Saturday, August 6, 2016

Happy 6th PhilosFX Day!

We're celebrating 6 years of PhilosFX with a Public Service Announcement.
"Got Your 6" is a nonprofit empowering veterans and strengthening communities.
Keep reading PhilosFX, and check out "Got Your 6" at https://gotyour6.org/


You know how they say that time flies when you're having fun? And that time flies faster as you age? For your humble correspondent, this past year flew by like a Perseid meteor. At midnight UTC (8 pm Eastern) between 6 and 7 Aug, we at PhilosFX completed 72 months (6 years!) of musing, writing, sharing, and inquiring about this wonderful world of ours. 


Six years! Time is flying, so I must be having fun or getting older or both! Here's some evidence to support our claim of a good, productive year worth celebrating:

  • Total views have climbed 31% to 263,229 from 201,692 this time last year. We crossed the Quarter of a Million Visits mark!
  • First-time views rose 83% to 78,197 vs. 42,619 after five years. 35% of all first-time views are from outside the United States. Lots of new viewers came from Russia to look at the Demitri Martin posts.
  • Countries with at least one unique visitor increased to 196 from 189 a year ago. It's getting pretty difficult to attract viewers from the few remaining "never" countries (or, as I prefer to call them, "not yet" countries!). All of the top 48 countries have at least 42 unique visitors. I love being part of an international network.
  • In terms of content, we have now published 879 posts (this will be 880), which is a 5% increase over the 836 we had last year. Any bets on when we'll hit 1000? Any requests on a topic?

Speaking of 6, I want to call attention to "Got Your 6," a great non-profit organization that is focused on empowering veterans and enabling them to make lasting positive contributions in communities across the USA. The phrase, "Got Your 6" is mil-speak for protecting you from threats to your rear, or 6 o'clock position. It means, "I got your back." 

As a public service announcement in honor of our favorite blog's 6th birthday, I recommend all PhilosFX readers--especially those with a soft spot for veterans and a passion for community activism--check out "Got Your Six."

"Got Your 6" believes veterans are leaders, team builders, and problem solvers who have the unique potential to lead a resurgence of community across the nation. Got Your 6 uses six pillars to strengthen veterans–jobs, education, health, housing, family, and leadership. Got Your 6 continues to ensure all Americans see veterans as indispensable assets that make our Nation stronger. For more information, please visit https://gotyour6.org/

Bottom line, friends: be focused, happy, and productive. Find and maintain your center. Align your priorities to worthy goals. Unite others on your quest for success. Thanks for reading and celebrating six years of Philosophy + Special Effects here at PhilosFX! Here's to many more...





For the insanely curious or terminally bored, here are links to previous PhilosFX Day posts, which you may enjoy at your leisure:

5. The 2015 version: http://philosfx.blogspot.com/2015/08/happy-philosfx-day.html
4. Musings from the Batman: http://philosfx.blogspot.com/2014/08/happy-philosfx-day.html
3. Lots of stats: http://philosfx.blogspot.com/2013/08/happy-3d-birthday-philosfx.html
2. Basically, a one-liner: http://philosfx.blogspot.com/2012/08/happy-2d-birthday-philosfx.html
1. First year in review: http://philosfx.blogspot.com/2011/08/happy-birthday-philosfx.html
0. Launch! http://philosfx.blogspot.com/2010/08/launch.html


Wednesday, August 3, 2016

The AP Top 100 College Football Programs Over 80 Years


The Associated Press (AP) has been ranking the best teams in college football since 1936. Over 80 years and in 1,103 polls, a total of 165 schools have been ranked in the Top 25 on any given week.  Additionally, 44 of those schools have been ranked No. 1 at least once (Minnesota was the first).
To determine the all-time Top 25, the AP used the following formula:
  • 1 point for each poll appearance to mark consistency, 
  • 2 points for No. 1 rankings to acknowledge elite programs, and 
  • 10 points for AP championships.

You can read the full article and see the Top 100 HERE. Where does your team fall in? I am a Notre Dame fan. We've not won a National Championship since 1988, but we had a great decade in the 1940s, and based on the AP formula, we came in 3rd overall.



I copied the results into Excel to look a little closer at the data. I wanted to know some relative measures instead of the straight ordinal measures. For example, Notre Dame is 3rd on the All-Time list. But how far behind Ohio State (#1) and Oklahoma (#2) are they? And how much cushion does Notre Dame have over Alabama (#4)? I added the 3rd and 4th columns to generate and explore some ratio data.

