Halls of Fame? I like a Good Friendly Kitchen better.

 

Late this morning I sat down to check the availability and time of the golf tourney I want to take a look at on television before the weekend is over.   This activity led me to a time-honored tradition…a little channel surfing.

I found the info on the golf tourney.  I found and sat and watched a great deal of the Memorial Service for former Chicago Cub player, Ernie Banks, on the Major League Baseball network.  Ernie died late last week.  Folks spoke about him with gracious hearts and kind words.  Mr. Cub was a great ambassador for the game of baseball and the city he loved to play it in.

I sat in awe, as I watched former players I thought the world of as a youngster deliver small speeches.  Lou Brock spoke for a few minutes. I had not seen him in years.  Fergie Jenkins had his speaks.  Banks’ twin sons spoke.

Having been to Wrigley Field in Chicago a few times myself, I had some sense of the appreciation that town and that place has for Ernie Banks.  Notice I say has…it will always be “has”.  He will never go away.  He was a true hero.  He is a true “Hall of Famer”…if there really is such a thing.

I changed the channel.

On the NFL Network…by the way…for those you giving a rip…the Super Bowl is tomorrow. I am interested in this game primarily because I am a contestant in a radio contest and if the Seahawks win and the score is a reasonable facsimile of mine…I will win some nice prizes.   Anyway, on the NFL Network this morning,  there was a panel of talking heads discussing the possible new inductees into the “Pro Football Hall of Fame”.

Having a Pro Football Hall of Fame is a good thing, I think.  Though of all the places I have been, I have never been to Canto, Ohio to see this facility.  Why do I like the idea of a Pro Football Hall of Fame?  I like that there is a place for young fans to get a glimpse of how the game has evolved and some insight into some of the players that played this game professionally for very little pay and more acclaim than the bass-ackwards theme I see today where many players receive a great deal of pay for very little acclaim.  A sign of the times, I suppose.

I suppose my biggest beef with the likes of “Halls of Fame” is how they decide whom is inducted.  Players in large part, as I understand it, are voted on by sportswriters.  The possibility looms that a football player’s chance of getting into a hallowed hall might hinge on a vote by a guy who couldn’t block or tackle his sister if his life depended on it.  Good luck with that.  So.. what do we get?

We get players deserving…obviously…like first-balloter Walter Payton.  And we get guys who get in twenty-eight years after they have hung up their cleats…see Ray Guy.  In between we get a great deal of maybe they do and maybe they don’t (deserve to get “enshrined”  into this club).  For a football purist, it is just too much to rely on.  There are a number of guys that deserve to be called Hall of Famers.  They never will be.

Players I think should be in the Hall of Fame off the top of my head?

Jerry Kramer…Ken Stabler…Roger Craig…Drew Pearson…L.C. Greenwood…Ken Riley…Lemar Parrish.   None of these players were my favorites.  When they played, however, you knew they were on the field.  They made themselves known with their play…not their mouths.

My sentimental favorite?  Easy…Ken Anderson, former quarterback of the Cincinnati Bengals.  He led the league in passing 4 times.  Set multiple records for passing accuracy that stood for years.  He was a force to be reckoned with even though he played on many lousy teams.  He was running Bill Walsh’s “west coast offense” in Riverfront Stadium along the Ohio River long before Joe Montana threw a pass for Niners head coach and former Bengals’ offensive coordinator…Bill Walsh.  Over 32,000 passing yards and 197 touchdowns in a league that is much different than the one we see today, as he was trying to throw behind some bad line play, Anderson is a Hall of Famer to me.

Baseball’s Hall of Fame?  Don’t get me started.  The sportswriters have to watch 162 games a season yielding them more constipation than expected.  They are the biggest hallowed hall mongers of all.  That alone is a reason to despise the baseball hall of fame.  That and two other easy words:  Pete Rose.

What is worse than sport halls of fame?

Answer:  The Rock and Roll Hall of Fame.  Or as I like to put it…the Cleveland Museum of Musical Criticism as told by Journalistic Neurotics claiming to understand Rock and Roll.

There should at least be this criteria for being inducted into a the Rock and Roll Hall: Most of us have heard of something you sang or played on!

I don’t have a personal beef with The 5 Royales…or The Paul Butterfield Blues Band…or Lou Reed (so I have heard of him)…or…believe me I could go on.  I do wonder how they can be in a hall of fame.

Answer:  Music Critics.  They are worse than sportswriters.  They know it all.  They try to be creative because they don’t play an instrument themselves.  You can throw a laptop across the room and it won’t make a good sound.  You can blow on a pen and piece of paper and no one will care.  So…they care little about what most of us like and use their own agenda to try to sway us to their liking.  In the meantime…they waste their time. I gloss over music reviews in my newspaper.

You who know me probably guessed it.  The Moody Blues are not in the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame and I hope they never get their.  They deserve better.

Reasons The Moody Blues have not been inducted into the AMERICAN hall?

Could be:

None of The Moody Blues ever wore an earring.  Playing sell out tours in 2014 isn’t cool. Selling 70 million records just doesn’t cut it.  No members dead of drug-overdose.  Lead singer married to same lady since 1969.  Too many all over the world know the song Nights in White Satin word for word.

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Who knows?  And really, who cares?  The Moodies just keep on rocking like the “Singers in a Rock and Roll Band”  they are.  Where is there a better hall than that?  Maybe in the kitchen.

By the way…this morning I had breakfast with four of the finest gentlemen I will ever know. Time has yet to play bad tricks on these guys.  Now and again…time stands still.  You’ll know it when it does.  This morning I was 7 and 47 at the same time.  To Steve, Jim, Harv, and Jerry…I thank you.

Go Seahawks…if someone must.

Speaking the rights.

Danny Johnson

 

 

And the Band Played On….

 

I am sitting here listening to a…oh my…pirated CD.  No…it is not The Moody Blues.  It is a CD that is very precious to me.  It is a compilation CD my brother, Darrell, made for me.  It has a little bit of this and a little bit of that on it.  No…there are no Moody Blues songs.  There are songs I enjoy just the same.  We all could use a little “Flock of Seagulls” every now and then.  There is also some Coldplay and GNR and Foo Fighters and Beatles and Phil Collins and ELO and well..I think there are 18 tunes on it.  Having your brother take the time to put together a collection like this is special in itself.  I cherish it.

