Poets and Hypocrites

 

My fascination with poetry came long before I had the chance to admire the works of William Wordsworth, William Blake, Geoffrey Chaucer, James Wright, Harryette Mullen, Robert Frost, Elizabeth Bishop, Seamus Heaney, John Keats, Donald Justice, Millard Dunn, or Dylan Thomas.

Putting words together in one way, shape, or form is a joy that grabbed me at a young age.  Recently I had a shiver up the spine whilst recording some songs.  There we were.  Me, a guitar, and a sheet of lyrics and chords were hanging out.  Embedded in one particular song were lyrics that I borrowed from poems I had written in 1985 and 1986.  A fifty-five year old was borrowing from his seventeen year old self.  That was a good day, however you wish to quantify.

Those poems I wrote more than three decades are in a bound book that, in earnest, I have not added anything to in a few decades.  If I was compelled to add something to it, I did not get the memo.  Perhaps this was by providential design.  Maybe.

When this book filled with poems from the mid-1980s to the mid-1990s, written long before I picked up a guitar with knowledge of how to mold words and music together, opens up, there is steadfastness about it.  The words never left.  They still have meaning.  Otherwise I would never have transposed some of these words with music.

Music.  Oh yes, that evil device!  

It was 1985.  That was then and this is now.  Some things never change.

When I think about the political bluster that is working its way around America in the form of book banning…AGAIN…I just shake my head.  This copy and paste political whimsy we suffer through today just looks for reasons to be mad.  Seems happiness in the form of complaining has become an art for some.

I can hear Ronald Reagan now looking at this unpleasant landscape, “Well, here we go again.”  

In 1985 it was that dreaded music that was polluting our nation.  Amazing as it was, there were Senate Hearings in Washington on the evils of popular music lyrics on the same day Bob Geldof was collecting 15.7 million pledge dollars that represented half of the money pledged during the LIVE AID CONCERTS in London and Philadelphia rockers put together to combat world hunger.  Their parents couldn’t stop Elvis from shaking his pelvis and now it was their turn.  Tipper Gore (Al), Susan Baker (James), Pam Howar (Raymond), and Sally Nevis (John) formed the Parents Music Resource Center and shook their finger at nasty lyrics.  One of these ladies found something her daughter was listening to objectionable and all music lyric hell at the Cotillion Society broke loose.

Not unlike what we are dealing with today in the form of book banning, I point to this time in my life when this was going on and all I could think, as a seventeen year old, was my parents taught me to stay away from music like that and they didn’t give a flip about Tipper Gore’s committee.  Oh yes, it was a simpler time.  My family’s values were in practice and we didn’t know what talking points were.

I recently looked at a list of fifteen songs that were targeted by the PMRC.  None of the artists listed have sat on my shelves at any point in time over the years.

I was there.  I have been there.

I will tell folks the same today.  If you can’t parent your kid, don’t blame the song.  If you can’t parent your kid, don’t blame the book.  And surely don’t blame someone else in the name of political bluster and the pursuit of intellectual welfare in the form of bigger government.

On September 19, 1985, John Denver, the musical equivalent of Mr. Rogers, said this:

“I suggest that graphic lyrics and explicit videos are not so far removed from what is seen on television every day and night whether it be in the soap operas or on the news.  That we should point our finger at the recording industry while watching the general public at a nationally televised game chant in unison ‘the Blue Jays suck’ is ludicrous.”

It was a simpler time.  Thank you, John Denver.  Glad I was there with you.

The aforementioned PMRC folded its tent eventually.  Given them credit, though.  This party was made up of both Republicans and Democrats.  It was a simpler time.

Examining the last point of John Denver’s statement makes me think of an ever popular slogan these days.  You’ve heard it.  Some of you have said it.  Some of you wear T-Shirts with it.  Some of you have bumper stickers on your vehicle sporting it.  You know the one.  It is a popular chant among some these days.

“Let’s Go Brandon!”

Not exactly a chant from the Cotillion Circuit.

Be it music or books to complain about, we know that some folks want to have their cake and eat it too.

We also know that not all nuts are grown in California.

We got a long way to go.  God help us.

Speaking the rights.

Danny Johnson

 

 

 

 

Running Scared

I used the following line and reference from the 1987 movie Broadcast News in a post I wrote more than five years ago.  It was true then and it is even more true now.  In fact, too true.

