Monday, January 31, 2022

Liz Cheney Responds to Threat of Future Imprisonment by Newt Gingrich

Sometimes, allegations are thrown around a little too easily about how a nation (particularly the present day United States) is sliding into dictatorship, into the domain of the fictional 1984. So it can be difficult to determine some kind of measure by which to judge how close we are actually getting or not.

Well, one measure might just be clues from politicians about just how powerful they believe themselves to be. When we have one former president who "joked" numerous times about serving more than his constitutionally allotted two terms in office, and we have him and other prominent members of his party suggesting that they would throw opposition politicians in jail (Presidents and members of Congress do not have the power to actually do that, yet, thankfully), then perhaps that may be a good indicator that we are getting much too close to being a totalitarian regime.

Former House leader Newt Gingrich recently echoed Trump's prison threat to Hillary during the 2016 presidential election by warning members of the committee investigating the January 6th 2020 insurrection at the Capitol building that they might be thrown in jail once the GOP grabs power again. Trump did not have the power to simply throw Hillary in jail just because of his hyped up charges against her, much like Gingrich does not have the power to throw members of Congress investigating what happened on January 6th of 2020 simply because it compromises his party and their quest for power. Indeed, this feels like a sure sign that we are sliding away from what remains of our democracy and edging ever closer to dictatorship, instead. 

What Gingrich is really doing is trying to send out a warning to get Republicans in line again. Not surprisingly, Trump was such a polarizing figure, that he even divided the previously largely united Republican Party. And the Republicans, who already had shown some signs of leaning towards outright authoritarianism, started to really lurch much more in that direction. This was yet another huge sign that proves that point. 

Below is a link to this rather depressing story. 



Liz Cheney Issues Warning After Newt Gingrich Says 1/6 Committee Members May Face Jail by Jason Lemon, January 23, 2022:  

https://www.msn.com/en-us/news/politics/liz-cheney-issues-warning-after-newt-gingrich-says-1-6-committee-members-may-face-jail/ar-AAT4kyQ?ocid=ientp

🏈🏈 NFL 2021-22 AFC & NFC Championship Games Review 🏈🏈

             


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Staying true to the exciting nature of these playoffs, both games yesterday came down to the wire, and were decided right at the end of the game. The AFC Championship went into overtime, while the NFC Championship was decided by a turnover within the two minute warning. 

Both teams overcame double-digit leads to come back and win yesterday’s games, and punch their ticket to the Super Bowl. And the two fourth seeds in each conference wind up being the ones who survive, improbably, to reach the Super Bowl. Now, they will meet each other, and obviously only one team can win. But later for that. I will make my Super Bowl prediction, but that will come later. Today, the focus will be on the two memorable Championship Games played yesterday.              

For Cincinnati, the win came on the road at Arrowhead Stadium, against the very experienced, and heavily favored, Kansas City Chiefs. They were somewhere between 150-1 odds to 75-1 odds to win the Super Bowl. And while they have not yet won it, they have stunned many people to reach the big game for the first time in over 33 years as a franchise. This will also be the third time that the Bengals have ever qualified for the Super Bowl. Already, they are being hailed as the most surprising team to ever reach the Super Bowl. And to think that they were down 21-3 at one point, playing on the road. They kept cool, and came back to knock off the heavily favored Chiefs. Unbelievable.              

As for the Rams, they were down by 10 in the second half, and against a team that they had lost to six straight times, dating back to the 2019 season. It looked at that point like maybe the Niners till had their number, and were going to deny them once again. To their credit, the Rams kept their composure, and began to fight back. In the end, they pulled off the comeback win, and will now head to their second Super Bowl in four seasons.             
 
Let’s take a closer look at the two Championship games from yesterday:


Cincinnati Bengals at Kansas City Chiefs

  Cincinnati Bengals


at 


Kansas City Chiefs





             


Cincinnati 27, Kansas City 24 (OT)              

The Bengals were celebrating at the very end of this game. But you would not have guessed as much early on, when KC jumped all over them, taking a 21-3 lead by late in the second quarter. But Cincy kept their heads together, and began putting some well placed punches of their own, while making the Chiefs pay for their mistakes the rest of the way.                