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This weekend there is a VERY entertaining golf tournament.  The Waste Management Event of the PGA is going on in Arizona.  Yes, I know, so is the Super Bowl being played in Arizona.  More about that later.  This PGA event may be the best of any for the casual fan to watch.  I think this is the golf venue that has a Par 3 that is basically an amphitheater of a hole.  If the player put the ball on the green he is revered.  If he does not make the green or rolls off the green he is SEVERELY jeered.  It is awesome.  Tiger Woods is playing this tournament after getting a tooth knocked out recently whilst following around his favorite female person, Lindsey Vonn, the famous skier.  Not sure how it happened.  Guess the skiing crowd is tougher than the golf crowd.  Who knew?

Again… this is the PGA event to watch on TV.  I know…I know…it is not Augusta…but what is?  The rowdies in Arizona are much more fun to listen to than the piped in bird sounds at Augusta…do you have any Grey Poupon?

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So I have a Super Bowl pick.  Help me out here people, please!

Seattle 34  New England 20

If I get the score correct or closer than any other contestant…many of whom have picked the New England Cheatriots, I will win a huge prize in a radio contest.  My Dad could use a new 40 inch TV.  That in itself is enough for you to help me root on the Seahawks.  If I were not in the contest, this game would not be the Super Bowl to me.  It would be the Pooper Bowl.  I could care less…prizes notwithstanding.  I hope I can stay awake for the whole thing.

Forgetting about Arizona for a while, I take the time to put a shout out to my friends in New Hampshire getting pounded by the great winter storm that is wreaking havoc on the Northeast.  Snow…snow….and more snow.  They are a hearty bunch there in the northeast.  What would seemingly paralyze most of us…they take in stride.  My dear wife, Carrie, and I were in New Hampshire when the great Nor’easter of 2011 took its toll on in the last weekend of October 2011.  Trees that were not broken were bent.  Power outages took a great deal of the region.  We were roughing it.  And it felt great.  It’s good to know you can hold your own when you need to.  I saw pictures today of Bob and Michelle’s girls sledding with smiles on their faces not far from Amherst Village, NH.  Did I ever tell you about the little store in the village with at least 5  daily newspapers to choose from each day from no less than 3 states?  God bless the literary sensibility of that place…and that little store.

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I hope all are safe and sound. The Beatles are singing about a long and winding road.  That is the last song on the CD.  It is my favorite Beatles song.  I have heard Paul McCartney sing it four times in person.  It brought tears to my eyes each time.  I am not sure why.  More importantly, I don’t care.  We all have a journey.

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Speaking the rights.

Danny Johnson

 

 

 

The National Anthem…NOT FOR SALE!

 

I have been somewhat perturbed…boy that is a kind word when you need it…as I have watched football on television.  No…I am not throwing more stones at the New England Patriots here.  With a nod to the final scene of the late 80s movie “Some Kind of Wonderful”, there is really nothing I can do to the Patriots that they have not done to themselves.

What has me p.o.’ed is watching the National Anthem being shown on televised football games.  No…I have no beef with the song or what it represents.  The thing is…I think networks should have been showing the footage of pre-game festivities…including and foremost…the NATIONAL ANTHEM for years.

Of late the playing of the song before some televised games has been featured.  ALSO featured is the fact that the song is being SPONSORED BY….so and so.

Translation:  The networks are getting around to showing the presentation of our country’s NATIONAL ANTHEM before games because someone is PAYING for it.  This makes me sick.

I have a point of reference here.  It is in the form of a piece I wrote a few years ago that never found publication before today.  I am glad I held onto it.

THE NATIONAL ANTHEM…NOT FOR SALE  (SUMMER 2010)

On two occasions this past June, I had grand opportunities to belt out The Star Spangled Banner…our National Anthem…in the context of exceptional circumstances.

The first, and most significant, was on June 14th at Fort Hood in Killeen, Texas.  My dear wife, Carrie, and I had trekked the from Indiana.  Inside a big white well air-conditioned tent positioned next to an airfield, Carrie and I were on hand to welcome back a unit of soldiers returning home from Afghanistan to the ones they love.

Like most inside the tent, we had a particular soldier we were there to meet…the newly promoted Sgt. Jarrett Beckett, our son.  Less than a week ago he was decorated with a medal for bravery.

As the troops fell into rank and everyone was positioned, those of us not already standing were asked to stand for the playing of our National Anthem.  I sang out.

I belted out that song like my life depended on it…and I suppose in part…it does.  Tears were streaming down my face as I thought of those brave exhausted soldiers before us and the ones whom made it back to the United States only to have their families face loss, anger, hate, pride, honor, and every gamut of emotion that must go into burying a proud soldier who perished in combat.

At that moment, our National Anthem made a little more sense to me.

The second chance I had to sing this great song was later in that month of June.  I was asked to sing our National Anthem in, of all places, the Conseco Fieldhouse ( it has since been renamed Banker’s Life Fieldhouse) in Indianapolis, Indiana.  This place is the home of the NBA’s Indiana Pacers and the WNBA’s Indiana Fever.

The promotions department of these entities had/maybe still has a noble program called “Court of Dreams” that invites Indiana girls high school basketball teams to play games during the day of a WNBA Indiana Fever game.  The high school teams participating during the day bought a block of group-priced tickets for the Fever game later that evening in exchange for the chance to play on the big stage that was the Conseco Fieldhouse during the day.

The high school games are played in the afternoon.  Afterwards these teams typically hang out in downtown Indy as they wait to return to the arena to watch the women’s pro game.

That afternoon, before the start of the girls’ game I was attending, the head coach of one of the teams about to play walked across the court and up to the sixth row where I was sitting and asked if I would like to sing the National Anthem.

I was honored.  I jumped at the chance.  After all, the only other person I ever heard sing in that building was Paul McCartney.

I sang my heart out.  As I sang my heart out, I could not help but to think about all the soldiers Carrie and I had seen earlier in the month walking in one after the other to their Ft. Hood homecoming.

Singing the National Anthem is an honor and a pleasure.  I have performed the song many times before in high school gyms.  I never dreamed I would be singing this song in a major league sports venue located in the state’s capitol.

Each time I lead an audience in the singing of this great song, I try to get out of it what I believe Francis Scott Key put into it as he was writing it.  As one with a penchant for songwriting, I have long been intrigued with the circumstances Key was presented with that gave him such inspiration.  We can only imagine.  I hope and pray we never stop imagining.

Upon finishing my rendition of our nation’s song at the arena that day, the young lady in charge of the day’s promotions and events indicated she liked the way I presented this great song.  Two staffers she had with her also raised their eyebrows in approval.

On that very spot, the lady in charge asked me if I would be interested in coming back to sing our country’s National Anthem at a Indiana Pacer’s NBA basketball game.  I told her I would be honored.  I continued to indicate my pride in the song and the fact that no more than ten days ago I was singing that song at Fort Hood as we were welcoming our son back from his service in Afghanistan.

