Keep Walking…Keep Moving

Yesterday I went for a long walk.  I walked more than five miles.  This was the first meaningful walk I have made this year.  My exercising has primarily been on an elliptical and stationary bike in 2024.

My reasoning for staying indoors to exercise has been based on either the temperature outside or the number of allergenic pollens in the air.  At least that is what I have been telling myself.

The truth of the matter is that I think I would have gone after my usual walking trail long before now, had I been able to call my Aunt Barbara.  I can’t do that anymore.  By now in years past, I could have told you how the Ole Miss Baseball Team was doing.  Aunt Barbara kept me in the know.  We’d talk about the Paul Finbaum Show and how long she listened to it that day before she had to turn it because it was sounding like “silly mess” to her.

I’d talk to her and walk and walk some more.  Then when I was done, I would write something like this and put all these pictures on here.  The next time we talked, we’d talk about the pictures on here.  Those times never got old.  I miss them.  I miss talking to her.  Aunt Barbara is in poor health somewhere in Mississippi.  When I think about that, I am in poor health too.

So, I need to keep moving.  I need to keep walking.  That five mile walk I made yesterday was seemingly waiting on me.  I needed it.  I talked to my mother while I was walking until the wind got too bad.  Then I listened to music.  I enjoyed it all.

Who wouldn’t enjoy walking around all this natural beauty?

The Spring is always a nice time.  But I was thinking about something.  As I was walking and looking at all the new green popping out in the warm weather we have been treated to of late, I thought about the fall.  I thought about how fleeting that special season is when the leaves are changing and the yellows, reds, and browns of autumn give us a settling comfort for just a while that is never enough.

Yes, my walking trail is special.  I walked for five miles and saw two cars in the process.  I am going to keep walking.  I am going to keep moving, however lonely it may seem at times.

A little while ago I watched Scottie Scheffler win his second Green Jacket in two years, as he won the Masters Golf Tournament today.  I enjoy golf.  There is so much grace and honor to it.  No other sport personifies grace and goodness like golf does.  Players don’t act like they are running for public office when they make a nice shot.  They know a clunker is waiting in the weeds for them.  You know, like the shots you and I make.  They make them once in a while too.  Class lives in golf.

I know I go on and on about Justin Hayward around here.  A few days ago, I listened to John Lodge’s live album that he recorded in 2017 apart from The Moody Blues.  This is a nice record.  It was recorded in Birmingham, England’s Town Hall.  This was the same place Lodgy saw Buddy Holly when he was a kid in 1958, just 11 months before the Day the Music Died.

On this day on 2018, The Moody Blues were inducted into The Rock and Roll Hall of Fame.  The last concert the Moodies played was in November of 2018.  It was in a hotel ballroom near San Diego.  The gig was in support of a local charity.  That was the last one.  No great fanfare.  No great goodbye.  Just a gig in a room with a low ceiling with a small crowd for a good cause.  That’s poetry.

The latest edition of the North Harrison High School Hodgepodcast was a great time.  Thank you for being my guest, senior Vicki Moorman.  We spoke of many literary pursuits and her future plans at Manchester University.  I was impressed with this young lady.

Have a great week all.

Speaking the rights…

Danny Johnson

 

 

 

Welcome to Indiana Basketball

Welcome to Indiana Basketball.

If you know the movie Hoosiers, you know that line. Welcome to Indiana Basketball.

Yesterday I texted those words along with this picture…

to a cousin in Mississippi.  He was impressed with the attendance.

Each time I watch the movie Hoosiers and hear that line spoken by Gene Hackman playing the character of Hickory Huskers head basketball coach Norman Dale, I see a different gym in my mind.

I was fortunate enough to shoot a few hoops as a youngster in this gym which was located in Brownstown, Indiana.  The locker room in the Hickory Gym is a dead ringer for the one we dressed in for pee-wee football here. I am fortunate, again I say it, to have been there.

Fast forward about 47 years.  