Cincy held onto the ball for just under 36 minutes, including the overtime session. They amassed 359 yards and 21 first downs on offense, compared to 375 yards and 24 first downs for the Chiefs. However, the Bengals committed one turnover, while the Chiefs suffered two, with both coming off INT’s by Patrick Mahomes.  

Cincinnati’s Joe Burrow was impressive, staying cool, calm, and collected even after his team seemed to fall almost hopelessly behind. On the day, he completed  23 of 38 passes for 250 yards, with two touchdowns and one interception. Tee Higgins proved to be his favorite target, with six catches for 103 yards.  Joe Mixon was a force on the ground for the Bengals, grinding out 88 yards in 21 carries.  

As for KC, it was almost like a tale of two different games, and that was particularly true for star quarterback Patrick Mahomes. Early on, he looked in great form, when the Chiefs seemed destined for their third straight Super Bowl. Later, he cooled off significantly, particularly from late in the second quarter, and throughout the second half and overtime. He even admitted to making bad decisions, such as when he threw to Tyreek Hill looking for a touchdown late in the first half, instead of trying for the easy points with a field goal that could have made it 24-10 by halftime. On the day, Mahomes completed 26 of 39 passes for 275 yards, with thee touchdowns and two INT’s. Travis Kelce helped him out quite a bit, reeling in 10 catches for 95 yards and one touchdown. On the ground, Jerick McKinnon added 65 yards on 12 carries.  

In the end, the Chiefs will surely be haunted by the missed opportunities in this one. Yes, they cooled off considerably after taking that 21-3 lead. But there were also a lot of mistakes and, frankly, bad decisions. As Mahomes suggested, they probably got too greedy, and tempted fate. It likely would have been wiser to go for the easy points late in the first half.  

However, the Bengals deserve to get a tremendous amount of credit. They surprised many people all season, but probably never quite as much as they did against the Chiefs yesterday. And remember, they have now beaten KC twice, as they also defeated them earlier this month, in the game that clinched the AFC North title for the Bengals, and a loss that prevented Kansas City from earning the top seed.  

Very few people could have seen all of this coming. ESPN pointed out just how improbable this Super Bowl run was for Cincy. They had finished with a 4-11-1 record last season, and had a winning percentage of just .203 over the course of the two seasons just prior to reaching the Super Bowl this season. That is lower than the 2001-02 Carolina Panthers and the 1979-80 San Francisco 49ers, who also both surprised many by reaching the Super Bowl after very losing seasons, and with seemingly little indication that they would be able to turn things around so quickly.  

The Bengals now reach the third Super Bowl in franchise history. They lost the first two to the 49ers, both in the eighties. Cincy will aim to try and win the first ever Lombardi Trophy in franchise history if they earn the win. They have been established as 3.5 point underdogs in the opening lines, although that may change in the coming days.             


My pick: Inaccurate












San Francisco 49ers 



at




Los Angeles Rams 



      


LA Rams 20, San Francisco 17  


The Los Angeles Rams tool a chance, paying a high price to acquire former Detroit Lions quarterback Matt Stafford. Stafford had been a consistently impressive QB for the Lions, and even led them to the layoffs on occasion. Yet, he remained one of the quarterbacks who had played the longest without a single postseason victory. All of that changed this season, and the gamble by the Rams paid off. They won the NFC West division title with a 12-5 record, earning the fourth overall seed in the NFC playoffs. They then dominated their division rivals, the Arizona Cardinals, in the Wildcard Game, before stunning the defending champion Tampa Bay Buccaneers last weekend. No longer was Stafford the QB who never won in the playoffs. But perhaps the biggest test came this past weekend, against the 49ers, who had taken the last six straight against the Rams. But Stafford was impressive yet again, completing 31 of 45 passes for 337 yards and two touchdowns, with one INT. He did not do it alone, of course, and particularly received solid help from Cooper Kupp, who brought in 11 catches for 142 yards and both of the touchdowns that the Rams scored on this day. Cam Akers added 48 yards on 13 carries.  