After leaving the scorer’s table and heading back to my seat across the basketball court, I was met by a an older lady working there as an usher.  She firmly grabbed my arm.   She the told me my performance of the National Anthem…”was so wonderful it sent chills down my spine”.  I thanked her and returned to my seat to enjoy some high school basketball.

Over the course of a month or so I exchanged emails with the young lady at the Conseco Fieldhouse about the prospects of me singing the National Anthem before an Indiana Pacers NBA game.

An official invitation came to me from the Conseco FIeldhouse to sing the National Anthem before an Indiana Pacers game.

In the context of the invitation, however, I came across the following phrase…”As part of the deal”.

Reading on I came to realize I had been suckered.

Yes…they wanted me to sing the National Anthem.  But…I was expected to be a ticket agent for them and sell a block of tickets in exchange for my pipes belting out the National Anthem.

The balloon popped.  The air suddenly failed the sail.  And I was left to ponder how on earth a company could possibly think about parlaying the singing the country’s National Anthem into a money making proposition.  (Leave it to the NFL this year).

I know…I know.  Whitney Houston’s version of The Star Spangled Banner at the Tampa Super Bowl went off the charts in 1991 a few weeks after we entered the Gulf War.

Newsflash:  I’m not Whitney Houston.  This wasn’t the Super Bowl.  And I only wish our country gave half the enthusiasm to our troops today as we did in early 1991 heading into the Gulf War.

Can you imagine in 1814 someone going to Francis Scott Key and telling him if he sold enough tickets for the Governor’s Ball then they’d take a look at his little song?

Well, the Pacers will have to find someone else willing to pay to sing the National Anthem.  I believe what they are doing is American Flag blasphemy.  While I am not a scholar of how teams of major professional sports go about presenting the National Anthem, I hope and pray this is an isolated case.  The Star Spangled Banner should not be for sale.  Our country is worth more than that.  The efforts of our soldiers are damn sure worth more than that.

As I sit here in my back porch enjoying a rare cool breeze on a late summer day in Indiana, I look out on the horizon…not quite sure of what I see.

Speaking the rights.

Danny Johnson

 

The Moody Blues return to Red Rocks…Enjoy!

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My dear wife, Carrie, thought I had lost my mind.  I told her we were going to get on a plane and fly from Louisville, Kentucky to Denver, Colorado to see The Moody Blues at Red Rocks Amphitheater not many miles west of downtown Denver.

We were on the back porch when I gave her the news. It was in late March 2011.  We flew to Denver on May 6th and flew back on May 8th.  By the way, if you fly out of Louisville the day before the Kentucky Derby and fly back the day after the Kentucky Derby, you can do so economically compared to most other days.   I wish you could have seen the look on her face the day I let her know of our upcoming trip.  It said somewhat of a combination of the following:

What?…  Oh…that’s great…  Really? (Not the annoying “really?” that was made glam by a TV show)… You’re kidding, right…  Another Moodies show?…  You know I’m scared of flying.  What?… (again)… Are you crazy?…  Well…okay.

I just asked her a few minutes ago about what she thought about the trip.  “Surreal”…is the answer I got.  She’s right.  And like me, she enjoyed the trip immensely.  We packed so much into so little time.  We rented a car.  We stayed at the foot of the Rockies in Estes Park.  Neither of us had ever been there before.  We drove into the Rockies as far as we could.  There was a foot and a half of snow up there and the Trail Ridge Road was closed at 10,000 feet and it was a good thing.  Any farther and I am sure I would have passed out. We ate great food.  I ran into Bill Benner, a Moodies fan from Indy.  Bill and I saw each other at shows in 2010, 2011, and 2012.  The coolest thing was going to Red Rocks the day before the show.

Red Rocks is a park that doesn’t cost a penny to visit.  Folks exercise up and down the rows of the venue and the views from the top of Red Rocks are fabulous.  I recognized the rocks as we were driving up the hill to the place.  I had been looking at them for nearly twenty years and now they were in front of me.  Wow.

Red Rocks is a natural amphitheater.  It is situated between two…well…Red Rocks!

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The view from the top of the venue.

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The view from the stage.

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The ROCK..exit stage right.

Red Rocks is significant in Moody Blues history.  On September 9th in 1992, The Moodies played a concert for the first time with an orchestra.  Many whom have heard The Moody Blues groundbreaking album Days of Future Passed, recorded in 1967, might think this was a band that had worked closely with an orchestra.  Not so.  When the Moodies recorded Days of Future Passed  they did their parts separate from the orchestra.  The Moodies parts and the orchestral parts were put together through the magic of recording.  I have spent some time in a recording studio.  The end product for this place and time was nothing short of… meant to be.  I, like the Moodies, am very thankful.

When The Moody Blues took the stage that night at Red Rocks in 1992 and recorded their exploits, Justin Hayward, the songwriter-lead singer-guitarist of the group, told the sold out audience that twenty-five years ago that very week they handed a piece of tape to their record company, Decca Records. That piece of tape was Days of Future Passed and it featured their signature hit Nights in White Satin. 

I’m listening to that concert as I present this post on speaktherights.com.

I remember watching this concert for the first time on a PBS broadcast in March of 1993.  Not long after that it was available to purchase on…gads…a VHS tape.  DVDs soon followed…at least in my backwoods neck of the woods.  But I still remember right where I was the night I watched it.  I was captivated.  Though I had seen my share of Moodies concerts by 1993, it was the first time I had watched a show of theirs on television.  In retrospect, the popularity of this event and the fact that this vehicle allowed The Moody Blues to continue touring while being backed at shows by orchestras into the next century probably gave the group stronger legs to keep standing on.

The first orchestra show I saw was at Deer Creek northeast of Indianapolis in the summer of 1993.  The last Moodies orchestra show I saw at Deer Creek in 1999.  The place was packed.  In between I saw the Moodies play with orchestras in Louisville, Cincinnati, Evansville, Lexington, Huntsville, Noblesville, and Ft. Wayne. I think I saw thirteen Moodies orchestra shows in all.  They were all a joy.  A full orchestra is something to behold.

Had this venture not been such a fruitful endeavor for The Moody Blues…who knows?  It worked.  Thank God.  No, I really mean that.  The Moodies music is full of hope, love, peace, and optimism.  Who doesn’t need that?  Especially in our quick to bitch about world.  The Moodies have stayed around for a good reason.  I have no doubt.

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The Moody Blues…Red Rocks 2011

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John Lodge…just a singer in a rock and roll band

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Justin Hayward taking it in at Red Rocks after Nights in White Satin…looks a bit familiar to those with the Twenty-Fifth Anniversary lithograph.