Yesterday, as I walked into the Gainbridge Fieldhouse, the home of the NBA’s Indiana Pacers, the first person I saw there was an old friend named Jon Robison.  I had the pleasure of meeting his wife and his son.  Jon too shot hoops in the ‘old gym’.  He shot many more than I did there. I saw Jon play for Brownstown Central many years ago.

Inside the Indianapolis arena, the current Brownstown Central Braves High School Boys Varsity Basketball Team was nearing their turn on the floor to play against the Wapahani Raiders for the Indiana Class 2A Championship.

I had my popcorn ready.

At the behest of my dear friend Adam Disque, I joined him and his family to watch the action.  Action that proved to be history in the making.  Brownstown Central defeated Wapahani 55-36.

The tale of this game for me was that Brownstown played the first half clean as a whistle.  Wapahani did not go to the charity stripe one single time in the first half.  That is rare at any level of basketball.  This is a true sign of a well-disciplined BC team.

Part two of the tale is that, and excuse my language, in the first half Wapahani couldn’t hit a cow in the ass with a bass fiddle.  With 2:13 left in the 2nd quarter, Wapahani’s shooting percentage was 21.1% to Brownstown Central’s 55.6%.  We need not look at much more.  The halftime score was 31-14 in favor of the BC Braves.

This was the first time I had seen this BC team in action this season.  I don’t get around to basketball games like I do football games.  Seeing this team in action, and I wanted to all year, was worth it.  One thing I jotted down in my notebook at halftime was about a pass that I saw BC senior Jack Benter throw across the court to a teammate in the opposite corner that turned into a three pointer, my apologies to the shooter.  That was the best pass I have seen at a high school game since I was announcing courtside at Medora when a kid named Brody Boyd came to town playing for Dugger.  Boyd threw a bounce pass in front of me that was so quick, fast, and accurate that I still smile when I think about it.  So impressed, that whenever I step foot into a high school gym to watch a game, I think about that pass each time I do so.

Wapahani came out in the second half like a team that wished it could start the game over again.  The Raiders outscored the Braves 14-7 in the third quarter.  At the end of 3 quarters, Wapahani was shooting 35% and the Braves fell to 42%.  That was that.

And that pass I was spoke of earlier?  Well, sorry Brody.  In the 4th quarter, Jack Benter was seemingly trapped on the block and had nowhere to go.  I was waiting for a Meatball Cockerham double-pump under bridge technique.  No need.  Benter spotted his teammate, sophomore Micah Sheffer, in the FAR corner from Benter’s precarious position.  Jack Benter proceeded to engage in a behind the back pass that took one solid bounce before it landed perfectly into the hands of Sheffer. Like the sophomore quarterback he is with good sense, Sheffer threw in a three pointer that put the icing on the cake of a pass and shot that will be talked about in and around Indiana High School Basketball long after my granddaughter is talking about me in the past tense.  The play was that good and I was there to see it.

Benter finished with 25 points.  Chace Coomer threw in 13.  Micah Sheffer scored 10, and Parker Hehman, who averaged 11.6 a game on the season, played the role of teammate extraordinary by tossing out 8 of the team’s 13 assists.  I am not going to list all the players here.  Don’t think I don’t appreciate you.  I haven’t officially been a Brownstown Central Brave since before the Miracle on Ice.  But for 1 hour and 24 minutes, surrounded by old friends and guys I was in a huddle with once upon a time myself, I was a Brave again for the first time in a very long time.  In truth, that feeling wore off by the time I was in my car riding away while the team was on the floor getting medals and a nice trophy.  I didn’t stick around for ceremony.  I was fortunate to receive what I did; I ran before something could ruin it.

Let me close with saying congratulations to Coach Dave Benter and the rest of his coaching staff, two of whom I worked with at Medora many years ago.  Marty Young and Michael Leitzman are both good guys.  And congratulations to assistant coach Kevin Gwin for being recognized, during the game at that, with a plaque acknowledging Kevin as the IHSAA Champion Educator for Brownstown Central.  Another victory!

Congratulations BCHS.  I enjoyed it.

Speaking the rights.