In a losing effort for the 49ers, Jimmy Garoppolo completed 16 of 30 for 232 yards, with two touchdowns and one very costly interception very late in the game, which effectively sealed the fate of the 49ers on this day. However, Deebo Samuel proved to be an all around threat for the San Fran offense, as he grabbed four catches for 72 yards and one touchdown. On the ground, it was Samuel who led all 49ers runners, as he picked up 26 yards on seven carries, although some of those carries were more impactful than those numbers might suggest.              

Los Angeles dominated the time of possession, hanging onto the ball for the better part of 36 minutes. They amassed 396 yards and 25 first downs on offense, compared to 282 yards and 16 first downs for SF. Both teams committed one turnover each, although the one by the 49ers, that aforementioned interception by Garoppolo, proved not only to be far costlier, but pretty much decided the game.              

Still, the Niners looked to be well on their way to a win, and thus, the Super Bowl. They scored a touchdown late in the third quarter, and owned a comfortable 17-7 lead entering the final quarter. But they could not put the Rams away. Indeed, Los Angeles fought for this thing, earning the comeback win. They scored a touchdown first, making it a close game again. They then got a field goal to tie it, and another one very late in the fourth quarter to take the lead.  

Finally, at the end of the fourth quarter, they applied a lot of pressure on Garappolo on third down, and the 49ers quarterback made a bad decision by trying to force things and throw an ill-advised pass. Travin Howard nabbed the huge INT very deep in Rams territory. Ball game. That put the Rams in position to run out the clock on San Francisco and clinch their own trip to the Super Bowl.  

So the Rams will join last year’s Tampa Bay Buccaneers, getting to play the Super Bowl on their own home field. This will be the fifth Super Bowl in franchise history, although they only won one of those, and that one was when they played in St Louis. Of course, the Rams were in the big game just four seasons ago, when they lost to the New England Patriots, 13-3, in what proved to be the lowest scoring Super Bowl in history to date. Somehow, no matter who wins or loses this one, it seems likely that there will be more points scored.



My pick: Inaccurate

Sunday, January 30, 2022

The Beatles Rooftop Show Anniversary

 


Photo by Luiz Fernando Reis (Bealtes cor 36 on Flickr) 
Creative Commons License -https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0/

beatles



It was on this day in 1969 that the Beatles made their last ever public appearance together as a band.

The funny thing about what became such a historical, iconic moment in the history of a band that set so many of the standards of what was still then the relatively new rock genre, and which many people still consider to be the greatest rock band in history, is that it seemed like no particularly big deal at the time for a few people who happened to be there. That is true of Ken Mansfield, the former American manager for Apple Records, who recalled in a recent Rolling Stone article:

“It was another day at the office,” Ken Mansfield says, recalling the Beatles’ impromptu rooftop concert in January 1969. There’s not even a hint of sarcasm in his voice. The group staged the gig atop Apple Records’ London office at 3 Savile Row, 50 years ago today, with the intention of shooting the ending for what would become their Let It Be film. It was an item on a checklist. Mansfield, who was born in Idaho, was the label’s U.S. manager at the time. “Some of the people in the Apple office didn’t even try to come up, because it was just another day.” 

Just another day at the office, indeed! As it turns out, Mansfield would actually write a book, with the simple yet revealing title, "The Roof," about that particular day, which some had dismissed as "just another day at the office." 

The story continues:

Mansfield was invited to watch the historic performance, the Beatles’ last live gig, at the urging of the band’s roadie, Mal Evans. “I think Mal just liked to take care of me, so he made sure I was up there,” he says. When he found out about the afternoon gig, Mansfield ran out and bought a white raincoat, since it was in the low 40s outside, and huddled on a bench with Yoko Ono, Ringo’s then-wife Maureen Starkey and Apple staffer Chris O’Dell to watch the quartet perform nine songs, including multiple retakes of “Get Back.” “George had me light some cigarettes for him for a few minutes just so he could hold the tips of his fingers up against the coals so he could feel his strings,” Mansfield recalls. “And I know John was really complaining about it, about the cold and how he couldn’t feel his hands.” 