In addition, I was curious about the relative strengths of the various conferences the teams represent. Everyone talks about the powerhouse SEC. So how many SEC teams made the overall Top-25, I wondered? I added the 5th column and filled it in mostly from memory, checking a few on the NCAA website.

Here is a closer look at the Top 25 of the past 80 years with some additional information:

The all-time AP Top-25 Points Pts Back % Conf
No. 1 Ohio State 1,112 0 100% Big Ten
No. 2 Oklahoma 1,055 57 95% Big 12
No. 3 Notre Dame 1,042 70 94% Independents
No. 4 Alabama 993 119 89% SEC
No. 5 Southern California 974 138 88% Pac 12
No. 6 Nebraska 901 211 81% Big Ten
No. 7 Michigan 894 218 80% Big Ten
No. 8 Texas 822 290 74% Big 12
No. 9 Florida State 714 398 64% ACC
No. 10 Florida 674 438 61% SEC
No. 11 LSU 655 457 59% SEC
No. 12 Penn State 647 465 58% Big Ten
No. 13 Miami 642 470 58% ACC
No. 14 Tennessee 624 488 56% SEC
No. 15 Georgia 572 540 51% SEC
No. 16 Auburn 570 542 51% SEC
No. 17 UCLA 535 577 48% Pac 12
No. 18 Texas A&M 447 665 40% SEC
No. 19 Michigan State 443 669 40% Big Ten
No. 20 Washington 430 682 39% Pac 12
No. 21 Arkansas 412 700 37% SEC
No. 22 Clemson 411 701 37% ACC
No. 23 Pittsburgh 356 756 32% ACC
No. 24 Wisconsin 336 776 30% Big Ten
No. 25 Iowa 329 783 30% Big Ten

Notice that the Top 5 teams all come from a different conference. Isn't that interesting? Is that a measure of parity?

I made a table that counted the number of times any given Conference landed a team in the Top 25. Below is a recap by Conference, showing that the SEC has 8 college football programs in the all-time Top 25, more than any other Conference. But I noticed that the Big Ten has 3 teams in the Top 10 compared to the SEC's 2, so the Big Ten may have fewer teams in the Top 25 but the teams they have are higher up. Notre Dame's eventual move into the ACC from the Independents will not be enough to bump the ACC into 2nd place.

Conference Count Pts Back %
SEC 8 0 100%
Big Ten 7 1 88%
ACC 4 4 50%
Pac 12 3 5 38%
Big 12 2 6 25%
Independents 1 7 13%




But of course, as many readers know, the Conferences are of different sizes, ranging from a low of 10 teams to a high of 14 teams, plus the 4 Independent teams. So that made me wonder if the SEC was performing so well as a conference because they field a lot of teams? Or, would the data show that the SEC is punching above or below its weight? To answer this, I gathered the total count of all the teams in all the NCAA Division I-A colleges and made the table below.

Conference Teams Top 25 %
SEC 14 8 57%
Big Ten 14 7 50%
ACC 14 4 29%
Pac 12 12 3 25%
Independents 4 1 25%
Big 12 10 2 20%
Conf USA 13 0 0%
American  12 0 0%
Mountain West 12 0 0%
Mid-American 12 0 0%
Sun Belt 11 0 0%

The SEC does have a lot of teams (14), but the bottom line is that 57% of those teams are in the all-time Top 25. That is more than any other conference in raw numbers and also tops when adjusted for the number of teams. The Big Ten has 14 teams (wait, what?) but they lag the SEC slightly in both raw and normalized numbers. Meanwhile, the ACC also has 14 teams but only half as many teams in the Top 25.

Looking over 80 years, the SEC is formidable, indeed. And of course recent years make them appear down right unstoppable.

H/T: CF


Saturday, July 2, 2016

Remaining Clear and True to the Pulse of Life, Part III

Welcome to the finale of a three-part meditation on Mark Nepo's "Wrong View," the July 2d entry in his brilliant day-book, The Book of Awakening (1). Our mental well-being depends, Nepo says, on "...how clear and true we remain to the pulse of life...".



What is the "pulse of life?" The poetic phrase captivated me, and I felt the need to explore it more deeply.
  • In Part I, we concluded that the Pulse of Life is the quest to commune in Oneness. 
  • In Part II, we explored how to remain "clear and true" to this quest for Oneness given the distractions, opportunities, and challenges of our current technological age. 
  • Here in Part III, we turn to some ideas for moving toward an age of integration and increased Oneness. 
Since terms like integration and oneness are difficult to translate into how we live on a daily basis without a lot of New Age lingo, we put forward the idea of betterness. Maybe we cannot describe what Oneness will feel like, but we can all recognize betterness in the form of sustained, continuous improvement in our well-being and overall quality of life. This installment then is about using the idea of "betterness" as a means of marking progress toward an ill-defined goal of an age of integration and increased Oneness.  