Danny Johnson

 

 

 

 

Music and Newspapers

I have a soft spot for old English rock and rollers.  When I saw that Steve Hackett, one of the greatest guitar players ever to reach for a pick, was going to be playing at The Brown County Music Center in Nashville, Indiana there was certainly a tug to head that direction this past Thursday evening.  The tug won.

I remember something Justin Hayward said in 1992, “There’s nothing more disgusting I think sometimes in the English countryside than that old sort of English rock and roller sitting there in his stately home, you know, plinking his guitar and wondering what to do next.”

Cue Steve Hackett.  Hackett had a desire on this tour to play places he and his group had not been to.  The man who can fill up The Royal Albert Hall was bringing the goods in earnest at a Brown County Music Center that I doubt had 400 in attendance.  Still, there was a power on that stage led by a guitar hero in his 70s that doesn’t come around very often.  The man, whose finger picking on the neck inspired Eddie Van Halen, has more dexterity in his fingers than anyone I have ever seen.  A Rock and Roll Hall of Famer from his time (1971-1977) as the lead guitarist and composer in the group Genesis during their artsy prog-rock incarnation, Hackett and his boys on stage were the real thing.

I think he was enjoying himself last Thursday.

My newspapers these days are on my new laptop. I am using my new computer to write this post.  My dear wife, Carrie, got tired of me looking at my online newspapers on my phone or my Chromebook.  This new HP has a much larger screen.

The daily Louisville Courier-Journal is no longer delivered to our address.  This has been a terrible adjustment for me.  I read The Tribune from Seymour.  It only publishes properly two days a week now.  Your old Uncle Dan can remember The Seymour Daily Tribune back in the day.  I can keep up with my native Jackson County and folks I still know well there.

These days I am reading the Indianapolis Star online daily.  This is paper is better than the Courier and in its last days on my kitchen table, The Courier was not giving us any Southern Indiana news.  This was both disconcerting and offensive.

I finish things off with The New York Times.  If there is something there to catch my eye, I read it closely.  If not, I pass it by.  I enjoy the music, theatre, and arts a great deal.

I miss the tangible experience of holding a paper and folding it up.  When I go out of town, I relish handling some of the papers I truly enjoy.

I found this picture recently.  It was a halftime chat my Dad was giving his team at Brownstown Central in 1978.  Looks like they were on the wrong side of the scoreboard at halftime.  You don’t see photos like this in school yearbooks anymore.

The latest North Harrison High School Hodgepodcast featured senior Zachary Miller.  I had a blast listening to The Miller’s Tale.  I am looking forward to watching this young man pitch for the NH Baseball Team.

Speaking the rights…

Danny Johnson

 

 

 

 

 

 

And So It Goes…

What’s it going to be?  Warm or cold?  Ugh.  Such is March.  

It must be March.  I am paying close attention to college basketball and was delighted to watch North Carolina State upset UNC in the Atlantic Coast Conference Championship Game.  5 games won in 5 days for the 10th seeded (in that tournament) Wolfpack.  How big a deal is this?  NC State last won this tourney in 1987.  Having UNC and Duke within Levi Garrett spitting distance from each other along Tobacco Road and NC State 25 miles down the road makes this unlike anything in college sports I can point at.  Well done NC State.

So much went on this past week.

Eric Carmen, the great singer-songwriter, passed away.  Whether as the lead man in The Raspberries or singing All By Myself, Boats Against the Current, Never Gonna Fall in Love Again, Hungry Eyes, or Make Me Lose Control, Carmen was one cool cat.  From Cleveland, Eric Carmen will be missed.  He is one I wanted to hear in person that I did not get to.  That makes me sad.

When I looked at the calendar on March 11 I did a double take.  No, I thought.  It can’t be.  Yes.  It has.

30 years since The Moody Blues played in Evansville.  These pictures were taken because I had a PHOTO PASS.  I wish our camera had been a little better.  We can call it a true sign of the times.

Thirty years later, Justin Hayward was playing a show in the old country this week.

Justin is on tour in the UK.  He comes back to the United States for a tour in July.  I doubt I will make that one.