“I just happened to be working in the offices that week,” he says. “And Mal just happened to say,
‘Hey, come on, Ken, we’re going up in 15 minutes.’ I said, ‘What do you mean?’ He said, ‘We’re going on the roof, and so come on.'” The rest, he says, is history."

And so, a kind of spur of the moment thing became one of the most famous episodes in the history of one of the most storied bands in music history! This was when John Lennon made that now legendary comment about hoping to pass the audition.

It all happened exactly 53 years ago, on this day, that the Beatles performed as a band in public for one final time.

Below is a kind of disjointed video that, nevertheless, purports to be able to show you the entire concert, from beginning to end. Enjoy!







Below are links to the articles that I used in writing this particular blog entry, particularly the Rolling Stone article:

The Beatles’ Final Concert: An Eyewitness Looks Back Ken Mansfield, former U.S. manager for Apple Records, recalls watching the momentous 1969 rooftop performance mere feet from the Fab Four  By KORY GROW, January 30, 2019:






By JIM AXELROD CBS NEWS January 30, 2019, 6:56 PM The Beatles' historic final concert held on rooftop 50 years ago


Australian Open Men's Final: Nadal Overcomes Two Set Deficit & Survives Medvedev to Capture Record 21st Career Slam

 

Australian Open 2022 Men's Singles Champion:

Rafael Nadal


Rafael Nadal

Photo courtesy of Yann Caradec's Flickr Page - Rafael Nadal: https://www.flickr.com/photos/la_bretagne_a_paris/5756335239


Rafa proved to be the one who finally broke through to win a record 21st Grand Slam title, which puts him in the overall lead in men's tennis history. Novak Djokovic has seemed to be well on his way to obtaining that just months ago, when he stormed to the US Open Final, only to lose to Daniil Medvedev, the man whom Nadal faced today.

Medvedev almost won today, as well. He raced out to take a surprisingly easy first set, and then fought hard in the second, coming back from a break to force a tiebreaker, and then won that, too. Suddenly, he was up two sets. It was only too easy to imagine another loss for Nadal at the Australian Open Final. It seemed like he would be close once again, but no cigar.

But Nadal is the most intense, and hardest working, player on the men's side, and perhaps in all of tennis history. He fought for it, despite being severely down. Rafa clawed his way back in, taking it one point at a time, winning games, taking the third set. Then the fourth, and forcing the fifth and deciding set, which he also won.

Yes, Nadal eventually won this match 2-6 6-7 6-4 6-4 7-5.

As a result, at least for now, Rafael Nadal moves ahead of both Roger Federer and Novak Djokovic to stand alone in men's history with 21 career Grand Slam titles. 

Medvedev, who looked like he might cruise to a decisive victory after he took the first two sets, nevertheless is playing the best tennis of his career. He won the US Open months ago, and with this run to the Australian Open Final, he has improved his position to perhaps claim the number one ranking away from Djokovic in the relatively near future. 

At 35, Nadal once again is a Grand Slam champion. This was his 29th appearance at a Grand Slam final, behind only Novak Djokovic and Roger Federer, who both have gone to 31 Grand Slam Finals. Also, he joins Djokovic as a double career Grand Slam champion. They are the only two men in the past half century to have won each Grand Slam title multiple times. He has won the French Open a record 13 times, has won the US Open four times, Wimbledon twice, and now, with this win today, he has two Australian Open titles, as well. 

Here are some additional facts that are now true following Nadal's impressive comeback win yesterday:

Nadal is the fourth man in men's tennis history to have won each Grand Slam multiple times each.

He was the first man in the Open era to come from two sets down to win the Australian Open Men's Final.

