time ago in a long and windy AskMefi discussion of classic, forgotten non-English language films and put it in the request queue at the Mountain View Public Library since, fortunately for me, they own a copy. Took a couple of months, guess we have quite the artsy crowd here in town. TS1 brought it home the other day and it turned out to have three discs! So I threw disc one in the player early afternoon wondering how long all of it would take but only 117 minutes for the movie itself, the other two discs are bonus features and related documentaries from The Criterion Collection.

The Battle of Algiers is first and foremost a political film, sort of a docudrama, made only a couple of years after the final events of the struggle it captures. Shot in black and white, little concern for plot coherence, very much about characters; the dialog is in French and Arabic so I had to read the subtitles. The battle is the post-WWII fight between the FLN, Algerian freedom fighters, and the French colonial government in the city of Algiers from 1952 to 1960 but mainly 1954-57 and a voiceover aftermath explaining that independence was finally achieved in 1962.

I’m not familiar with this period of French history, before my time and got wiped away by the Vietnam War, but seems to have been one of the two key conflicts that shaped modern French politics along with their defeat and withdrawal from Viet Nam. Wikipedia has a useful entry on the film and some of the individuals involved.

Director/co-writer Gillo Pontecorvo, working in Rome and Algiers, does a frankly amazing job. Completely ignoring conventional filmmaking and using only one professional actor (Jean Martin as Col. Mathieu, commander of the local French military), Pontecorvo must have had to walk an emotional tightrope filming the crowd scenes. I wonder if there were moments when the recreated riots almost turned into real ones and how many of the people in the crowds were present at the original events.

The film jumps in time every few scenes. The narrator is the only channel holding things together, there is no protagonist or antagonist though the Algerians a given the positive framing and the French negative but not unmixed. Both sides are shown committing abominable acts of violence against civilians. Main characters are composites of real people or just have the name changed. Very powerful emotional impact by the end.

recommended

Rock and math

Speaking of this week’s Rock and Roll Hall of Fame celebration, Bruce Springsteen gave an impassioned, loving yet somewhat intellectual speech welcoming U2 to the ranks. He connected them musically and thematically to some of the other greats of rock and soul, trying a bit too much for a laugh by mentioning one of his own efforts, but overall delivering a terrific tribute and returning the favor after Bono did the same for the Boss in 1999.

Highlight: Springsteen surprised a lot of people, including me, by describing the Edge as perhaps the greatest unsung guitar hero in rock. Not that he isn’t right, just that we rarely think of him that way, but Bruce put Edge up with “Jimi Hendrix, Chuck Berry, Neil Young, Pete Townshend–guitarists who defined the sound of their band and their times.

For their performance the band played I Still Haven’t Found What I’m Looking For (Bruce joining in on guitar and vocals), Until the End of the World, Pride (matched well with Bono’s recollection during his acceptance speech of death threats received during a tour in the American South while they were part of the successful campaign to have Dr. Martin Luther King’s birthday established as a national holiday) and Vertigo.

TS1 pointed out that U2 is the only top rock band to last so long without a single change in personnel and she seems correct to me, which is really amazing arithmetic. Solo artists like hall of famers Dylan, Clapton and Costello can’t figure in here. Think about it:

  • The Beatles and Led Zeppelin made no changes but their recording careers lasted less than a decade and 12 years respectively;
  • the Stones are missing two originals, Brian Jones and Bill Wyman, as well as short termer Mick Taylor;
  • R.E.M., which came to prominence at the same time as the Irish lads, almost made it but lost Bill Berry to long term effects of his brain aneurism; and,
  • the E Street Band is down two originals (Vinny Lopez and David Sancious plus Steve Van Zandt left for awhile too) and have only worked sporadically with Bruce anyway (technically they are only given cover credit on the concert releases, Live 1975-1985, Live in New York City and Live in Barcelona, but at least one member worked on each of his record).
  • Aerosmith, class of 2003, come within a whisker but miss out due to a nasty interregnum when Joe Perry and Brad Whitford left for about five years.
  • ZZ Top, inducted into the Rock Hall last year, are perhaps the closest to meeting the U2 test though one might suggest their last hit was 1983’s Eliminator.

TS1 and I just cannot wait, the next 20 days until U2 hit the HP Pavilion stage with us in the audience feels like an eternity!

Diet Pepsi is the drink of choice for punk rockers? Seems ridiculous to me but that’s what their commercial during the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame induction celebration said. Chrissie Hynde, the performer just before the commercial break, has more punk in her right index finger all these years down the road than the entire executive staff at Pepsico has had their entire lives.

Bushinations: Straining common sense through cottage cheese

SCOTUSblog previews a case which will be argued Monday at the Supreme Court; the previous court decision in this case demonstrate clearly the kind of logic which leads to the commonly-held negative opinion of lawyers. A Colorado woman’s husband, from whom she was separated and had a temporary restraining order against, took her three daughters in violation of the TRO; the woman called the police several times and even went by the station but was turned away each time. The husband had taken them, killing the little girls before committing suicide by cop.

Generally speaking, SCOTUSblog’s Stephen Wu explains, American law bars suits against governments for failure to prevent acts of private violence, that is, one private individual against another. This remains true even when the hurt individual has gotten a TRO against the offender.

However, the Colorado legislature passed a law stating that law enforcement officials must (1) “use every reasonable means to enforce” such orders; and (2) arrest anyone who violates them. Reasonable Americans reading this would expect a police officer after receiving a call such as the first one made by this plaintiff to take immediate action to secure the safety of the children and not to put her off as was done–several times, in fact.

The town government of Castle Rock, Colorado, where this happened, supported by the Bush Administration, claims that the cited state law should be taken to provide nothing stronger than guidance despite the plain and obvious meaning of the words used and therefore the town should not be held liable for the failure inaction of its police department.

From today forward, every time I hear or read whining and complaining from Republicans about activist judges overiding elected legislators, not to mention the sanctity of life and family values, I will think of Jessica Gonzales and her murdered daughters.