The line was:  “What do you do when your real life exceeds your dreams?”  The character who was asked the question said, “Keep it to yourself.”

Yesterday I spent more than an hour on the elliptical and tallied nearly 7 miles.  That was in the morning.  In the afternoon, I walked more than five miles.

This morning I got on the elliptical for 69 minutes and tallied 7.43 miles.  This afternoon I did a strength training workout given to me by a former Medora student.  Michael Powell was kind enough to come to my house and lead me through it five years ago.  Actually, there are workouts A and B.  I did “A” today.  It includes lifts, pushups, and some dreadful thing called “dead bug”.  I got through it today.

To keep my rhythm and pace I watch and listen to music.  Yesterday I came upon the London Live Aid Concert on July 13, 1985.  I was probably in a hay field throwing square bales that day.  This concert was a big deal.  It was the brainchild of Boomtown Rat turned activist Bob Geldof.  The concert was epic and it was all about feeding the world, as the refrain of the song Do They Know It’s Christmas? says.  In addition to the London location, the same day JFK Stadium in Philadelphia was holding an American Live Aid Concert to augment the efforts across the pond.

Today I watched the show from Philly.  In the photo above, you can see George Thorogood.  He played Madison Blues and it was off the rails good.

JFK Stadium is long gone.  That day was a long time ago.  The music lives on in my heart for sure.  I was 17 when these concerts happened.

So why Running Scared?

WIthout getting into gory details, I feel better than I have in a long time.  I had some robbers removed from my stomach last month.  Even more robbers are coming out June 14th.  Tumors, polyps, both of those words are on a piece of paper I can show you.  I call them robbers.  They were robbing my vitality.  I was severely anemic.  For how long?  Who knows?  I don’t care.

With the help of a few medicated therapies and new asthma medication…and removing those darned robbers, I can tell you that I can breathe easier than I ever have in my entire life.  I got here with breathing troubles and they have haunted me.

When I go more than an hour on the elliptical at a nice pace, I can keep going.  My lungs, for the first time in my life, are not betraying me.  I can breathe deeply and freely with ease.  It took a trip to Denver to find this kind of breathing ability before.

Yes.  I am running scared.  I am scared to death I will go back to the way it was.

For many years I have eaten well and exercised more than the average bear.  I didn’t know my will was as strong as it was.  I kept moving and kept hurting for a long long time.  I only tell myself had I not done that who knows where I would be now?  I don’t care.  I can breathe now.  I have lost pounds that did not have a chance to leave me before.  I’m not working harder now.  My body and I are finally in concert.  The sound is great.  And I know better.  That is why I am running scared.

Speaking the rights.

Danny Johnson

 

 

 

Milestones

Graduation 2023

The North Harrison High School Class of 2023 celebrated commencement yesterday. It was a great time.  My dear wife, Carrie, and I sat near the top row of the bleachers and were able to take it all in. It was a sight to behold!

I had the honor to sing a song for this bunch on Friday during graduation practice.  I never get tired of breaking out a tune I wrote with graduates in mind.

Mr. Kellems, our principal, went over the finer points of graduation during practice.  The whole ceremony turned out very well a coupled days later.

As I said, it was an honor to sing for this bunch.  I had many of them in class this year and they made it a memorable (for good reasons) school year.  Thank you!

Some of the caps took flight after the turning of the tassels.

Recording 

On Saturday, the day before graduation, I found some old friends.  My musical partner and engineer, Jeff Carpenter, and his studio.  They are both dear friends.  Both full of memories of pure sweetness.

Jeff takes care of me.  I show up with a stack of tunes and a guitar and his magic makes it sound like I belong there.

There is a true comfort I find in this space.

I had my game face on before we began.  The last time I was here was before the dreaded Covid crisis.  I had not seen Jefferson since 2019.  You wouldn’t know it.  We just took up where we left off.  Fortunately it is always like that for us.  No pulling up the ground when we get together.

When we are in this space, the hours melt like a cube of ice on the roof of a Mustang in July.

There were some nerves and apprehensions on my part.  I think that should happen.  When that goes away there’s nothing left to appreciate.  When you settle down and really start going for it, good things happen.