A few folks told me I was overreacting when I wrote some time ago about the changing face of college football.  When I listened to Nick Saban talking about the same thing this week I just shook my head in agreement.  All I can say is, at this point, something has to get better.  Look for us to suffer through an awkward season with no PAC-12 and conferences going through growing pains.  A few conferences and many players will be going to the bank watching their budgets swell.  What else could this be about?

I must say the North Harrison High School Hodgepodcast has been a great thing so far.  The students and faculty member I have sat down and jawed with so far have had a good time.  I really believed in the concept.  I thought it would work.  Through five episodes, we have not had to STOP! and start over again.  Every syllable has been from the heart.  We’ve talked about music, track season, academics, science teaching, archery, future plans, and more.  In upcoming episodes we will be discussing baseball and the upcoming school play.

 

HOW ABOUT THAT MID-SOUTHERN CONFERENCE!

I know.  This is an old photo.  I have not been to the Brownstown Central High School gym since they installed the new floor.  Given it was designed by a guy who stood up in my wedding, I should be ashamed.  I am.

I am not ashamed to report that the Class 2A BCHS Braves and the class 3A Scottsburg Warriors, both members of the Mid-Southern Conference will be playing the State Finals at Gainbridge Fieldhouse in Indianapolis on March 30th.  The high schools have to wait for the NCAA Tourney stop to clear out before it is their turn.

Last week I was a bit critical of the plight of listening to the Braves games on radio.  Can’t really blame myself.  Rare is the time I can make it through an entire broadcast.  Gladly, I can report that, for whatever reason, the announcers were much improved this weekend.  I don’t know if they were inspired by the “burp” one of them turned loose before tip-off (the burper did say “Excuse me.” and that was encouraging) or the fact that there was just a little more consistency about the recognition of the players.  All I can say is keep up the good work.  I was able to hang with both games this weekend.

Tomorrow will be a good day for me.  I have been looking forward to my 56th birthday.

Speaking the rights…

Danny Johnson

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

News Feeds? I Don’t Think So. Sorry Mort.

Editorial Note:  Written while listening to the Brownstown Central Braves play Sullivan for the Regional Championship.  Listening is painful.  One Brave announcer finds it cute to call out Jack Benter by his first name…at all times…whilst referencing the other BC players by their last name.  Thankfully, JACK is a senior.  Listening to this is always painful. Know that I called football, basketball, and baseball on radio at the high school level for many years. I feel I can state this.  Still, I follow the Braves when my North Harrison Cougars are not playing.

I am either that old or that much of a traditionalist.  

Not unlike so many of us, I have a “news feed” on my cell phone that is dictated by that which I am interested in.  Ballet does not show up.  Water Polo does not show up.  My news feed has a great deal of items related to music and a great many devoted to sports.  Football is the primary sport I am “informed” of.

News Feeds, for me, are becoming more and more unworthy with each passing day.

I get stuff like this:

3 Musicians That Dislike the Eagles…who cares?  I don’t like The Eagles.  Sure, I have a copy of Hotel California. But why should I give a rat’s bladder about 3 musicians who don’t like The Eagles.  I know their windbags.  Personally I don’t think The Eagles pushed themselves creatively.  Still, I don’t care what any other musician thinks about them similarly to how I don’t care what a music critic thinks.

Alabama had 2 coaches in mind to replace Nick Saban… I certainly doubt that.  There had to be at least six candidates on the short list.  The hierarchy of the Tide Athletic Admin and Boosters would never let themselves appear to be a bunch that had to keep looking.

Rece Davis names Big Ten Team that will ‘Never” be Michigan or Ohio State... Does it get any dumber than this?  Probably.  But man, this is asinine.  How do I get this off my phone?  I liken it to stepping in a pile of dog crap and noticing that something stinks after I take my shoes off.

Paul Finebaum Bluntly Names College Football Teams That Don’t Belong in CFP (College Football Playoff)…  The 2024 season starts in earnest the first week in September.  Why?  People really care about this?  Look, I think the world of Paul Finebaum.  His daily show on the SEC Network is a throwback.  Regular callers.  Great guests.  Paul lets folks have their say.  Face it.  My news feed stinks.  Am I that boring and predictable?