Yes.  Justin Hayward told the crowd that night that it had been 25 years since Days of Future Passed.  It seemed like such a long time…25 years.  How could these guys still be rocking we asked?   Well…

On May 10th The Moody Blues will return to Red Rocks….twenty-three years after the twenty-five year celebration.  To this fan…that doesn’t seem possible.  This time Justin can tell everyone….”48 years ago we handed a piece of tape to Decca.”  Wow again.

They still put on a great show, you know.  Maybe you don’t know.  Take my word for it.  When you get Justin Hayward and John Lodge and Graeme Edge in the same room…good things happen.  They just do.  After looking at them and watching these guys for so many years, I am convinced that what they share is the music they bring.  I doubt they spend much time together away from the instruments.  They don’t need to.  They found what they were looking for and they have continued to rock and roll year after year without fail. So many of us are thankful.

The first time I saw the Moodies was the fall after my senior year of high school in 1986.  Since then I have seen them play in 1988, 1990, 1991, 1992, 1993, 1994, 1996, 1997, 1998, 1999, ( this four year gap is due to me drowning in my own music and recording) 2003, 2004, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2008, 2009, 2010, 2011, 2012, 2013, and 2014.  As of yet, I have no plans for one of the scheduled 2015 shows. The only time I ever got on a plane to see them was in 2011 for the Red Rocks show.

The Moody Blues love to bring their music to the people.  If they didn’t, they would have packed it in a long time ago. I, for one, hope they keep going.  We need more love, peace, hope, and optimism.

Another thing I like about The Moody Blues is that they don’t “milk the cow” like other artists do.  The Moodies keep their ticket prices down compared to what they could charge….hope I don’t give them any crazy ideas.

Case in point is the May 2015 Red Rocks show.  If you are in the know, there is access to great tickets to Moodies shows.  Some include perks…some don’t.  The perk-less tickets are face value tickets.  The Moodies offer pre-sale tickets to those in the know.  These tickets, to the Moodies credit, are ones the TRUE FANS pick up at the box office.

Translation: these tickets are for fans and not for ticket brokers…ticket scalpers…and cow milkers.

For the upcoming Red Rocks show, The Moodies released a number of pre-sale tickets.  They sold out.  More were released.  They sold out.  I got a third email alerting that more had been released for fans.  They sold out in a hurry.  I am glad that they did.  The Moody Blues took care of their fans.

I have been fortunate enough to get great Moodies tickets by being vigilant to the process.

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This photo was taken by Carrie.  In the background is Gordy Marshall.  He has been playing with the Moodies since 1991.  He does most of the heavy lifting of the drums for the band.  Gordon Marshall too is awesome.

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When he is not singing, Justin’s guitar playing is amazing.

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Playing the song Higher and Higher…by Grame Edge

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Graeme Edge comes off his drumming perch to deliver Higher and Higher. Note the lunar landing pictures behind the band.  The song was inspired by Neil Armstrong taking that first step onto the moon’s surface.

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Justin Hayward and John Lodge

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The boys taking it in after the last song at Red Rocks in 2011.

I hope all of you who are fortunate enough to take in this sight this coming May have a great time.  Well….you will.  It’s The Moody Blues.

Speaking the Moody Blues Rights.

Danny Johnson

The Air is out of the Ball… Cheaters

Cheaters.  That is what my Granny would have said.  She then would have said: “They don’t belong in the Super Bowl if they’re a bunch of cheaters.”

There Granny, I said it for you.

Granny was right.

So…what is the price for being a cheater?  Lose a few draft picks in 2015?  Whatever…

That still doesn’t dismiss the fact that the New England Patriots cheated.  What do you expect?  It worked out okay in the past when they were exposed as cheats.  I know…I know…there are some of you out there who are of the philosophical nature that adheres to the old adage “if you ain’t cheatin’, you ain’t trying”.  Well, if you believe that, you are a cheater too.  Shame on you.

I knew of some cheaters when I was a younger man.  These guys were on the sideline of the opposing high school team.  They…or should I say…one of them…had enough football acumen to decipher what he heard when an opposing coach made a call for a run to go to the left or the right…or if it was pass.  When it was going left he would signal to a defender in the huddle…who was also a cheater…by scratching his left ear.  If it was a pass he scratched his forehead.  Cheaters.

Will this come back to bite Coach Bill Belichick on hindparts?  I doubt it.  After all, it has worked out so far.

His team played with under-inflated balls against the Colts last Sunday.  Cheaters.

This is the same guy that did not shake Tom Coughlin’s hand after the Giants beat the Patriots in the 2007 season’s Super Bowl.  Sore Loser and Cheater.

Will this keep Bill Belichick out of the Hall of Fame?  I doubt it.  Seems cheating is a little more acceptable these days.  When the Pats were caught taping Jets signals a few years ago it was treated rather novel.

The Patriots need to change names with the Oakland Raiders.  That should be their penalty.  The Oakland Patriots and the New England Raiders.  That sounds much better.  After all, Bill Belichick is allowed to take a pair of scissors to his sweatshirt when the league would not let former 49ers coach, Mike Nolan, wear a dress suit on the sideline.  This did not meet the NFL’s dress code?  Translation:  Belichick’s sweatshirt was available for purchase on a website and after a fan paid 70 bucks for it, said fan could also take scissors to his or her sweatshirt and make it like the sophomoric Belichick’s.  Nolan’s suits were not available on the league’s website.  Pathetic.

The team we love to hate?  Not me.  I just get mad at them when they cheat.  Otherwise, I don’t care if they play.  In fact, they shouldn’t play.  They’re…as Granny would put it….cheaters.

Speaking the rights.

Danny Johnson

 

Rock and Roll Never Forgets…neither do I (PART I)

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While my dear wife, Carrie, and I have seen Bob Seger and The Silver Bullet Band sing three times, he is elusive when it comes to getting good pictures.  A Bob Seger show is not about lights.  A Bob Seger show is not about what images are flashed on a screen.  A Bob Seger show is not about filling a hall with synthesizers.   A Bob Seger show is about Rock and Roll.  Pure songs.  Pure sound…clunky at a rare moment…solid as a, well, rock the rest of the time.  It is a lover of American FM Rock’s dream.  Background music floods you and reminds you of where you were and whom you were with as Seger sings about “Mainstreet”, “Night Moves”, and “Katmandu”.  Wow.  I can get there with ease.

What follows is as a piece of writing I want to share with you that was published in 2006 when Bob Seger turned out a new album for the first time in many years.  The record was called Face the Promise.  I hope you enjoy it.  I sure did.