Remaining Clear and True to the Pulse of Life:
Where do we go from here?



We want ourselves, our children, our friends and family, and our neighbors and co-workers to all experience outstanding well-being: to be healthy, happy, and prosperous. Nepo says that key to this high level of well-being is fidelity to the Pulse of Life--the urge to get better, and ultimately to commune in Oneness with all through unity with the Divine Other. 

This quest is a real problem worthy of study but challenging to describe. The quest is not easy--indeed, it is not meant to be easy. We all struggle, according to our ability. I believe it is possible for everyone, even the most disadvantaged of us, to listen for and move with the Pulse of Life. We can help each other overcome distractions and challenges and leverage our collective strengths to move toward a better state. Ultimately, we are each responsible for our own journey.



 Climbing the ladder
Photograph: Paul Hardy / Corbis

More than the urge to merely survive, the Pulse of Life seems to imply the innate urge to get better, to improve, to move forward on a path to Oneness. We are compelled to push beyond survival as a means to achieving "betterness." The ongoing struggle requires alignment of heart (values), head (plans), and hands (actions) (2). Because enacting our values uses the full spectrum from concepts to implementation, the struggle could be called the "Art-Science of Betterness" (3). 

Continuous improvement in this sense can be described as moving up a ladder from Survival to Stability to Success to Significance (4).  We move up and down the ladder over time, and we probably all know people at each level.



Many books have been written, read, forgotten, and rewritten on the subject of attaining happiness. The uncertainty of life guarantees that there will never be one and only one path to attain universal bliss. Happiness, Self-actualization, Significance, Oneness, Betterness. There are as many paths as there are journeyers. I write to acknowledge the universal quest, to suggest one possible path, and to encourage others who are on the same journey. 

I realize this whole thing sounds rather esoteric to this point. I'd like to make my concept of betterness more plain through employing the 4 Cs of: 

    Compassion, Communication, Cooperation, and Communion

     
    We remain clear and true to the pulse of life and move toward an integrated age of increased Oneness by developing competence in four critical aspects of character which I call the 4 Cs. The remainder of this post is a description of the Four Cs essential to Betterness.


    • Compassion, 
    • Communication, 
    • Cooperation, and 
    • Communion



    Wojtek Kwiatkowski Photography

    Compassion

    The Dali Lama has defined compassion as love in action. Feeling love is not enough. Love is a verb. To live well, one must DO love. How are you showing compassion in the world? How are you living out your love in community with others? What happens when you see ugly behavior, or when you yourself do not show compassion?

    The way of the miracle-worker is to see all human behavior as one of two things: either love, or a call for love. 
                                                              --Marianne Williamson

    Every human act can be seen as either an act of love, or a plea for love. If we see the world as flowing over with love, we treat ourselves and all others with fairness, dignity, and respect. The lack of love explains a lot of rude and selfish behavior in the world. Without compassion, people may feel insignificant or forgotten, and they may lose hope. 

    Show love. Be a beacon of compassion in a lost world. 


    Wojtek Kwiatkowski Photography


    Communication

    Compassion sets the stage for life, but how does one put compassion into motion? With apologies to Matt Groening, I believe that

    "Communication is the cause of, and the solution to, all of life's problems." 

    What sort of problems are we talking about? Poverty, ignorance, disease, famine, war? Yes! Peace follows from justice. Where there is injustice, there will be unrest. How can we get better by using communication?

    We must put values first. We must be clear about our values--about what really matters--to ourselves and to the people closest to us. In conflict, we must find the common values and use those as a foundation. No discussion of what to do about a problem should occur until after there is group consensus on shared values. Lacking consensus, friction is inevitable.

    People can rationalize almost anything, even seemingly contradictory things. Flexibility and the ability to compromise in some things are essential interpersonal skills. The only way to avoid constant conflict on one extreme, or a complete lack of progress on the other, is to be Value Focused (5) in your orientation. Put values first as a compass when deciding which way to go for you and yours.

    Effective communication requires (a) Clear thought, (b) Open channels, and (c) Attentive receptor. Commit to improving your own communication skills and you will enable others to communicate more effectively as well.