In Memoriam

I’d be remiss if I did not speak a word about Mrs. Janet Petty.  She passed away today at her home in Alabama.  She is the mother of my dear friend Brother Tim Petty.  Brother Tim, our hearts and prayers go out to you and your family.  I know her suffering is over.  Regardless of the circumstances, when we lose a loved one there will always be an empty feeling for a while.  I know Mr. Petty will have a time of it.  God bless him.  Mrs. Petty liked to laugh.  I was fortunate to be able to laugh with her a few times.

Speaking the rights.

Danny Johnson

 

 

 

 

 

The Troubadour/Song For A Winter’s Night

So I don’t just listen to The Moody Blues, though I think I could.

Near a week ago we lost a legend in this crazy world.  His name was Gordon Lightfoot.  He was a Canadian Icon.  If you have spent time in a dentists’ office, you have surely heard his classic songs If You Could Read My Mind and Carefree Highway.  If that is all you remember, consider yourself fortunate.  If you can tell of more, consider yourself blessed.

Justin Hayward in Variety Magazine (August 23, 2019)

 

For years I have talked about how I discovered The Moody Blues by chance as I was looking at a heap of cassette tapes on an endcap display at a department store I would one day work for nearly a decade.  Three years later,  when I was a senior in high school, The Moody Blues were all over the radio and MTV with a new album titled The Other Side of LifeYour Wildest Dreams, the first single released from the album, was a Top Ten Hit.  I knew something after all.

The summer after high school graduation I was in Shreveport, Louisiana living with my grandparents before I was to be off to college.  On July 1, 1986, Gordon Lightfoot’s album East of Midnight came out.  I was smitten.  There is one song on the album that saw Gordon removed from his normal comfort zone of producer.  He turned the board over to David Foster.  Foster is the guy who diverted the sound of the band Chicago in the early 1980s.  He was also the musician behind many movie soundtracks.  One of those was St. Elmo’s Fire.

The Foster produced tune on Gord’s new album was co-written by the producer and the artist.  I really enjoyed the song; it was called Anything for Love.  I was drawn to it.  The sound.  That is all I can tell you.  As a musician by hobby and heart, that is all I can tell you.  There is a sound and sensibility about music.  I can enjoy a work.  Better yet, I can “get” a work.  I got the entire album.  In fairness, Anything for Love is really removed from the rest of this album.  It has a David Foster feel, as where the rest of the album is all Lightfoot.

Anything for Love was released as a single and charted well on the Adult Contemporary Chart.  The song’s highest position was #13 on the AC poll.  Fortunately for me, KVKI 96.5 in Shreveport had the good sense to have the tune in rotation along with Your Wildest Dreams.  I am left to believe it was not a favorite of the artist, as it was not a song Gordon played in concert.

Like most of us, at the time, I knew Carefree Highway, Sundown, The Wreck of the Edmund FitzgeraldBeautiful, and the much covered Early Morning Rain.

I kept digging.  What I found was one gem after another.  In 1993 while seeing Gordon Lightfoot singing in person the first time,  I heard him and his long-time band play the tune Song For A Winter’s Night;  the sound of those sleigh bells caressing the chorus made me look up to see if the snow really was softly falling.  Listen to this song, if nothing else.  But be careful.  You’ll be looking for time to listen to more.  Thank me later.

The last time Gordon was in Louisville in 2018, he was playing at The Brown Theatre on Broadway.  Just down from Broadway and around the corner on 4th Street, my dear wife, Carrie, and I were at The Palace Theatre listening to Boz Scaggs.  I saw Lightfoot’s bus and the truck for his gear parked down the street and I got a bit wistful.  It all worked out.

Justin Hayward is a pretty good endorsement, if you don’t trust me.  His 1965 solo single London is Behind Me on PYE Records, before The Moody Blues, has a folky troubadour essence about it.  There is a reason he too gravitates toward the music of Gordon Lightfoot.  Me, I can just appreciate it.  His chord structure and multiple tunings are beyond my guitar acumen.

Gordon Lightfoot’s songs demand your attention without you even knowing it.  Is there a better musical compliment than that?

Speaking the rights.

Danny Johnson

NFL Draft (or Dfart) Day

I read an interesting quote from Will Levis recently.  Will is the former University of Kentucky quarterback who many think will be a high first round draft pick in tonight’s NFL Draft.

