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Isn’t it odd that for 90% of any given game, baseball is quintessentially a boring sport. And yet, movies about baseball are incredibly exciting and entertaining 90% of the time. It’s a fascinating contrast to say the least.

Spring training is here and that means baseball is in “full swing” (had to). Admittedly not a fan of the professional adaptation of Stickball, the amateur version can be fun to play…or at least enjoyable to watch in a movie. It’s an important part of the American fabric of sports. That’s undeniable. However, baseball also has a serious drug and cultural stigma and has, thus far, refused to adequately deal with this contagious problem.

Resisting the temptation to list all the negatives about baseball (they are plentiful), instead the following will be a surprisingly laudable tribute to the one constant every fan and non-fan can agree upon: great films have been made about baseball.

An important note: I do have a few great memories of going to baseball games. This includes venturing down the road to a AAA baseball game on a slow summer day (with a Beach Boys performance!), a Cleveland Indians game in the mid-nineties with a best friend when the Tribe was stellar, watching the Atlanta Braves in “Hotlanta,” a day trip to Chicago with a first time visit to Wrigley Field to take in a Cubs game and seeing a Yankees-Royals game in the now torn down Yankees Stadium.

Am I a fan of the actual game? No, not so much. But every once in a while, it is a great American tradition to take part in. At this point, the “once in a while” qualifies as one game, each having a special significance, approximately every few years. So far, so good. This means my next game is right around the corner…literally. The Columbus Clippers have won two championships within the past three years. Will I be heading to Huntington Park this summer?

As a celebration of the magic of movies involving baseball, at least one scene from a different film will be posted each day for the next nine days, starting this morning.

Here is the first clip as part of a collection of the best movies that have stood the test of time in terms of popular culture and childhood memories.

Let’s start off with a classic.

Play ball!

Any Second Now…

“Hey Jimmy, friend me on Facebook!”

This was a revolutionary phrase to a freshly minted college freshman sitting at his desk in his dorm room in the fall of 2004 as a girl with a familiar smile energetically stepped into his door frame. In the fall of 2004, the question was what was ‘the facebook?’ As the major motion picture, “The Social Network” showed us, Mark Zuckerberg, through a series of consequential events, concocted the idea for a new kind of social network with the help of his friends and roommates. Facebook was beyond the parameters of the already existent MySpace and Friendster and, as a result, sparked an online craze that has yet to yield in a society based in minutes and seconds.

The italicized words new kind are paramount to predicting the next “big thing” in communicating and interacting with each other in modern society. Nobody will reinvent the human capability of talking, writing or typing, but instead could reveal a before unknown adaptation of the way we interact with each other, potentially on a grand scale.

What will it be? Think not of originality in its purest sense, but rather of variance. How will you kick, throw or spin a ball in a way that hasn’t already been done? The greatest soccer players don’t invent absolute alternatives to kicking a ball, but instead figure out a better way to kick a ball with their foot by making a superior touch or spin with a certain motion with their leg and foot. If they prove on enough occasions their new technique is beneficial and leads to personal and team success, and, let’s face it, if it looks “cool,” then they have successfully redefined the game while playing within the same rules as everybody else. They have elevated not only their style, but themselves in a sport with countless players. Their jerseys will be sold in soccer shops all over the world and fans will know and cheer their name. World-class indeed!

One scene in “The Social Network” showed Zuckerberg’s inquisitive mind at work when sending out a link to Facemash, which was a website he created in the aftermath of an angry break-up one night. His best friend Eduardo asks, “Who are you gonna send it to?” Zuckerberg responds by saying, “Just a couple of people. The question is, who are they gonna send it to?”

The answer? In the movie, 22,000 people clicked on the link within a two-hour window. Nearly a quarter of a hundred thousand curious Harvard minds clicked on a link late one random evening and brought Super Bowl halftime show-caliber activity to a brand new website. In fact, it crashed the Harvard network.

In today’s world, with the unprecedented speed of communication literally at the control of our fingertips and smart devices, the next “big thing” or person can arise from an abyss to celebrity status after a day or a week…or even just in a two-hour window on a college campus, for better or worse as the movie portrayed with the mere posting of the website. Want more proof? Does the name Psy mean anything to you? Guess it was a good idea for the South Korean rapper to post his wildly outrageous, and addictive, music video on YouTube.

There are countless ideas swirling around the sky of big thinkers everyday in this country and around the world. It’s not a matter of just being seen by a large group of people anymore, but creating a type of metaphorical spotlight on yourself like one found on a Broadway stage that generates genuine interest from an audience wanting to know more. Nora Ephron’s, “Lucky Guy,” is a Broadway play with Tom Hanks featured as the lead actor. Whether he is on a stage, in a movie or doing a late-night interview, he gins up intrigue because of his affable, charming personality. He instills trust in his fans, from performance to performance. It’s a rare and admirable quality.

“Nice guys finish last.” At least Tom Hanks has opened that door slightly to the contrary within the realm of popular culture. The question is who will star next in this against all odds story of hope and goodness? Who knows? But in this society of constant negativity, he or she just may become the next big thing…    

The Double-Edged Gear Shift

The key-less entry. The navigational system. The centralized command center. The GPS key with a push-start engine. The electronic clock.