    Wojtek Kwiatkowski Photography


    Cooperation

    Competition is healthy. Constructive criticism is beneficial. In the spirit of mutual benefit, we need to consider the role of cooperation in terms of helping the less fortunate or the differently-abled.

    When people feel hopeless, the cause is imbalance. Even the perception of imbalance can induce despair. Thinking people and leaders need to consider the vital importance of a balance of power and the role of cooperation in achieving increased betterness


    The world's shifting economic center of gravity is depicted in the map above. Black dots represent movement of the center of gravity from its 1980 mid-Atlantic position to the present. Red dots are forward projections to 2049. The point is that nothing stays the same. Every living thing changes and so every collection of living things also evolves, adapts, changes. Since nothing stays the same, we must learn to cooperate. Help one another. Take the good with the bad. Feel the joy or the pain of the moment fully, and then let it dissipate before it blocks out the the experiences awaiting to unfold in the next moment.
    Wojtek Kwiatkowski Photography


    Communion

    The pulse of life? It begins with the recognition that all living things change. All things are connected. If we keep an open mind, we can see that some changes we can influence, but most of the time we must simply struggle to maintain balance in the midst of constant change of life all around us. Balance is maintained best when we keep our focus on the central values.

    Everything is connected. We are, quite literally, stardust. With apologies to the '70s rock group, America, I borrowed and re-purposed a snippet of lyric from their classic tune, "A Horse with No Name (6)."

    On the first part of the journey
    I was looking at all the life
    There were plants and birds and rocks and things
    There was sand and hills and rings...

    Communion is not limited to people and Creator. Communion in relation to the Pulse of Life

    The Art-Science of Betterness includes improved communion with "rocks and plants and birds and things." There was a time in my life when I would have attacked such a phrase as "flaky." But consider the following: After the Big Bang, the basic building blocks of all light, matter, and anti-matter flew outward. The material building blocks of all things gradually cooling and coalescing into simple atoms and molecules. The minerals, flora, fauna, and all things we see today, both natural and man-made, are composed of atoms, molecules, and compounds created from energy that existed before time began.
    "Against the classical concepts of permanence and identity the realization that all living is a dynamic process of transformation from which no entity escapes now stands backed up by the whole edifice of scientific research and theory. 
    "On the ruins of the world of thought dogmatically extolled by nineteenth century minds we witness the reappearance of ancient concepts which were for millennia the foundations of human knowledge. 
    "The universe is once more to be understood as an ocean of energies in which two vast complementary tides can be distinguished. Everywhere a dynamic and electrical dualism appears as the foundation upon which all reality stands."
    --Astrologer Dane Rudhyar
    
    
    The Universe is an ocean of mysterious energies. Again borrowing from America, that universal "ocean is a desert with its life underground and a perfect disguise above." The most enlightened among us appreciate that we  "rocks and plants and birds and things" are all swimming in the same Universal ocean trying to move upward and onward toward the original source of love and light. 
    
    
    Conclusion
    
    
    A cause of disenfranchisement is selfishness or a lack of compassion. A source of ennui is disconnectedness resulting from poor communication, A feeling of injustice or imbalance comes from a lack of cooperation. Finally a sense of debasement comes form a lack of regular communion with the divine spark.
    Remaining clear and true to the pulse of life can be difficult in a technological age. The art and science of betterness is about the values that lead us closer to Oneness. In light of the highly technical and increasingly networked world in which we live, how do we identify and nurture the values that lead us in the best direction?
    The way to move onward and upward is to 
    • express love with compassion
    • communicate love with intention, 
    • cooperate in the spirit of mutual benefit, and 
    • spend time in grateful communion.
    PEACE!
    
    
    
    
    
    
    
    
    
    
    
    
    
    
    
    Notes and attributions

    (1) My muse and spirit guide for this series of articles is the incomparable Mark Nepo, author of several books but most widely known for his acclaimed Book of Awakening.



    (2) The specific reference to heart, head, and hands is attributed to Robert Pirsig. author of Zen and the Art of Motorcycle Maintenance.

    (3) The "art and science of better" is the catchphrase of INFORMS, the Institute for Operations Research and Management Science. The phrase has become something of a buzzword in the Analytics community. My twist to betterness from better is made to focus more on the process rather than the state. Better is a milestone on the journey to Betterness.  

    (4) Survival to stability to success to significance is the scale developed by Zig Ziglar and used by many to put Maslow's Hierarchy of Needs in an alliterative form. 



    (5) Value-Focused Thinking is the brainchild of Ralph Keeney.