Finally, he was involved in both of the longest Grand Slam singles finals in history (the 2012 Australian Open Men's Final against Djokovic, and the legendary 2008 Wimbledon Final against Federer). 

🏈🏈 NFL 2021-22 AFC & NFC Championship Games Preview 🏈🏈

            


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We have just three meaningful games left for this NFL season, and two of them are being played this coming Sunday. After that, there is the Super Bowl, but we will find out who will be playing in the big game after these championship games.

On the AFC side, we have the Cinderella Cincinnati Bengals, following more than three decades of playoff futility, suddenly on a run. They will visit the Kansas City Chiefs at Arrowhead, after the defending AFC champs just barely survived the Buffalo Bills last weekend. 


Cincinnati Bengals at Kansas City Chiefs

  Cincinnati Bengals


at 


Kansas City Chiefs




 


Both teams just escaped very difficult challenges last weekend. The Bengals went to Tennessee and beat the AFC's top seed on the road. The Chiefs, meanwhile, just outlasted the Bills in a rematch of last year's AFC Championship, really needing a miracle in the final 13 seconds of regulation to manage the feat. 

Here's the thing: the Bengals will not have the benefit of experience in this one. True, they did not really have more experience than the Titans last weekend, but the Titans also do not have nearly the playoff experience of the Chiefs, who have made it to the playoffs in each of the past six seasons, have reached the AFC title game now four years running, and went to the last two Super Bowls, winning it all two years ago.

So this will be a much more difficult challenge for the Cinderella Bengals. And at Arrowhead, the clock may strike midnight, and their magical postseason ride might turn back into a pumpkin.

It's just that the Chiefs have been considered probably the best and most consistently winning team in the league for the last four seasons now. They looked a bit unsteady since losing last year's Super Bowl, and then starting off this season with a surprisingly dismal 3-4 record. Since then, however, they have returned to winning football. And it seemed that the later in the season it got, the stronger the Chiefs have gotten. Their defense stepped up first, hanging on to games that otherwise might have been lost causes, with the offense struggling as it was. But then the offense got going, and KC has looked virtually unstoppable since. They almost looked like a machine since that 3-4 start, having since gone 11-1, including the playoffs.

Now, here's the thing: if you are a Bengals fan, the good news is that the one loss that the Chiefs suffered was to the Bengals. Yes, Cincy won an important game, and that should be a help to their confidence. It also makes it more interesting, to be sure.

However, that was then, and this is now. things are different this time. After all, the Chiefs of all teams know that beating a team in the regular season, then following that up and beating them in the postseason are two different things. They were on both sides of those situations. Remember, they beat the Buccaneers convincingly during the regular season last year, and then got absolutely pummeled and dominated in the Super Bowl. But they also were dominated by the Bills earlier this season at Arrowhead, while the playoff meeting last week between the two teams went the other way.

Right now, the Chiefs look very hot, and practically unstoppable. That may be especially true when we are talking about them playing at home in Arrowhead. The Bengals finally won their first road playoff win last weekend, but it would be asking a lot of them to win two in a row now, especially when this one will be in Kansas City against the red hot, and very experienced, Chiefs.

Maybe the Bengals can keep it close. Maybe they can learn from the mistakes that the Bills made. Maybe they can pull off a shocker.

Yet, heading into this one, it feels to me like the Chiefs are clearly the favorites, and seem to be perhaps the best team in the league. In short, they are running on all cylinders, and given their quick strike abilities, and a proven track record of comeback wins, you just cannot count them out, even if they play poorly and fall behind early in a game. They can roar to life at any moment, no matter how well the other defense has shut them down up to that point in a game. That is what makes facing them such a daunting prospect, and that is especially true in Kansas City. And that is why they are my pick to win this one and head to a third straight Super Bowl.