Rece Davis Names Most Underrated Fight Song in College Football… Shoot me. We really care about this in March?  You say someone does?  God help them.

BRAVES LEAD AT THE HALF…29-18…if I heard correctly.  Listening is not easy.  Oh, by the way, I just answered the station’s halftime trivia question and won a pizza.  Small consolation prize for the listen.

The College Football Announcing Road always leads me back to Keith Jackson.  I know.  I know.  He’s gone.  But that doesn’t mean we can’t try to do it like Keith did.

My favorite Keith Jackson quotes:

“Amplify, clarify, and let the viewer draw his or her own conclusion.”...How refreshing.  Don’t be the story.  Tell the story.

If I’ve helped people enjoy the telecast, that’s fine.  That’s my purpose.”…The man knew his purpose.

“The one thing you can’t ever forget-the playing field is the property of the players and coaches.  It’s not to be used by some fat-butted announcer trying to make a name for himself.”….Keith would never have a chance in today’s climate of blow-hard announcers.  I love the man.

Keith was a soothsayer…

“When the money gets bigger and the stakes get higher, the sea gets wider, and the sharks in the water grow sharper teeth.”…  College football personified long before there was a thing called NIL in play.  Keith Jackson died a long time ago.  The man was ahead of his time.

How messed up is my news feed?

I get all the crap I have mentioned here on my phone (not the Keith Jackson stuff).  What did I not get on my phone?

Today as I was on the elliptical downstairs, I decided to go through some YouTube to find something to pass the time.  I found a story that broke my heart.

It’s March 9th and only today did I find out that the great Chris Mortensen, Mort, a credible NFL JOURNALIST,  A REAL ONE, died on March 3rd.  How great was Mort?  Peyton Manning knew he could TRUST Mort.  When Peyton Manning left the Indianapolis Colts, he told Mort.  And he asked Mort to sit on the story until the next day.  Mort was a man of his word.  Mort was a man of dignity.  Mort was a man of truth.

Why did I not know this?  I don’t watch ESPN’s Sportscenter.  Can’t stand the announcers.  I don’t read a daily paper.  One is no longer delivered to my address.  Another The Day the Music Died story.  How can my credible news feed leave out the death of Mort?

Get me out of here.  I don’t watch pre-game shows.  And now looks like I need to find a way to change my news feed on my phone.

Keith Jackson, I am glad you did not live long enough to see this.

Speaking the rights…

Danny Johnson

 

 

A Star Rises, a Star Falls

Written whilst listening to original vinyl from 1974.  50 years?  Don’t tell me that.

I recently acquired the autobiography written by Barbara Streisand.  I have read only a few chapters.  I had to look for what she had to say about Pat Conroy, the author of  the novel The Prince of Tides which Barbara made a movie out of and did a great job of.  Her accounts of Pat Conroy were favorable bordering on exceptional.  I met Pat Conroy once.  And for me, that time was exceptional.  When I told him I was an English teacher, he was mine.  I am so glad his novel was given the treatment it deserved.

Henry Wadsworth Longfellow wrote a poem I was quite enamored with in college.          The Tide Rises,the Tide Falls by Longfellow made an impression on me.  A song I wrote many years ago alludes to this poem slightly.

I use this as a reference for the title of this post.

Yesterday while I put myself through a vigorous workout on the elliptical, I watched, for the first time in my life, A Star is Born (1976) starring Barbara Streisand and Kris Kristofferson.  This movie has been a part of my life since I was 8.  Why?  The song Evergreen, the love theme of the movie, has played out in my head for more than 47 years.  I love the song.  And guess what?  I enjoyed the movie.

Watching this movie, I came to the conclusion that, in my mind, Barbara Streisand is the greatest American entertainer in history.

Watching A Star is Born, I was asked to believe that Streisand’s character was a nobody waiting to be discovered.  This from the actress that wooed us in Funny Girl, cracked us up in What’s Up Doc?, and already made us cry with a song and acting performance in the movie The Way We Were with Robert Redford.

I believed every minute of A Star is Born. She was that good.