Levis made a statement, I paraphrase, that indicates his confidence by saying he has as strong an arm as anyone in the NFL.  Big words.  But this is nothing we haven’t seen or read before.  In the 1983 Sports Illustrated College Football Preview, those were always nice back then, one Dan Marino said he could throw better than anyone in college and he could throw with anyone in the pros.  That paraphrase is much more accurate than the one about Levis.  What can I say?  The Marino story came 40 years ago.  NFL football meant just a little more to me then than it does now.  Remember, Ken Anderson was still playing for the Cincinnati Bengals in 1983.

In 1964 this was the NFL Draft.  Doesn’t she look darling?

Where they are having the NFL Draft tonight in Kansas CIty, there will probably be more people in the bathroom between the 11th and 12th pick compared to what we see in this photo.

Will Levis?  Will Levis is a big fan of Will Levis.  I have always been a fan of you too, Will.  I just hope your interest in your arm goes beyond a three foot radius around.  I hope you will be a good teammate, Will.  My hope is that you will be chosen by the Indianapolis Colts.  I read that Peyton Manning gave you props.  Were those smoke signals?  Or did he attach a note to a horseshoe and throw it through Jim Irsay’s office window.  That would not be cool.  Don’t want to risk damaging a guitar.

No.  I don’t think the Colts will choose Will Levis.

No, this is not Will Levis.  This is Arch Manning.  I read today that Arch Manning will forego any monetary gain college players are raking in these days with Name Image and Likeness deals until he is named the starting quarterback.  That whole NIL mess is another post entirely, providing there are enough ROLAIDS at the ready.

I don’t think Arch is going to miss a meal.  This edict does have a 180 degrees about it though, if you want to look at it closely.  Seems folks bet on everything these days.  Do you think Vegas has and OVER/UNDER on how many teams Arch will play for in college before he declares for the draft?

Oh yes, the Manning Brothers and the NFL Draft Drama.  

When Peyton came out of Tennessee and landed in Indy there were those who thought Ryan Leaf was the one who got away.

It worked out.

When Eli was drafted out of Ole MIss he let it be known he was not going to play for the San Diego Chargers.  Spoiled brat power play?  Only if you want to think so.  I think otherwise.  All of a sudden you can’t make a business decision in the big business world of pro football?  I think otherwise.

It worked out.

It’s popcorn time!

Speaking the rights…

Danny Johnson

 

Life: It Goes On

The last entry I made on this space was February 1st.  More than two months have passed since I spoke the rights.  That is too many sunsets on one website.

The last time here I was lamenting the loss of a youngster I knew a long time ago.  I didn’t expect that the distance that goes along with losing someone from your past would also find me distancing myself from my keyboard here.  Too much unspoken feeling will do that I suppose.  I am sure of it.

Since then much has gone on.  Most of it wonderful stuff.

My Brad McCammon Tribute.  I was offering my glasses to the refs at a college basketball game. I saw Brad pull this when he was coaching a sectional basketball game at Orleans many years ago.  This was the first college basketball game I have ever witnessed in person in my life.  The guy who has been to college football stadiums from sea to shining sea and seen more than half of the FBS teams play in person was finally watching a college basketball game.  Making a promise will do that to a fella.

It was late January 2019.  In the Brownstown Central High School Gym BC’ers affectionately call “The Pit” I watched the North Harrison Lady Cats beat the Lady Braves (or Squaws to some politically correct-Americans).  On this night I promised then senior Lilly Hatton I would watch one of her Wofford games when she was playing in college.

Fast forward to her senior year and I am running out of time.  Life goes on.  But on February 18, 2023 in Chattanooga, my dear wife, Carrie, and I were there to watch the visiting Wofford Terriers defeat the UT-Chattanooga Mocs.  Watching Lilly was a thrill.

It was a great night.  In Lilly’s senior year at Wofford, the team won more games in a season than it ever had before.  22-10 was their final record.  They won the Southern Conference Championship in the regular season and were bested in the conference tourney final by the same UT-Chattanooga team.

One week later, Carrie and I were back in Tennessee.  This time in Nashville at the Vanderbilt Medical Center to see granddaughter Penelope Ann being brought into the world.  Our son Cody and his wife, Paola, did good.

I kid you not.  Penelope was only a few hours old when I took this picture.  She got here ready.

And you better know Grandma is having a good time.

This was taken this week.

I must say I am having a good time too.  