    (6) Full lyrics to America's classic tune, "A Horse with No Name" are available HERE

    (7) The four beautiful Desert Horse images are from photos by the incomparable Wojtek Kwiatkowski, equine photographer.


    Friday, July 1, 2016

    Rumi to the Rescue

    To be fully human is to feel the full range of human emotions. Perhaps we are free to pursue happiness, but in no way is happiness guaranteed. We may know the highest heights if we have felt the lowest lows. What then, is the proper response to emotional challenges? Rumi to the Rescue!  




    The Guest House
    This being human is a guest house.
    Every morning a new arrival.
    A joy, a depression, a meanness,
    some momentary awareness comes
    as an unexpected visitor.
    Welcome and entertain them all!
    Even if they’re a crowd of sorrows,
    who violently sweep your house
    empty of its furniture,
    still treat each guest honorably.
    He may be clearing you out
    for some new delight.
    The dark thought, the shame, the malice,
    meet them at the door laughing,
    and invite them in.
    Be grateful for whoever comes,
    because each has been sent
    as a guide from beyond.











    Poem by the Sufi mystic, Rumi, from a translation by Coleman Barks. Portrait of Rumi from the public domain (i.e., Wikipedia). I snagged the beautiful blue mosaic off of the cover of a book called Rumi: Bridge to the Soul: Journeys into the Music and Silence of the Heart. See also, Rumi: The Book of Love.

    Saturday, June 11, 2016

    What is your favorite Gibbs Rule?

    Gibbs Rules - For NCIS Lovers!

    Gibbs rules mug. Get yours here

    If you are reading this post you are probably a fan of CBS's long-running and wildly popular TV crime drama, NCIS. Mark Harmon stars as Leroy Jethro Gibbs, an NCIS Supervisory Special Agent and a former Marine Gunnery Sergeant.

    Since NCIS spun off from JAG back in the fall of 2003, Gibbs has been leading his team, occasionally dispensing wisdom in the form of numbered rules that have been doled out in random order.

    My favorite Gibbs rule?

    #8: Never take anything for granted.

    Saturday, May 14, 2016

    Me & Bobby (or Bobbi?) McGee & Janis Joplin & P!nk & Kris Kristofferson & You

    Janis Joplin

    Now and then, you hear a song--and it just grabs you. "Me and Bobby McGee" is such a song for many of us. We've all heard lots of covers over the years, from Roger Miller (1969) to Grace Askew (2013). Why does this particular song spark so much interest? How is it that we prefer some versions of the "same" song over others?

    "When you hear a great song, you can think of where you were when you first heard it, the sounds, the smells. It takes the emotions of a moment and holds it for years to come. It transcends time. A great song has all the key elements — melody; emotion; a strong statement that becomes part of the lexicon; and great production."--Jay-Z, Rolling Stone

    Recently, I heard P!nk's (2003) cover--and it transported me back in time. I enjoyed comparing P!nk's voice and attitude with Janis Joplin's iconic expression from over 30 years prior.

    Alecia Beth "Pink" Moore

    The experience of reveling in the renditions of this particular story got me wondering--how it is that certain songs stick with us? Some songs grab and hold. How does that work? What makes a song stick with you over time? How does a piece music grab us when another leaves us cold? How does it work for you?
    • Do you respond to the lyrics? Perhaps you are a cognitive learner and you tend to experience the world intellectually--or at least, in your mind. 
    • Or, is your response more beat-driven? In that case, you may be a kinetic learner and your favorite songs are those which make you want to dance. 
    • Perhaps you hear the music and the accompaniment and your response is mostly about the harmony. This preference fits the profile of an auditory learner.
    In truth we are all use a mix of these learning styles. Educators will often deliberately employ cognitive, kinetic, and auditory methods to engage students inside of their comfort zones. Perhaps the most successful musicians do the same, attempting to reach their audience with a variety of methods.

