Blog Archives

The Backup’s Backup Plan

FYI – This may be the first college football game in history when announcers and fans will know the name of a fourth string quarterback (Freshman Stephen Collier, Ohio State).

It’s safe to say that Ohio State football fans (and players) are cautiously optimistic/worrisome of what the immediate future will hold for its team. With a third string quarterback starting in the Big Ten Championship game against a tough Wisconsin Badger squad, Buckeye fans are, at a minimum, curious of how their team will perform. And this curiosity could potentially continue into the semifinals of the College Football Playoff, but that’s a discussion for a different day. Plus, it’s also contingent on the quality of an Ohio State victory. Regardless of the jitters we the fans and the team are feeling before before tomorrow’s big game, someone put together a hype video that plays off of these concerns.

Offense wins games, but defense wins championships is an eternal truth of sports.

Ohio State has 60 minutes to discover its true character tomorrow night.

Happy Monday!

42-28

Awesome, bittersweet, complicated, suspenseful, devastating, resilient and glorious are just a few words that encapsulate the 111th gridiron match-up of The greatest rivalry in all of sports between The Ohio State Buckeyes and That Team Up North. The Buckeyes dominated the first and last two minutes of the first half, while Michigan controlled the other 26 minutes. The result was a 14-14 tie at halftime. The second half was a bit of a back-and-forth battle, before Ohio State pulled ahead by a touchdown.

Then, it happened.

It, for the second time this year, led to the starting Buckeyes quarterback suffering a season-ending injury. For freshman phenom J.T. Barrett, it was a fractured ankle in a cringe-worthy tackle/dirty move by the Wolverine defense. The only positive takeaway from this heartbreaking moment was when rival quarterback Devin Gardner knelt down beside Barrett to console him in a great act of sportsmanship.

Well done Gardner, well done.

Playing their third string quarterback for the duration of the fourth quarter, Cardale Jones and the rest of the Ohio State offense (and defense) held strong and even extended their lead in exciting fashion in front of their anxious home crowd. For Michigan’s head coach Brady Hoke, cognizant of his steady decline of success in Ann Arbor the past few years, it seemed fitting that Ohio State’s third string quarterback effectively signed his walking papers in his final appearance (very likely anyways) in The Game held in the state of his birth.

Brady Hoke always likes to poke at Ohio State by calling us “Ohio.”

Well, “OH-IO,” Mr. Hoke, “OH-IO.”

Then, news of a missing senior walk-on with concussion issues since mid-last week made local and national headlines. Devastatingly, the story did not end well. We don’t need to go into details.

The 111th edition of The Game featured a full-range of emotions. The Buckeyes won their treasured Gold Pants for the 9th time in the last 10 years in the best damn rivalry in the land. Even with the somber news, let’s try to remember the positives from this past Saturday.

Ohio State vs. Michigan really is the greatest rivalry in sports.

Have a Great Week (Especially For All of Us Buckeyes)!

A Stellar Experience

(The Hollywood Reporter)

(The Hollywood Reporter)

“Wow…just, wow.”

That was my initial reaction while walking out of an IMAX theater in Columbus, Ohio on November 7th following a nearly 3-hour space journey that, like many of the great artists of the modern era, requires only a single name: Interstellar. The director and co-writer, (we could go with one name, but since brothers are involved) Christopher Nolan is famous for his incredible physical sets/playgrounds, realism and grit, amazing, star-studded casting and complex stories that have more satisfying twists and turns than one can ever hope to imagine.

Interstellar fulfills all these “Nolan prerequisites” and manages to take it one step higher…if not two.

The science in this science fiction epic is based on work by renowned theoretical physicist Kip Thorne of Caltech, who also served as an executive producer. The science and intergalactic travel juxtaposed with the emotional relationship of farmer Cooper (Matthew McConaughey) and his two children Tom (Timothée Chalamet) and his relentlessly inquisitive daughter Murph (Mackenzie Foy) will pull and tug at your heart strings.

FYI – I firmly believe in maintaining movie plot secrets, so, therefore, the intent of this review of sorts is not to reveal any spoilers, but to attempt to put this film into some concise perspective, which for anyone who has seen it, is no easy task.

Interstellar is a movie about exploration, desperation, family, the unknown, love, adventure, solitude, scientific theory, hope, the dynamics of space travel, heartache and pushing oneself to a myriad of limits. Plus, a perfectly placed surprise here and there…Set in the near future, the broad-ranging inspiration for the story and main character Cooper is something he says while sitting alongside his father in-law Donald (John Lithgow) on their dust covered porch late one night: “We used to look at up at the sky and wonder about our place in the stars…now we just look down and worry about our place in the dirt.”

From the metaphorical curtain rise to the curtain close, this movie is a cinematic labyrinth that will launch its audience through a wormhole of expected and unexpected visuals and circumstances that ultimately gels into an unforgettable experience that is genuinely out of this world, yet deeply rooted in this one. It will hit seemingly every nerve you’ve got for 3 hours for something that feels real and surreal at the same time.

And bridging the real and surreal on the silver screen is, in essence, Christopher Nolan. He does this with the help of his superb wife and business partner Emma Thomas, their production company team (Syncopy Films Inc.) and we cannot forget about Nolan’s screenwriting partner and television producing brother Jonah Nolan. Interstellar was a Nolan family film through and through. Add in a brilliant, cosmically pulsating musical score from good friend and composing partner Hans Zimmer and you quickly realize you are part of something supremely grand.

Quick takeaways: Interstellar is an epic journey, every actor and actress’ performance is the real deal, Mackenzie Foy will damn near bring you to tears and this is a visual and audible experience that showcases what making and seeing movies is all about.

After processing everything featured on Earth and in the film’s multiple galaxies, my verdict (after two IMAX viewings) is simply this:

Wow…I love it.

Hear You Me, 23 is My Best Theory

Pure sweetness.

Jimmy Eat World is a band that hails from Mesa, Arizona that’s been strumming their guitars, banging their drums and singing their songs for ~ 21 years now. For any group in any musical genre, that’s a noteworthy feat. Simply incredible. But what’s more impressive is how their fans continue to fill venues, passionately sing along to their songs and bounce around for a genuinely fun concert experience to this day.

Last night, the band returned to Columbus, Ohio and played at the famed Newport Music Hall for 1 1/2 hours of rock. It even included the very rarely seen double encore. There were literally two encores! For any night, it was a blast. However, consider that they were able to put on a rock show inside that felt like a Friday or Saturday night while outside was a normal Monday evening.

A very cool dynamic was pulled off.

While footage from yesterday’s show and/or their last Columbus, Ohio appearance back in 2010 is bouncy and the sound somewhat muffled, below is a video that captures the energy and musical quality within the walls of the Newport Music Hall on October 13, 2014:

Jimmy Still Rocks The World.

P.S. Where’s Waldo?