Watching her sing Evergreen in the movie after my personal movie had been established was tough.  My mind already had a video for this tune and they did not mesh.

Bob Seger was never big on making videos.  Think about it.  How many Seger tunes have you SEEN?  You haven’t.  Seger once said the video that is most important is the one we conjure in our own mind.  I paraphrase here.

I still think Barbara Streisand’s performance was monumental in A Star is Born.  I am glad I finally got around to watching this film.  It was important.

I end this listening to Justin Hayward and the Moody Blues singing Nights in White Satin.  This song is timeless.  So is the work of Barbara Streisand.

Speaking the rights.

Danny Johnson

 

 

A Podcast is Born and Other Notes

Oh my, it has been a day or two since we have been here.  I have missed it.  The days are busy and busier.  That’s not a bad thing, as long as we feel we are making progress.

First, let me tell you I am delighted that we are going to record our first podcast tomorrow.  North Harrison High School Hodgepodcast is going to be a good time.  One of my senior students, Phoenix Biller, will be the first guest.  Phoenix loves music and I do too.  He plays guitar and so do I.  This will be a great thing for our school.  A preview of the concept can be found on the North Harrison Community School homepage under NHCS Social Media.

 

Last night I met up with Dave Dedrick the voice of the Paoli Rams.  95.3 WUME has enjoyed Dave’s calls for over 40 years.  He told me he has no plans to hang up the mic any time soon.  Why would he?  In 2020, I was fortunate to team-up with Dave to call a high school football game.  It was my pleasure.

As the UCLA Bruins move into The Big Ten next season, the opposing sideline of The Rose Bowl will be an interesting place.  The UCLA student section has been extended to include the first seven rows of the entire visiting side of the field.  I think this is a stroke of genius.  Why not?  The place holds 92,000.  There’s plenty of room there.

One thing I never tire of as an educator is to see friendships among students blossom and carry on and you can only hope these friendships will last through the decades.  I get that.  The picture above taken at a concert in Nashville in 2015.  Train was the headliner along with The Fray and Matthew Nathanson.  From our left to right in the center are:  Pat Monahan of Train, Matthew Nathanson, and Isaac Slade of The Fray.  These guys were singing the old Beatles tune With a Little Help From My Friends.  They took tune in the direction of the Joe Cocker version that was the theme song of tv show The Wonder Years.  I’ve been to many concerts.  This was by far the most powerful performance of one song that I ever heard.  In fact, second place is somewhere in the distance.

Baseball season is coming up.  I still miss Riverfront Stadium.  I knew the place inside and out.  What was better than George Foster’s cracking bat knocking a home run into the red seats?

The dream is over.  Meaningful print journalism is no longer in my paper box on a daily basis.  The last few issues of Louiville’s Courier-Journal arrived in the mail a day late, what there is left of the paper.  This is a scary thing.  Woodward and Bernstein, where are you now?  Oh, I know, metro dailies in Boston and New York and Chicago and a few other cities are still really there.  Not many are.  Again, this is a scary thing.  It is a portent of they never knew what hit them.

At least we have North Harrison High School Hodgepodcast to look forward to.

Speaking the rights…

Danny Johnson

 

 

 

 

Black and Blue Victory

I woke up with free throws and blocked shots dancing in my head this morning.

Last night the North Harrison Cougars defeated the Crawford County Wolfpack.  The first 32 minutes went back and forth and forth and back again in a “Black Out” themed NH Gym.  The Cougars were down 19-11 early.  When the dust settled at halftime, the Cougars were up 30-27.  At the end of the 3rd quarter, NH held a 45-37 lead.  The Pack came back.  54-54 at the end of regulation.

If you have spent any time around North Harrison, you know the Crawford County game holds a little more “umph” than most.  For me it’s partially geography.  I can look out a window in the winter, when the leaves have taken leave, and see a river that divides Harrison and Crawford.  Once upon a time that also meant a time zone.

So I was in a time machine of sorts last night.  My mind went back during breaks in the action to a place we called the “Cougar Dome”.  A quaint little gym still on campus, it was hot and loud and crowded and volatile at times, the Cougar Dome was a long time ago.