Penelope and I were watching Indy Car Racing from Texas today.  She lost interest when her driver, Sato, hit the wall.  So did she.  I had to relive the finish for her and how Josef Newgarden won under caution with less than two laps to go.

It hasn’t been all good recently.

I found this in an Albany (NY) newspaper last June.  Besides looking at it a few times and shaking my head, I have never shared it before.  That changed when another school shooting, this time Nashville, was realized.  This says a great deal to me.  Unfortunately, I am not as influential as I wish I was.  Strange when I get into a gun debate no one wants to talk sense.  They don’t seem to listen.  They don’t care.  They don’t care that I think owning a gun is fine.  And I have seen on social media comparisons to rocks and guns.  I have yet to see a rock that could destroy a 7-Eleven in 8 seconds.  Talk about stupidity.  But that seems to be the cup of the day.

God help us.

On another good note…

This guy has already mowed his yard this year.

One more good note…

I was so impressed with an interview that Coach K gave to Chris Wallace recently, I sent a note to Coach K letting him know it.  As usual, I mentioned some things I appreciated and expounded a little.  Thankfully, he kept reading.  The man sent a letter addressed to the Students of North Harrison High School.  The letter will be framed and placed in the school library.  At least I know Coach K is listening.

Speaking the rights…

Danny Johnson

 

 

 

 

 

A Kick I Will Never Forget

Leave it the Louisville Courier-Journal to leave me with a silent scream on my face.  

I have a newspaper archive account.  I used it tonight to look up a line score from a high school football game played 30 years ago come this October 2nd in the October 3rd edition of The Courier-Journal.

There was a time (a long time ago) when I was in exile from North Harrison.  1993 was one of those years.  Fortunately, I did find a football team that wanted my coaching assistance.  Unfortunately, it was the Corydon Central Panthers.  I didn’t care then.  I just knew I needed to be helping out punters and kickers, not to mention I was the sole JV coach for two years and we had a blast.

The 1992 game Corydon Central played against North Harrison was a classic memory for me.  The score was tied 0-0 at the half.  North had the ball early in the third quarter.  Billy Powell intercepted a pass for the Panthers and took it to the house.  6-0 Corydon Central.  Our sideline erupted like no other high school sideline ever did.  I was on the ground turning circles like Curly of The Three Stooges.  Players were rolling around on the field.  It was mayhem!  Not that goofy guy on those stupid insurance commercials.  This was real.

The ref saw enough.  He threw a flag on the bench for holding up the game under the aegis of “unsportsmanlike conduct” and there was no way I could be happier!  That meant our kicker was going to put up an extra-point from 35 yards away and not 20 as is the custom.  My kicker nailed it with PLENTY of room to spare.  I think I was on the ground again.  Corydon Central won 21-0 and that was the first shutout in The Big Cat Classic since the 1985 North Harrison team won 23-0.  I kicked a field goal in that game for North Harrison.

Jason Becker was the kicker for Corydon Central that night.  The next season in a game at West Washington, Jason kicked a 47 yard field goal that was clearing the uprights when it went through.  It was amazing.  I can still see that kick more clearly in my mind than any ball I ever put through under the Friday Night Lights.  I only wish he had the chance to connect on more.

The Courier-Journal had the kick 34 yards in its box score.  I went to the Bedford Times-Mail and found the correct distance.  It was as I remembered it.  I saw it happen.  I still see it today.

When you coach, players come in and out of your life.  Some years ago I ran into Jason Becker.  We laughed and relived some of the old stories.  Vowed we would get together.  You know how that goes.

I was taken aback a couple weeks ago when I was running down the obituary column of The Courier-Journal.  Jason Becker passed away suddenly on January 16, 2023.  He was 46.

On Saturday, January 21, Carrie and I went to the funeral home in Corydon to pay our respects.  On the way to the funeral home I was talking to Carrie about how Jason and I practiced.  I was still a young man and I led by example.  “Match that!”  That is what I would exclaim when we were swinging our legs together.  I told Carrie about the long snapper, Virgil Smith.  He was harder on himself than I ever was.  Couldn’t tell you the last time I saw Virgil.

Back then those guys called me Coach Moody.  My affinity for The Moody Blues was not lost on them.  I didn’t ask for it.  But Buck Hauswald, during warm-ups, often yelled out “Moody Bluedy!”  Buck is gone too.  Lord he was a great guy.