My pick: Kansas City









San Francisco 49ers at LA Rams



San Francisco 49ers 



at

Los Angeles Rams 



      


The Rams seemed an unlikely choice to host this year's NFC Championship Game. They would need to survive a home game in the Wildcard round, and then win on the road in the divisional round against the very tough defending champion Buccaneers. Then, they also would have to hope that one of the lower seed teams would survive to this point. Yet, that is exactly what happened.

Meanwhile, the 49ers themselves have surprised many people in getting to this point. They survived a strong comeback attempt in Dallas to move onto Green Bay. There, they once again surprised many by beating the NFC's top seed, and the winningest team in the league during the regular season. It took a bit of a miracle for them to do so, particularly with two very memorable special teams play. So this team seems to just find ways of winning, whether conventional or not.

Both of these teams obviously have their strengths, obviously. Early this season, the Rams seemed to have an awesome defense, but the defense then went south. However, the defense has stepped up so far in a big way in these playoffs. And the offense, with veteran quarterback Matt Stafford at the helm, has been solid. He has thrown some incredible passes at key times, and really helped to lift the Rams not only to the division title, but to a blowout win over the Cardinals, and then managed to escape a very scary comeback attempt by the defending champions Buccaneers last weekend. So it might seem that they should have an advantage in this game, playing in the comfort of home as they are/

Here's the thing: the Rams have lost six straight to the 49ers. That dates back to the 2019 season, when the 49ers last went to the Super Bowl. They had two big meeting this season, especially the latter one. And despite all that was in their favor, and so much at stake, the Rams lost those meetings. They cannot seem to get past whatever it is that the 49ers throw at them.

As for me, I feel like maybe it's time to learn my lesson. I picked the 49ers to lose to the Rams in that game a few weeks back, ignoring their history of dominating the Rams in recent history, and San Francisco won. Then, I picked the Packers to win last week, even though they and Aaron Rodgers, too, had a history of failing against the 49ers, and San Francisco won that one, too. So I look at this game, and what is glaringly obvious is that however good the Rams have looked in recent weeks, they still have not show themselves capable of beating the 49ers. That makes picking them a difficult prospect, and I am not sure that I believe that they can indeed beat them, even at home, and even with all that is at stake in this game, obviously.

So my pick in this one is for the road team.


My pick: San Francisco

Saturday, January 29, 2022

Yesterday Marked the Anniversary of the Beginning of Construction of the Eiffel Tower





Yesterday marked the anniversary of the Eiffel Tower.

It was on January 28, 1887 that construction began on what would wind up being one of the most famous monuments in the world. When it was completed, it was the tallest manmade structure in the world by far. it also kept that title for over 40 years.

Far from being appreciated at first, the initial reactions were mostly negative. People at the time thought it was ugly, an eyesore that detracted from Paris, rather than adding to it or being almost inseparable from the city's identity, as it has since become. Many complained loudly, including some of the most famous voices of the time. It was assumed that it was just temporary, and would be torn down a few years after the World Exposition of 1889 that it was built for.

Obviously, though, it was not torn down. In fact, it has become one of the most iconic, instantly recognizable landmarks in the entire world. Everybody knows the Eiffel Tower, and these days, nobody questions it's beauty. Paris is hard to imagine without it, frankly.

So even though this comes a day late, here's to the Eiffel Tower!

In order to celebrate properly, I thought it would be a nice touch to add some personal pictures of this most famous and beautiful landmark. Most of these pictures were from the trip that my son and I took to Paris in 2019, although I also added one picture from my 1998 trip with my brother, as well.






Joyeux Anniversaire Tour Eiffel! 28 Janvier 1887







Here is picture of me at the Eiffel Tower literally days after I shaved my head for the first time. This would have been in August of 1998. 






Arguably my favorite picture - without my son in it - from the recent trip to Europe this summer.



The Eiffel Tower Hardcover – December 30, 1984 by Charles Rickard (Author), Alain d'Orange (Author)    Editions Ouest-France (December 30, 1984)

These are my favorite pictures of the Eiffel Tower from the recent trip to Paris that I took with my son during this past August:




















































The Eiffel Tower at Night