Last night was better.  Though I still feel the need every now and then to jump up and down and carry on, I hope to act like there is at least a modicum of dignity within my fiber.  Oh there were times when I wanted to yell at the refs and tell them they couldn’t call the hogs to the trough.

Last night was better because I have five senior boys on the team that I see day to day in English class.  They are good guys and they are easy to root for.

Cooper Dunn swatted shots last night like he was after flies at a barbecue.  This free shot was true in a game it had to be.

Colten Smith runs the court and makes cuts and passes that throw defenses four different directions.

I am still seeing a three-pointer that Landon Farnsley threw in from the corner where it looked like he was standing in the third row.  He just watched the shot fall and took back up the court like that was the way it was supposed to be.

Watching Caleb Voyles is like a basketball rendition of “Where’s Waldo?”  Caleb glides from side to side, in and out, his head on a swivel and I swear I don’t know how he keeps his feet under him.  It is a sight to behold.  He makes passes the rest of us wish we could.

Tre Walters was in a walking boot for most of the season.  I wish he could have been on the floor last night.

I meant it when I said these guys are easy to root for.  They have had a challenging season and I have been around enough to know when I see a class act on the field or on the floor.  Coach Ross Schulz and his staff have kept these guys together and they are still playing hard together as a team.

Final Score:   NH 64 CC 59 OT

This old NH Cougar enjoyed every minute of it.

Speaking the rights.

Danny Johnson

 

 

 

 

Looking Around

Well, I suppose we have a little ground to cover.  Haven’t been here for a while.  Taking care of business will do that to a fella.

So, how are ya?  I hope all of you are doing well.

Next Sunday is Super Bowl 58.  I hope I can feel something about it by next Saturday night.  I wanted the Ravens vs. Lions.  We got Chiefs vs. 49ers.  I would never bet against Patrick Mahomes.  That may be why I don’t bet.

Looking Backward

Recently I came across a few images on social media that I hope don’t get me in copyright trouble here.  I’ll take my chances.  I just thought they were really cool and iconic.

The set of the classic CBS sitcom All in the Family.  This sitcom got serious on occasion.  It had to.  Otherwise all the Archieisms would have buried it.  We needed to see that Arch had a good heart after all.  We need that, don’t we?    I enjoyed this TV show.  There aren’t many that I do.  These days I look for two network TV shows:  the new Night Court and the new Quantum Leap.  What does that say about me?

The last time The Beatles played together was on “the rooftop” in London.  I sure wish I could have been on the street that day.  I was only ten months old.  Twenty-three years later, I heard Paul McCartney in person for the first time.  This world we live in today doesn’t have room for a group like The Beatles.

The Moody Blues in Oakland in 1973.  One of the last concerts they performed with original member Mike Pinder.  This led to a hiatus for the group.  In 1978 they were back.  This past week marked 51 years since the song I’m Just a Singer in a Rock and Roll Band made the Hot 100.  The first time I saw the band live that gap was 13 years.  Unreal.

Did you ever believe you would see football stories lead the entire Courier-Journal sports page during basketball season.  If you wonder if college football is king, here is proof.  I never dreamed I would see this.  I don’t like it.  Sure I love football.  But I am afraid the golden goose has been shot.  Just wait.

This makes everything better.  Granddaughter Penelope sitting on Grandma’s lap.  How awesome is that?  Penny will be 1 in a few weeks.  I thought time was flying before she got here.  What did I know?

Last Friday the NH Cougar Basketball Team lost a double overtime contest to West Washington.  The Homecoming affair drew a nice crowd.  I was so proud of the team for coming from 11 behind in the 3rd quarter to tie it.  64-61 was the final.  I had a hard time sleeping that night.  I so wanted to see those boys walk off the court with smiles on their faces.

We are going to be in the podcast business.  Yep.  North Harrison High School Hodge-podcast will be premiering soon.  Yours truly will be the host in the early going.  I will let you know when and where to listen when the time comes.  This is going to be a good time.

I ran across this on the internet.  Two observations, well, maybe three.  To see that kind of price is an honor.  I will never see a penny of that.  If someone completes that purchase they need therapy.