 

I Waited for You, Bob Seger  (2006)

 

The first time I heard it, I got goose bumps.  Could it be?  Am I the victim of a cruel joke?  Did the air stop moving? Am I really supposed to trust my auditory canal here?  Is this really on the radio?

When it was over, I was still here.  The hands on the clock were still moving.  I was not dreaming.  I was listening to Bob Seger.  The song is called “Wait for Me”.  Bob, you’re not the only one who has been waiting.  Even though, like a rock, you’ve never gone away, I have been waiting.  I’ve been waiting for this song.  I have been waiting for Bob Seger’s new album, the recently released Face the Promise.

A promise was not delivered here.  It was a gift.  Simply put, I never thought I would hear anything like this from Bob Seger again.  Suddenly I was back in a high school locker room in the seventies when my Dad was the head football coach at Brownstown and I was hurtling toward age ten. In those days I was schooled on Aerosmith, Led Zepplin, Ted Nugent, Boz Scaggs, and the perennial favorite, Bob Seger.  In 1976 he released the classic album Night Moves.  In 1978 we heard from Bob in the form of Still the Same.  Hits off those albums included Night Moves, Mainstreet, We’ve Got Tonight, Still the Same, Old Time Rock and Roll, and Rock and Roll Never Forgets.

I never forgot either.  While the only two I did any homework on later in life were Bob Seger and Boz Scaggs, the last whispered wish of age (to live it all again) brushed across my face and blew my hair as I listened to the new Bob Seger song.  Though we’ve heard from Bob Seger as the years have gone by, thanks in part to radio friendliness and a Chevy ad campaign that has taken Seger’s classic music and turn it into a fixture like a comfortable couch because we’ve heard it so much thus somewhat devaluing his special talent, his last album was release in 1995, and it was not a memorable effort.  I have it sitting on the shelf and couldn’t name two consecutive songs off of it to save my butt.

Facing facts isn’t always a joyous thing to do.  I don’t recognize hit radio today.  I look at the Billboard Hot 100 and ask, do what?  I see names like Kid Rock and can’t help but think about Fred Flintstone.  I expected the group Green Day to be comprised of a few horns and a drum or two from the Notre Dame Marching Band. And what about the group called The Barenaked Ladies.  That shouldn’t be printed in mixed company, let alone the focus of any singing.

I guess that’s why this is so special to me.  Superman took his cape out of the closet and he ironed that sucker.  He blew the dust off his microphone and delivered.

My music heroes will be going away soon.  The Moody Blues are all between sixty and sixty-five.  While I saw them live again this year, I also remind myself I saw them live twenty years ago.  And some in the audience this year saw them nearly forty years ago.  But The Moodies hit the road year after year unlike any other British Invasion contemporaries.  They still love playing live and their devoted fans respond in kind.  I’m on twenty-nine Moodies concerts and counting, myself.  The Moody Blues and so many of our other favorites are like the rest of us…not getting any younger.

My lovely wife, Carrie, and I have never seen Bob Seger. With any luck that will change, I’d like to believe Seger plans to go out on the road to support the new album.  How could he not?  He’s Bob Seger…Travelin” Man.

Speaking the Rights…with more Seger Speaks to come

Danny Johnson

Footballs are BROWN

*Editorial Note:  I am sitting here at home with one eye on the Patriots and the Ravens and one eye on speaktherights.com.  I have to write something this evening and I kind of don’t want to.  I don’t want to put a final punctuating period on a piece of prose I have been looking forward to writing since early October last.  The idea just clicked in my head and I have been tossing it around ever since and I have enjoyed every minute of it.  Hence, I don’t want this story to have any end punctuation.  I might just leave off the final period.  Though the story may end, the adventure continues.

Footballs are BROWN

A few minutes ago I exchanged text messages with my dear friend Jerry Brown.  Jerry and his son, Clay, and his brother, (Tom) “Harv” were featured in a speaktherights.com post that was written in September.  I was reflecting on a high school football game I had attended and the many layers of significance the night represented for me.

That night Jerry was coaching, Clay was playing quarterback, and Harv was broadcasting the game on the radio.  For over forty years this family has been putting the BROWN in Brownstown Central Football.

Never does a football season come that I don’t think intently and deliberately about Brownstown Central Football.  That is where I fell in love with the game.  My Dad was the head coach of the BCHS Braves from 1970 to 1978.  I was ten years old when he coached his last game there.  In March of the next year, a day or two shy of my 11th birthday, the school board at Brownstown decided they did not want my Dad coaching the team anymore.  I was a sad youngster.  The field I played my games on as a pee-wee league player would not be the home field I would play my high school games on.  I was in the 8th grade when I played on that field again.  I was a North Harrison Cougar and not a Brownstown Central Brave.  It was very awkward for me.  My Dad did coach my high school team at North Harrison and I would play inside the confines of Brownstown’s Blevins Stadium on two occasions in high school.  As a freshman in 1982, North beat Brownstown 27 to 14.  In 1984, the Cougars beat the Braves 59-0… Jerry Brown and I, high school juniors at the time, were on the same field…but we were not teammates.  I still remember how strange that was…and how much I hated that aspect of it.  One of the best friends I have ever known…still to this day…was on the other team.

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The Cougar in 1984.

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The Brave in 1985.

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Finally Braves teammates in 2014.

Know that football is a tough game.  There are aspects of this game that I am so delighted that I was privy to.  Teamwork.  You have to have it if you are going to be successful.  Toughness.  Physical toughness and mental toughness are essential to understanding the game of football.  I miss it.  I still miss playing it.  I miss the camaraderie that goes with it.  For the past near twenty years, I have worked in schools that do not have a football team.  If they had, I would have coached.  Never say never.

Among my cronies, my memory is legendary.  I have not forgotten much.  There are moments and sounds associated with this game that I hope to never forget.  The people are what I remember the most.  I can rattle off the names of players my Dad thinks the world of and a few names he probably wishes he had never heard.  That is what happens when you coach.  When a coach says the team has a “graduation problem”, it might mean they lost some key guys to graduation or it might mean it is a shame a few of the current seniors were not seniors last year…then they would be gone too.

When you coach and when you play football, it becomes a way of life.  A coach’s time is not his time.  It belongs to the greater good of the team.  Coaching is not easy.  A  high school coach must manage personalities of players and managers and sports writers and fellow coaches and administrators and parents…all of which offer good and bad.  Players contribute to the good of the cause too.  Instead of sitting on the couch eating Twinkies and watching reruns of Hogan’s Heroes, the player lifts weights and runs and studies and makes good decisions to help his body stay out of harm’s way…unlike some of his classmates.  There is a sacrifice that is made for the good of the cause that affects the coaches and the players and their families.  Thank God we have folks willing to put a portion of their livelihood on the line partly contingent upon whether or not a sixteen year-old hangs on to a pass in the end zone late in the game.  Yes…it is a risky business.