All of these are examples of the continuously evolving digital revolution within the automobile. As Jay Leno could passionately profess about, for hours, cars were first built so that everything had a specific purpose. If a car did not work properly, it was a certainty that something literally was too loose, too tight, missing, burned out, not filled up, etc. If a tire went flat, it was as simple as getting out a jack, a safety stand, a tire iron and screws to then manually use our own muscles to take off the busted tire and take out the spare from the trunk and fit it onto the axle. And yet, in 2013, these garage shop truths are changing. Despite being only a little more than a decade into the 21st century, progress is moving quite fast towards the automobile’s new skeleton and vital organs.

Ladies and gentlemen, the geeks are now taking over…cars. Yes, you read that correctly. Vroom-Vroom! (a sound effect downloaded from the iTunes installed in the car).

For the majority of the 21st century, it is safe to presume that cars, or whatever their new name becomes, will undergo a manufacturing transition from the garage to the lab…a computer lab to be more specific. As mentioned above, subtle upgrades have been occurring for many years now. For instance, just ponder the first car you remember sitting in with a digital clock. This minor observation deserved no spectacular reaction, but it was the first step towards the current car revolution. Substitute the crescent wrench for the USB cable.

While transitioning from one era to another can be overwhelming and even unnerving, there too are tremendous upsides. Replay the above clip and notice again how amazing the BMW prototype used in the movie, “Mission: Impossible – Ghost Protocol” was in the scenes it starred. For starters, it showcased a windshield that served as a transparent iPad with blazing speeds and an instantaneous navigational system. Just the fact that movie writers dreamed that as a reality is a sign of how cars are being perceived by today’s imagination. For better or worse, mankind has become attached to his and her smart device(s), so it only seems appropriate, and evolutionary, that we innovate towards a technologically advanced car.

Hmmm, this seems familiar?

Mr. Feeny as the voice of my car? Where is that in the App Store!?

The Age of the Electric Car is closely upon us. To the next generation, the internal combustion engine could become an artifact of the past. The tipping point of the automobile’s next phase has been determined and is currently being implemented in small steps as to test its reliability and compatibility with the public. The touch screen in the middle of the front seats is a type of computer, as is any navigational system included with the car or added separately. The sensors that measure the weather outside also qualify. Now a button or the light tap of a foot opens the rear door of an SUV. The key for a new Lexus RX 350, for example, only needs to be in possession of a person to enable him or her to lock, unlock and start the designated car. This key already possesses a wireless feature. Is this just the tip of the iceberg of inventing more wireless devices and features? What’s next?

Technology is proving to have virtually no boundaries and cars are just one of its projects. But as Jay Leno has pointed out in the past, “I’ve got an electric car. It’s quite advanced, it goes 100 miles on a charge, it’s fully electric and it was built in 1909.” Perhaps, we are just living in the electric car’s renaissance a century later?

As the body of the car changes, so does the car culture. The more computer developments that are added means, consequentially, that fewer traditional mechanics will be needed and tech “geniuses” (like at Best Buy and the Apple store) will therefore be in higher demand. The free market will add this dynamic and society will adapt. Will the absence of mechanics and their hands-on skill, knowledge and brawn be a good thing?

The “do it yourself” option is gradually disappearing. The days of people spending hours working on their cars with their tools on a warm Saturday afternoon may be in the beginning phase of being numbered. How many of us rebuild and add parts to our laptops on the weekend? Also, consider that Apple, for example, makes their products in such a fashion that no consumer can make changes on their own and that it has to be sent to one of their tech specialists for help. Will this be a ‘smart’ way to manufacture a car? And you thought customer service was slow when you asked questions about your laptop. What happens when your car breaks down in the middle of a snow storm out of cellular range in the mountains?

On the other hand, pollution from gas would be greatly reduced with the popularity of reliable and, let’s face it, cool looking electric cars (Yes Prius, I’m looking down at you). Fisker, Tesla, BMW and others are designing sleek cars of the future, even if their concepts are just for the wealthy at this point. Plus, iPads, tablets and smart phones continue to sell with wild popularity, so these prototypes are likely here to stay for the time being.

However, the malfunctioning cooling fan of a particular electric model does need to be resolved, and fast, if the makers of the Fisker Karma intend to gain any trust with the American people. Fires and cars do not mix!

Hybrids seem to be the realistic “next car” of the here and now, ranging from the 2013 Chevrolet Silverado Hybrid to the stunning BMW i8 from “Ghost Protocol.” According to Manuel Sattig, the lead man of Communications for the i8 concept, said this car will premiere to the world in the very near future. “I can actually promise you that 80% of what you see here will be on the streets at the beginning of 2014 and you can buy it.”

I wonder what Billy Joel has to say about all this?

A Penny for Your Thoughts

The Nominees for The 1st Annual Clark Kent Super Moment at the 2013 Oscars are:

Tommy Lee Jones finally laughing!
The on-stage musical number from “Les Misérables”
A montage of Seth MacFarlane’s best jokes
The Grey Poupon commercial
Adele’s win for Best Original Song for the movie “Skyfall”
Daniel Day-Lewis’ acceptance speech for Best Lead Actor in “Lincoln”
Sally Field and Jennifer Lawrence in general
Grant Heslov: “I know what you’re thinking: the three sexiest producers alive!”
Ben Affleck’s speech for “Argo” for its Best Picture win (including the funny and inadvertent quip about his wife and Iran)

and The Clark Kent goes to…

The 16th President of the United States of America