2761.

Ten minutes on a Windows based laptop is a form of hell. I should’ve gone to the garage to retrieve the laptop, but it is dark down there, and I am home alone, and I have been listening to a lot of  Stephen King. So instead I sit in my kids’ room swirling with nostalgia and a growing sense of disappointment as I watch the words I typed moments ago slowly take shape across this tiny screen.

It turns out I’m a mac guy.

I guess it started back in college when the mac was still a rectangular box with a cathode face and a mouth you could insert mini floppy disks into. I fed the school mac disk after disk, always making sure I had a fresh disk less my files get corrupted and I lose all my writing. It only happened once, but that once was lesson enough to make sure it never happened again. Back then the English department was spread across two buildings–the oldest ones on that part of campus. Even then I knew there was a stigma about English. It was a dead-end area–something that bore no connection to the real world job market. Hell, even acting had a public face to it. We’d walk across the street and watch movies and know that the musicians and the actors all had somewhere they could dream to go and go big! We writer’s didn’t have any of that. The Lit and Comp-Rhet people had it worse. I could, at least marginally, say I could be the next Neal Stephenson. They could say they would get a job somewhere in Academia.

The knowledge that our profession was to stay behind the walls of academia bonded us all in a way. We settled into the idea of the college life and dreamt it would be like this even when we were old. The professors were in on the joke too. They sometimes threw parties or had one of us house sit, all leading to a sense of place and belonging within the collegiate system. I think that is why I ended up teaching in the end. It just felt familiar and expected.

2760. Waiver Wednesday

Wednesday is sports day. Normally I reserve this space for (marginally) useful conversations about football, but there is nothing of relevance really going on in football. OTA’s are not relevant. What is relevant is the showdown brewing in the Golden State. For the first time in NBA history the same two teams are meeting in the finals for the 3rd straight year. This is the rubber match. It is unlikely that both will be back next year (though the argument that Lowry is trying to get to Cleveland does change that conversation–if true), so this is the own where we learn who is the mightiest.

Only, that is not the whole story.

Today we discovered that Lebron James’ L.A. Mansion was vandalized with a racial epitaph. He responded by saying that no matter how much money and power you have, in the end you remain a black dude in America and that is a terrifying thing. In other words, despite his status he is still being subjected to this type of stuff. Will this affect his play? Nope. One has nothing to do with the other, IMHO. What will affect his play? Draymond Green.

Here is my guess for the finals: Golden State in 7. The real factor here is the play of the secondary guys–guys like Kyle Korver on the CLE side and Javale McGee on the GS side. These are the guys they brought in that were not the big names, but are going to be the impact players who create opportunities for the big 3 on each squad. And how about those big 3? Honestly, I think Cleveland has the edge, because Kyrie Irving is balling out of his mind. Everyone is talking about Kevin Love finally putting in legitimate work in this offense (and not sucking too bad on D) but Kyrie is that guy.