Tom and Gleda Brown had four children….four boys: Steve Brown, Jim Brown, (Tom) Harv Brown, and Jerry Brown.

 Steve Brown, the oldest, did not play football.  He was in the last graduating class of Clearspring High School west of Brownstown in 1972…I think.  This was a small school that did not have a football team.  His son, Scotty, did play for Brownstown.  We’ll get to him later.  I have no doubt that if Steve had played football, he would be remembered.  The mean ones usually are.  When I was a kid in the 70s spending time over at Jerry’s house, Steve would come around with his mirrored sunglasses on ready to kick the butt of any eight year-old that got in his way.  Though he was ultimately harmless, he put on a good show.  He taught us to value fear.

Jim Brown, a 1976 graduate of Brownstown Central, played football for my Dad.

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This is Jim.

Jim Brown wasn’t the greatest athlete in the world but he sure played like it.  My Dad never kept many newspaper clippings from his coaching career. He is just not that type.  He does have a picture of Jim being honored as a senior for being a….I think it was….12-time letter winner during his high school career.  Jim played football, basketball, baseball, and participated in track and field…with an emphasis on field.  He was a senior on a team that played a game at Paoli against the Rams in 1975.  Brownstown won the game 76 to 0.  Someone commented that was Brownstown’s opening ceremony for the upcoming Bicentennial.  Jim was the first kicker in the family.  He started it for the rest of us.

One of my fondest memories of Brownstown Central Football features Jim Brown. It is an audible memory.   I can hear it right this moment like I could hear it forty years ago.   Jim was about to kickoff to start a game.  The opening kickoff of a high school  football game is special.   The teams are spread out on the field unlike they are on any other play, as the tension of the start of a game is flying around along with the ball that just left the foot of its deliverer.  In a scene like this one, Jim Brown was about to kickoff to start a game.  One of Brownstown’s greatest athletic supporters, Maurice Hobbs, was sitting near me and she cut through a cool October night (it was dark) with the following edict: “Boot it, Jim!”  He did.

For the past several years Jim Brown and I have had an opportunity to keep up with each other to a certain degree.  Jim runs a very successful Sporting Goods store that supplies many of the schools in Southern Indiana with what teams need.  One of these schools is the one I am employed by.  Our athletic director always gives me a heads-up if Jim is scheduled to come by.  We talk candidly.  I am always delighted to see him.

Like Jerry, Harv Brown too had a son that would play quarterback for the Brownstown Central Braves. Harv played high school football for BC during the years 1980 to 1983.  His son, Jake, played from 2008 to 2011.  I was doing a pregame show on the radio one Friday night before a high school game.  I had Harv on as a guest.  This was long before he would be calling BCHS games on the radio.  This past fall he had me on as a halftime guest.

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September 2014

 

When I interviewed Harv many years ago, I called Harv the “Godfather of Brownstown Youth Football”.  In 1989, Harv helped revived the youth program and it was no longer called the pee-wee football program. They renamed it  the 56er program.  One would think it was named so because its participants are 5th and 6th graders.  I happen to believe it was called 56er Football because when Harv played high school football from 1980 to 1983 he wore number 56!  Just kidding.  Coach Harv Brown was at it from 1989 to 2005.  That is a great run of helping youngsters.  He has been doing Braves radio since 2011.  He and his partner, Harry Rochner, do a fine job on 96.3 WJAA.

I thank Harv for his dedication to helping improve the horizon of football and good citizenship in Brownstown.  As a player, as a solid parent, as a broadcaster, as a coach, and a friend to  the program…Harv has done Brownstown a great service.  I thank him again.   Harv was the next kicker in the family, taking up where Jim left off.

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At center….#56….HARV BROWN!  (The crowd roars).

Harv’s son, Jake Brown, played quarterback for Brownstown from 2008 to 2011.

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Jake Brown, QB.

This past week I have heard the following phrase attributed to a sportscaster that recently passed away.  With all respects…I first heard it on the radio listening to Jack Buck and Hank Stramm calling Monday Night Football when Stramm said about Bob Griese: “He is as cool as the other side of the pillow.”   That is how I would describe the play of Jake Brown at quarterback.  Though I did not see him play many times, I was always impressed.  His command of the field was fantastic.  He never seem to get too high and never seem to get too low.  He had the field presence and demeanor of a leader that is rarely seen on a high school field.  Harv told me the years Jake played went by way too fast.  I have no doubt. Jake’s junior and senior years saw the Braves win twenty games and lose three.  Not bad.

Jerry Brown and I are very fortunate.  Well, at least I know I am.  He is one of my dearest friends.  We were in each other’s weddings.  We got paddled by the principal together when we were in the 4th grade.  Our offense?  Chewing gum in music class.  What can I say, 1977 was a simpler time.  We listen to each other.  He too is an educator and I am so proud of his work as a teacher and a coach.

As I alluded to earlier, it was tough to be on a football field with Jerry having a different colored shirt on.  It just wasn’t right.

Jerry was a kicker too.  He wore number 57.  Being a kicker also, I look back fondly on the times we kicked together at his house at the time.  Our crossbar was an electric line.  It was fun…swinging our legs together.  We took it serious.  We tried like heck to out kick each other.

When we were seniors he kicked a 33 yard field goal against my team.  I can still hear my Dad, as he was Jerry’s opposing coach, and what he said as Jerry was lining up his kick.

“Come on, Jerry, put it through there”, my Dad mumbled.  It was the only time in over twenty years of coaching did my Dad root on an opposing kicker in a relatively close game.  We lost 17 to 7.  Dad had cheered on Jerry’s brother Jim when he was kicking for him ten years earlier.  Right is right.  Good is good.  Jerry’s kick was good.

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Jerry in the 9th grade.

Jerry has been a high school football coach since 1994.  He has been fortunate enough to work with Coach Reed May.  What Coach May has done with the Brownstown Central Football program since he arrived in 1993 has been nothing short of phenomenal.

In observing Jerry in his football environs, I have seen a coach that loves the game…but most importantly…he wants to do right by his players.  He is tough.  He is consistent.  He knows when to give them the business and he knows when to give them an ear…or an ear-full.  He, like me, has not forgotten what it felt like to be behind the face-mask.  That in itself is a wonderful gift.