When I signed the guest book at the funeral home, I saw the signature of Virgil Smith.  I couldn’t help but smile.

It wasn’t always easy, but we sure had fun.  I have memories with these boys I would never trade for anything if we could go back.

Have I told you I am a blessed guy?  I am.

Speaking the rights.

Danny Johnson

 

 

The Write Thing to Do

When I feel the world closing in on me, I write something.

My world is not closing in on me.  But I know some folks who have been going through exactly that.  Best I can tell you is they have handled it with a grace that is only admired by most of us.

Oh my.  There is so much conflict within me when I look at this photo.  Letters put together last school year when we learned that our North Harrison colleague, Andy Pavey, was diagnosed with pancreatic cancer.

On a lovely Spring day last year, we gathered for a WALK that was dedicated to Andy.  I was proud to be there.

Those who know me know full well I am usually not at a loss for words.  Some probably wish I was at a loss for words more often.

This is so hard.

Andy Pavey was that positive fabric that could walk into any room and make it a better place.  Most of us dream of doing that.  Andy was that.

I ran into Andy at an Indiana University Football game in Bloomington this past fall.  That was the best moment for me all football season.  I didn’t expect to see him. When I did see him there, everything else stopped.  I wish I had taken a photo of the two of us there talking IU football.

Andy Pavey’s fight with pancreatic cancer ended on January 21, 2023.  To say he will be missed is only a thimble of this loss.

That conflict I have looking at this?  I am just glad that the place that has never gotten around to honoring anyone by naming a facility or a road or a calculator drawer after any of the venerable legends that have worked for the greater good of North Harrison finally got it right.  They got it right for ANDY.  Lets hope these letters hang around for a while.  They mean so much to so many.

Andy, your kids were in school every day this week.  I was proud of them for walking into my classroom.  I left them alone.  It was best.  You’d be proud.  Thank you.

Danny Johnson

 

 

 

 

 

I’m Still Here

Written as I listen to John Wetton’s  Arkangel album.  

John Wetton was a great singer.  He played bass and sang in many groups.  U.K. was one.  King Crimson was one.  Uriah Heep was one.  The big one though was ASIA where he teamed up with Carl Palmer (ELP), Steve Howe (YES), and Geoff Downes (YES and The Buggles).  ASIA was called a SUPERGROUP.   They were too.  But that didn’t mean the songs wrote themselves.  From the outside looking in, music is just made.  On the inside, making music is something that is worked for.  John Wetton died of colon cancer in 2017.  His last edict to the male fandom was to make sure to get your “guts and nuts” checked out.  He admittedly failed to do that.  Next to Justin Hayward, this guy is my next favorite singer.  There is something in his voice I understand.

Changing the subject…

I did everything I was supposed to.  I have been more careful than most I think.  When the whole Covid scare got here, I was like the rest of us.  I was still more than I am used to being still.  I got my vaccinations.  My dear wife, Carrie, and I volunteered our time at the local Covid Shot Clinic.  I wiped down chairs inside.  Outside, I checked on folks in their vehicles and made sure they were okay after fifteen minutes to make sure they were ready to drive on into the night.

I got every booster known to man.  It is a good thing.

When all this Covid business began I was scared.  My lungs have never been my friend.  We fight more than we get along.  That has been my life.  They took away a football season when I was in the 7th grade.  I fought them tooth and nail as a freshman with an inhaler tucked in my sock at all times.  It was awful.

When this Covid business began I figured I wouldn’t have a chance if it found me.

This past Monday, it found me.

I was walking upstairs at school.  I noticed my legs betraying me after walking as many flights of stairs North Harrison High School can offer.  Then I felt a bit awkward as I walked on.  Something was not right.  This was different.  I know my respiratory system better than it knows me.  I pay attention.  This was different. I looked at my fancy watch and saw heart rate numbers I had never seen walking up the steepest hills behind the house.

That was when I procured a Covid test from the school nurse office.  I didn’t wait long.  A positive response presented itself in a hurry.

So how has it been?  Being home all week since Monday?  

It has been long.  I have been introduced to a sense of worthlessness I have never know before.  Only late this afternoon have I felt like doing anything at all.

Each morning I made myself come downstairs and log on to my computer to send my lesson plans to my students.  Then I went back to bed.  This was not fun.  Not being there is a chore all its own.  A creature of habit is typing these words.  When I am away from that, I am not good.  I miss the students more than they miss me I am sure.