Take care.

Speaking the rights…

Danny Johnson

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Rugged Roads and Peace

There is a time to be silent.  There is a time to be still.  There is a time to write.  There are times when all of these things present themselves at the same time.  And I don’t want to touch a single one of them.

Last month my dear friend Kelly Samons’ wife, Nancy, passed away.  This was not expected two weeks beforehand.  I have been at a loss dealing with this.  How can I leave my friend a voice message and say what I always say, “Enjoy your evening.”  When he doesn’t answer that is what I still leave him with.  I feel like a fool.

Looking inside, optimism has had to be at the forefront of a great deal that I have done and continue to do.  Only when I am still and silent do I see some of the things behind me that I am not sure how I made through so seamlessly.  Well, I do know, and I am still amazed.  If not for the grace of God, I would not have stood a chance.

Somewhere in Mississippi right now my football buddy, Aunt Barbara, is bedridden and fading in a nursing home.  We spoke on November 24th for just over ten minutes.  She sounded pretty bad.  Through it all, the last football question she asked me was if Arch Manning is going to hang with Texas or transfer as is the fashion in college football these days.  Our last phone transmission was on December 2nd.  We talked for nearly six minutes.  I did most of the talking.  She did not have much energy and sounded much worse.  Just as I suspected when our conversation ended, we have not shared a phone call since.  Via a nurse’s station on Christmas Eve, I wished her a Merry Christmas.  I have a kind uncle, her brother-in-law, keeping me posted now.

Aunt Barbara and I talked often.  We covered a great deal of ground.  She is 88 years old.  One thing she told me was that she sure didn’t want to end up in a nursing home in the shape she is in now.  That part is hard to take.  We talked Ole Miss football.  We talked family.  We talked life.  In the late 80s, 90s, and early 2000s, we attended Ole Miss games in Jackson, Oxford, and Lexington.  She came up and saw a few Indiana Hoosier games too in the 1990s.  We talked of those times often.  

Most of our phone calls were while I was on the walking trail in the afternoons.  I’d tell about what was around me.  I think it helped her get a mental picture or two away from her home where she lived alone until this past October when she went to an assisted living facility.  Her husband died in 1988.  He had a brain tumor.  They had no children.

On December 4th, as I was on the walking trail, I took this photo to mark the sun going down on the phone calls we had, the laughter we shared, and the beautiful meaning of it all.

As 2024 came on, I finally decided to wave the white flag on an endeavor I have hinted at and never accomplished.  There was one curious question I had for Justin Hayward and I never got an answer out of him.  Part of that was my fault.  The first time I inquired, his very kind publicist allowed me to forward some questions.  I was told he was not doing press at the time.  When he was, I did not get my questions answered.  I tried again over a year later and told the students in my English class involved nothing of my one question; I kept it in the weeds.  Nothing again. We got nowhere.  I suppose one of the questions (thee question) that I sent wasn’t supposed to be answered.  Some things we just leave alone I suppose.

 

My question was about Buddy.  Justin Hayward has often referenced Buddy Holly as being one of his heroes.  When he plays his solo shows, Justin always mentions Buddy when talking about the next song played.  What was my question?

Had Buddy Holly lived, would we still be here had there not been a torch to carry on?

Crazy things happen to kids when their hero dies.  Buddy Holly influenced so many musicians of a certain vintage.  Buddy paved the way for young songwriters whose desire was to do it their way.

I don’t blame Justin for passing on the question.  I wrote a song called Unspoken Feeling a long time ago.  I get it.

When I saw this new tour promo, I smiled.  There may be another day to listen to his songs yet.  There is not a 77 year-old dude that ever did it better.  Nostalgia need not apply here.  He’s still bringing new tunes and new arrangements.  I’m still bringing a new sense of awe to every show and I am glad I have been afforded the opportunity to appreciate music the way I have.  Listening to Justin Hayward again or writing another one of my own songs, for the first time I can balance the two with ease and I don’t need Justin to tell me the answer to that question after all.

Speaking the rights…

Danny Johnson