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Jerry addressing the team. You would have thought E.F. Hutton was speaking here.

Jerry’s son, Clay Brown, was a senior for Brownstown Central this past football season.99980004

He wore Jim’s old number…15

I got to see Clay play a few times and it was a joy each and every time.  I think as a junior he threw 41 touchdowns and only 4 interceptions.  As I am not the Elias Sports Bureau, don’t hold me to that. This past year was much of the same.  Clay quarterbacked BC for three seasons.  The past two years they won 22 games and lost 2.  Wow.  Like his cousin, Jake…their Dads were centers and they were quarterbacks…Clay was very subtly in charge on the field.  I saw him talk a ref into changing out a ball at the line of scrimmage once.  I just laughed.  You could tell he knew the playbook inside and out and down to the copyright date.

If Clay decides to continue playing at the next level…and he has the talent to do so…I look forward to watching him play some more.  If he chooses not to, I certainly respect that too.IMG_0536

 

Jerry and Clay victorious post-game 2014.

I was at Blevins Stadium sitting with Gleda Brown and her son, Steve Brown, as we watched Steve’s boy, Scotty Brown,  take a kickoff back against Salem for a touchdown.  Right up the gut if I remember correctly.  He was barely touched.  I was impressed with his speed.  I was more impressed with his cool demeanor. I don’t know what got into these younger kids.  When Jerry and I were playing we were both nutty as fruitcakes.  Scott, Jake, and Clay were better players and better teammates than most any others you will ever find.

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Scott Brown played for Brownstown Central from 1988 to 1991.

Scott was tough.  I remember sitting there that night with his grandmother and his Dad as he returned a kickoff for six.  As usual,  I just took it all in.  I was glad to be back at Brownstown and thought it so novel to watch another Brown play.  Twenty years later we would see more with Jake…and now Clay has wrapped it up…at least for a while, I suppose.

What we have is a legacy of football..one that won’t be forgotten.

I am so fortunate that I have been here to bear witness.  It has been my pleasure.

Tom and Gleda Brown are not around to read this.  I wish they were. They were my parents away from home. I wish they both could have seen all these grandchildren play like the champions they are.  Champions in football?  Who cares!  This is a legacy that has shown and is still showing us Champions in Life!

Speaking the Gridiron/Friendship/Thankful Rights…and not wanting this to end

Danny Johnson

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

BOWLED OVER…and other admissions

I got bowled over.

On my last post about the College Football Bowl Games I picked I reported that I had picked 17 winners and 7 losers.  I was feeling quite good about myself.  I started to think not only was I having a good time…but, perhaps, I actually knew a thing or two.

Wrong.

I know nothing.  If only there were only those 24 simple game..

I got my hind-parts handed to me with the rest of my picks.  Let’s start with the fact that I picked Alabama to beat Ohio State and Florida State to beat Oregon….thus landing Bama and FSU in the National Title Game.  Including the title game, I lost all three.

My beloved Ole Miss Rebs wasted gas money getting to Atlanta.  A refund should be given to every fan that spent any of their discretionary money on attending this game over the sum of quarter….as in 25 cents.  The fans showed up.  The players did not.

18 winners and 21 losers….that was Bowl Picking Effort.  This from a man who picked 110 winners to 40 losers leading up to the bowls.  I am delighted you don’t have to pay to read this.  I am paying for enough for both us…I’m a proud man.

The National Championship Game to be played on…get this…Monday Night…only a dollar figure could move the Saturday mainstay to a Monday Night.  I have said I will not watch.  I have been lying.  I will watch the first half and decide if I should brew a couple cups of coffee to maintain my interest from there on.  Ohio State?  Yuck.  Oregon? Duck.  Still, know this…the SEC got the humble pie they deserved.  It was just a matter of time.  It always is.  Bear Bryant coached his last game at Alabama in 1982 in the Liberty Bowl.  Nick Saban coached his first game at Alabama in 2007.  He’ll be done some day and then they will be reeling again.  Good luck to the man that has to replace THE MAN.  Ask Ray Perkins.

This past Monday I looked at Carrie, my dear wife, and told her it was the first Monday Night we had not had a meaningful football game to watch on television since August 25th.  I don’t count pre-season NFL football.  If you are trying to make a team, you can count it.

Honestly, I am glad the season is over.  I am ready to give my eyes a break.  I watch too much football.  Today it was VERY bright as I drove home after work.  I put my sun shades on.  It felt good to have them on again.  I had not put them on in a while.  And yes, it was COLD…and it is COLD as I write this.  Single digits.  Windchill factors in the minus-double digits.  I was listening on internet radio to 104.9 The Surf, Hilton Head today.  Someone on there said the windchill was going to be 0.  Early last week I was walking on a beach there watching the sun come up as I was wearing a pair of short britches.  Curious.

I want to thank Carrie for getting me an IPOD for Christmas.  I had one.  I lost it a few months ago.  I hope I lost it.  I sure hope no one stole it.  It is so good to get my music back.  Moody Blues at the ready.  My IPOD is a mixed bag….outside of the Moody Blues songs that number over 100 I am sure.

On my IPOD you will find:  ABBA, a-ha, Air Supply…I know, I know, Al Stewart, Alicia Keys, Allison Krauss, April WIne, Asia ( a great deal of it), Barbara Streisand, The Bay City Rollers, The Beatles, The Bellamy Brothers, Bette Midler, Billy Joel, Billy Swan, Bob Seger, Boz Scaggs, Bruce Springsteen, the Byrds, Carly Simon, Carole King, Christopher Cross, Coldplay, Creedence, Crosby, Stills, Nash, and Young, Dan Folgelberg, myself,  The Dave Clark Five, David Foster, Debby Boone (Yes, that song), Diana Ross, Dion, Don Henley, Don McLean, The Dream Academy, Duran Duran, Dwight Yokam, The Eagles, Earl Thoma Conley, ELO, Elton John (Lewis Grizzard said that sounded like a toilet manufacturer), ELP, Eric Carmen, Faith Hill, Fastball, Foo Fighters, George Harrison, George Strait, Gordon Lightfoot, Huey Lewis and the News, Jimmy Buffett, Joe Cocker, Joe Walsh, John Barry, John Fogerty, John Lennon, John Mellencamp, John Parr, Johnny Cash, Justin Hayward, Little River Band, Madness, Mark Knopfler, Mark Shultz, Merle Haggard, Mike +The Mechanics, The Moody Blues, Moving Pictures, Neil Diamond, Nena, Night Ranger, OMD, The Outfield, Paul Anka, Paul McCartney, Phil Collins, The Prentenders, Procol Harum, Ray Charles, The Righteous Brothers, Rita Coolidge, Roberta Flack, The Shirells, Soul Asylum, Steve Earle, Styx, Theodore Gile, Tim Krekel, Train, Traveling Wilburys, Travis, U2, Van Morrison, Wetton/Downes, The Who, and Willie Nelson.