    But when it comes to music appreciation, learning style is just one dimension to consider. Another: Personality type.
    • When you hear a song that grabs you, do you wish you had written it? Does it connect to your personal history? If so, you might be an Introvert (in the sense of Jungian psychology) 
    • Or do you sing along and imagine performing the song yourself? When responding to the song, do you add your own vocal stylings? In this case you may be more of an Extrovert
    Kris Kristofferson

    The lesson is that the best music offers a combination of features, the mix of which appeals to cognitive, kinetic, and auditory learners and both introverts and extroverts. I believe the most memorable songs are those that somehow engage me on all of these many levels.
    "Think of 'Bohemian Rhapsody,' by Queen. That song had everything — different melodies, opera, R&B, rock — and it explored all of those different genres in an authentic way, where it felt natural." --Jay-Z, Rolling Stone

    How does music appreciation work for me?
    • I am primarily a cognitive learner with a mild propensity for extroversion. When listening to music, I often pay close attention to the lyrics. This explains my enduring fascination with Elvis Costello, one of the best lyricists ever. His voice could be described as an acquired taste.
    • I know others who love to dance and sure enough, they tend to prefer songs that have a good beat. Often, they have no idea what the song is "about." They are not nearly as interested in the story as they are in the beat. For me the beat is the icing, not the cake.
    • It was a surprise to me when I learned that most songwriters write the music first and then fill in the lyric as an afterthought. That process never would have occurred to me. I thought everyone set lyrics to music, not the other way around.
    We appreciate music in different ways. Successful singers and songwriters know that and they use that information when they cast their creative efforts out to the listening audience. Humans are storytellers. We have an innate need to tell and listen to stories. Musicians are our troubadours.

    All of this talk of storytelling and music appreciation brings us back full circle to the iconic song we are examining today. "Me and Bobby McGee" is a song that has endured because it:

    • tells a compelling, human story
    • tells that story in a memorable and easily absorbed manner
    • attracts and holds the attention of a wide range of learning styles and personality types.

    Let's look at a few different renditions of this classic song and see what jumps out. Since the lyric and melody are essentially the same in all the versions, the popularity of any version must depend on something beyond those factors that are common.



    Janis Lyn Joplin was an American singer-songwriter who first rose to fame in the late 1960s as the lead singer of the psychedelic/acid rock band Big Brother and the Holding Company, and later as a solo artist with her own backing groups, The Kozmic Blues Band and The Full Tilt Boogie Band." Janis was born on January 19, 1943 at Port Arthur, TX and she died of an apparent overdose on October 4, 1970 in Hollywood, CA.

    I love the gritty and desperate edge on her voice in her rendition of this song. It is so sad that she did not live to see her song, recorded just before her death, rise to Number One in the charts. In fact Janis Joplin's version of Me and Bobby McGee is her only song in the Rolling Stone list of 500 Greatest Songs of All Time, and the only version of the song to make the list.




    Alecia Beth "Pink" Moore (born September 8, 1979) (stylized as P!nk) is an American singer and songwriter. I enjoyed comparing P!nk's voice and attitude with Janis Joplin's iconic expression.




    Dolly Parton gives it a go. Her voice is sweet and the backing vocals and instrumental accompaniment are polished--too polished for my liking. The gritty, earthiness of Janis Joplin's version connects on a more visceral level.




    Johnny Cash & Willie Nelson & and Kris Kristofferson bring three quite different styles of performance to the effort. They play off each other nicely.




    I enjoyed this version immensely. As an aging Country Music Hall of Famer, Kris Kristofferson sings the song he wrote in the late 1960. In this version, recorded live, Kristofferson plays his own accompaniment (harmonica and guitar) and dials down the vocals in a way that suits his range and lets the listener focus on the story. Near the end of the performance, he gives a nod to the singer who made his song famous when he sings,
    "Feeling good was good enough for me (and Janis!),
    good enough for me and Bobby McGee."
    Is feeling good good enough for you? You can learn a lot more about Kris Kristofferson and his famous song at this link.

    Bottom line for me is simple: to my mind, Janis Joplin owns this song. When I hear any rendition of this classic song, I can't help but mentally picture

    Janis Joplin 

    on a Harley 

    at Woodstock.








    Saturday, April 30, 2016

    Favorite Scene From Secondhand Lions


    This is my favorite scene from one of my favorite movies. 

    "I'm Hub McCann. I've fought in two World Wars and countless smaller ones on three continents. I led thousands of men into battle with everything from horses and swords to artillery and TANKS! I've seen the headwaters of the Nile, and tribes of natives no white man had ever seen before. I've won and lost a dozen fortunes, KILLED MANY MEN! And loved only one woman, with a passion a FLEA like you could never begin to understand. That's who I am. NOW, GO HOME, BOY!"

    Hub McCann had a hard time fitting in with the folks at home after his travels abroad. I get that. 



    Secondhand Lions is a 2003 American adventure/comedy film about a young boy, Walter, (Haley Joel Osment) who is sent to live with his two eccentric but mysterious great-uncles (Hub and Garth McCann (Robert DuvallMichael Caine) on a farm in Texas. The movie was filmed in Lockhart, Texas.