A funny thing happened on the way to Georgia’s butt-whipping.

 

On Saturday, January 7th, ESPN was running a story about the TCU Horned Frogs.

In earnest, I was busy looking at school work when I looked up and saw this screen.  I had to take a photo of it.  I was beyond sad to, for the first time in my life, see the word “franchise” in reference to a COLLEGE football team.  

I went ballistic.

I put on a Facebook post and a tweet that included the photo above and said the following:

Reflections of light out the door and out the window, just like college football. Schools are now deemed franchises? Keith Jackson had it right talking to Fowler and Herbie the last time Keith saw a Rose Bowl and said “too much coverage” of what was college football’s demise. ( This was a refence to the last time Keith Jackson was in the booth at The Rose Bowl in January of 2017 and lined these boys out.)

The tweet I sent I tagged to Paul Finebaum, ESPN, Chris Fowler, and old reliable, Tim Brando.  Brando and some other media folk retweeted it.  I can only believe that word got out regarding a college team as a franchise.

When Max Duggan was stepping behind center on the games first play from scrimmage, ESPN color commentator Kirk Herbstreit said: “Duggan is the face of the fran…uh..of of the offense.”  Herbstreit fumbled.

I just sat there and smiled.  Sometimes things really do work out.

If I survive this Covid thing, and I think I will, we will keep having a good time.

Speaking the rights.

Danny Johnson

 

 

 

My Rose Bowls Ahead

The calendar was kind this year.

Usually I am ready to cuss when January 1 falls on a Sunday.  I know what that means. The Rose Bowl will be played on January 2nd.  It has always been that way.  God Bless the folks in Pasadena.  They exclaimed “Never on a Sunday” so many years ago.

Me, I was glad it was another day to hang on to The Rose Bowl as we know it.  And I was glad it was a Big Ten team, Penn State winning over Utah, to win the final Rose Bowl as we have known it.

When I was on The Rose Bowl turf in 2018, I never imagined we would be here.  All I could think about was PAC-12 v. Big Ten in perpetuity.  That is all I have ever known.

I can’t tell you how emotional I was knowing this was the LAST Rose Bowl as I know it.

Next year the Rose Bowl will be one of the College Football Playoff Semi-Final Games.  That means no guarantee of a Big 12-Big Ten matchup.  In 2024, The Rose Bowl will be a part of an extended College Football Playoff and who knows will be playing in the Faux Rose Bowl.

But, I can forever say I was there in the best of times when The Rose Bowl was still real.

Will Schnell was the Rose Bowl Superintendent in 2018.  Will and I talked about the history of The Rose Bowl.  He did not know me before this day.  He grabbed my arm and told me he was glad that I understood, as a fellow Midwesterner, the significance of The Rose Bowl. I doubt another North Harrison Football T-Shirt has made it to Pasadena. Go Cougars!

Yes, Will is a big deal!

Will led me out to the Rose Bowl Stadium Field.  Entering the field, I walked over the corner of the end zone where Texas’ Vince Young scored to win the National Championship over USC in 2007.  Keith Jackson was on the call for the last time.  None of this was lost on me. I remember every moment.

Will and I talked about Rose Bowl history as my Brownstown Central gym bag circa 1978 listened in.

And then it was time to kick.  I did not miss.

Go Cougars!

Thank you for humoring me.  I have no idea how many times some of these photos have made it on this space. I know I never tire of reliving it.  After all, it is The Rose Bowl.

This is my Dad walking through a Rose Bowl tunnel. You have to experience to understand.

He found this.  I am so glad.

Dad and I watched this year’s Rose Bowl together, as is our custom.  Being there changes everything.

GUESS WHAT!

I am sooooooooooo pissed at the horizon of college football with changes in the bowl games and the NIL and the players opting out of bowl games…I have made a WONDERFUL decision!  Staring in 2024, when USC and UCLA being Big Ten play, I will be treating the UCLA and USC Big Ten home games as MY Rose Bowl Games!!

I am looking forward to the Big Ten 2024!

And when the Indiana Hoosiers go to play UCLA in the Rose Bowl, chances are better than not I will be done.  I will move on from football watching to bird watching.

After all, not unlike the Indiana Hoosiers of The Rose Bowl 1968, I have been there and done that!

Speaking the rights…

Danny Johnson