Call me a softy if you wish.  I can live with that for a very long time.

ALBUM

Speaking/Singing the Rights.

Danny Johnson

 

Bundle Up…Hill Street Snacks await

Bundle up.  It is cold out there.

“Let’s be careful out there.”

That was the edict of the roll call Sergeant on the 80s television show Hill Street Blues.  I wrote here some time ago that I procured the entire series and I have been watching it as I exercise on our equipment downstairs.  Tonight, as I raised my legs up and down with resistance and pushed back and forth on what is called an elliptical machine, I began watching season 5.  It made me sad.  There are only seven seasons.  I am over half way there.

HILL STREET SNACKS

So I have replaced Hill Street Snacks with an elliptical and an exercise bike and some free weights.  Once upon a time it was different story.

Hill Street Snacks was kindly of a contest.  It was a test of culinary will.  Mine.  These days you see television shows on the Food Network that show creating a meal as a competition of speed, accuracy, and taste.  I was doing this thirty years ago as I was watching Hill Street Blues with my Dad on Thursday nights.

A Hill Street Snack started with a decision:  What to make to eat!

French Toast?  A good Hill Street Snack.  A bunch of it.

Bacon Eggs Toast?  A great Hill Street Snack.  We’re talking 4 eggs, a half a pound bacon, and 4 to 6 pieces of toast.  Good God Y’all!  It’s true.  I did it.

Chili Dogs?  The ULTIMATE Hill Street Snack.

No matter what the Hill Street Snack…it was designed  to be prepared around all the commercial breaks.  There was a commercial at the fifteen minute break.  There was a double commercial at the bottom of the hour…commercials and a teaser  “Hill Street Blues will be right back”.  Then there was the fifteen minute left commercial.  After that…you eat your Hill Street Snack during the final segment.

I had a advantage cooking at my parent’s house.  If need be, I could dip my head below the stove’s exhaust fan and actually watch the television…although the decibel level of bacon frying might have impaired my ability to clearly pick up the show’s dialogue if the heat was too high.

Chili Dogs prepared for a Hill Street Snack…my favorite such snack:

At the fifteen minute commercial you hustle.  You run to the pantry and find a clogged artery in a can…Armour Star Chili.  You open the can and dump what you can into a pan and turn that heat up.  Grab another pan and fill it with water and put four hot dogs in it and turn that pan up to high to boil the wieners.  Before the the first break you grab an onion and some shredded cheese out of the fridge and put it on the counter to use during the long break at the bottom of the hour.  You also turn you oven to 375.

At the long thirty minute break your hot dogs and chili are getting there and are about ready.  Grab that onion and chop it up quickly…big chucks are okay. You grab a rectangular cookie sheet and put it on the counter.  Then you grab a package of hot dog buns out of the bread keeper.  If you feel you are losing time, you can rip open the package and take out your four buns.  You know you can put the leftover buns in a plastic bag later, if need be.  You then place you opened four buns on the cookie sheet.  Place a hot boiled wiener on each of the four buns.  Then pour your warmed up chili liberally over the hot dogs.  Grab a handful of onion and place it on a chili dog.  Repeat this three time over the other dogs.  Then pile each of your four chili dogs with as much shredded cheddar cheese as you have.  Put that in the oven…and about this time Hill Street is returning from its long commercial.  Watch the show and enjoy…as you look forward to the next commercial.

At the last commercial, you head to the kitchen and grab the biggest plate you have.  Take the chili dogs…covered in cheese and onion…out of the oven and place them on your plate…all of them.  Grab a fork and..since I was a growing boy…I poured a tall glass of 2% milk to go with it.

As you watch the final segment of Hill Street, you enjoy the Hill Street Snack and try not to get anything on the couch.

Wow.  Those were good times.

And probably why I am watching these shows in 2015 from the comfort of an elliptical machine as I sweat instead of eat.

It was worth it!

In fact, when I watch the final episode, I am going to take it over to my parent’s house and get my dear wife, Carrie, and our two boys, Jarrett and Cody, and I am going to make a Hill Street Snack for them one last time.  My culinary acumen is never better than when I am preparing a Hill Street Snack.  Thirty years later, I think I still have what it takes.

Let’s be careful out there.

Speaking the Rights.

Danny Johnson

 

Hilton Head…North and South

My dear wife, Carrie, and I made it back home this afternoon after most of a week at Hilton Head, South Carolina.  We stayed at a place called Shipyard in a group of condos that were the closest to the beach of any on the 880 acre property.  We were just about two and half blocks from the ocean.  We could have stayed another night, but we needed to get home.

I am so delighted we were able to share this great trip with my sister and her daughter.  We tried to get our nephew to come too.  He wanted to stay home.  His loss!

Hilton Head is every bit the golf paradise that is advertised.  Out the window of the place we were staying was a lagoon, trees, other trees with Spanish moss hanging on them, and we could see the 150 yard marker of the 6th fairway of the property’s golf course.

On New Year’s Eve, Carrie and I visited Harbour Town.  This is home to Harbour Town Golf Links where the RBC Heritage PGA event is played annually.

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Here Carrie and I are on the modest lighthouse that looks over the harbor and you can see part of the 18th fairway behind us.  As you can see…we had a nice day.  This was New Year’s Eve.  Though we left after a SPECTACULAR sunset, there was a ball that was dropped from the lighthouse to celebrate New Year’s.  Of course, it was a LARGE golf ball.

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The 18th green

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Me standing near the 18th green

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The Lighthouse

Hilton Head was great.  It really was.  What is wasn’t was a Southern place.  People there were there to have a good time.  They were not rude.  They were not real friendly.  The best way I can put it is that it is like Florida jumped over Georgia and landed on a piece that is Hilton Head.  Southern Accents?  You’ll find more of them up North in Wilmington, NC.  Friendly on the beach?  No.  Cordial.   Would I go back again?  Tomorrow!  It was a nice place.  And no…I did not play golf.  If I go back, I will.

104.9 The Surf…a great radio station… is not to be missed and worth the visit on its own.

Carrie and I usually plan our getaways months in advance.  It was strange and good to go somewhere on the spur of the moment.  It more than worked out.  Oh, Carrie and I did see an alligator as we were on a hike.  We did not have a camera at the time.

Speak the rights.

Danny Johnson