Sunday, July 29, 2007

Weekend Blowback - I will now let, and I stress LET, Red Sox Nation Blow Me



I spent Friday night and all of Saturday in Gainesville with The Chelsea Bee. Bless her heart, she has made the I-75 trudge down to Tampa for something around 37 consecutive weekends, so the least I could do was mix in a trip back up there. Of course, once football season rolls around, I'll be up there all the time. Anyway, her dog Sierra had six seperate episodes of diarrhea, all in the apartment, in the 24 hours leading up to my visit. I suggested that The Bee simply move to a new place by the time I got there Friday night, but she's the type that likes to plan ahead and the notice was too short, so I lowered my head and plowed through what I thought would be a weekend's worth of knee-deep shit. Luckily, The Bee had the place sparkling by the time I got there. I felt bad for her, since if it had been me, I would've simply put sheets of vomit on top of the already soiled carpet. I don't do shit, in more ways than one.



It turns out the it was the Tropicana Dome where I would have to wade through shit, because on Sunday I got back to town and hit the Devil Rays-Red Sox game at the Trop with Drew and Poppy. What a bunch of fucking turds these Red Sox fans are. Growing up in Tampa as a native, you become inured at a young age to all of the people around town who are from another place. It doesn't bother you normally. In fact, we NEED these people. They are repsonsible for the explosive growth of my fair hometown that I hold so dear. But it does bother you in one particular setting - sporting events in town where the home team is terrible. In a sold-out crowd of 35,000 at this game, I would estimate 20-22,000 were Red Sox fans. Of those 22,000, I would say 75% fell into the category of "Massholes", as they have come to be known. I fucking hate Boston accents and basically their whole culture, which is based apparently on leaving their beloved hometown to live in ours while simultaneously singing the praises of almighty Boston. This describes the culture of a lot of other cities, come to think of it. Well, fuck Boston. And fuck these people:



Massholes

Do you see? Do you see what has to be put up with? Imagine 20,000 of these parasites at a game in which YOUR team is supposed to be the home team. I blame the Devil Rays entirely, for managing to swallow inch after inch of cock year after year. If they weren't as categorically atrocious as they are, the situation wouldn't be this depressing. The Bucs are proof that this can be turned around. It used to happen to them all the time too.

The Devil Rays won 5-2, but lost two out of three in the series.





Comments are for the Meeting House

I toyed with putting a "comments" feature on the site which would allow for "comments" at the bottom of each individual post. I even threw it up there to see how it would look. Upon further review, these "comments" are the exact reason the Fentonian Meeting House Bulletin Board exists (that link is permanently on the left side of the site right below the photo). To add a seperate feature for "comments" would detract from the spirit of the Meeting House. No special feature for "comments" then.

Thursday, July 26, 2007

Fuck it. I'm ready for college football.

Buccaneer training camp opens tomorrow with a morning/afternoon two-a-day session at Disney's Wide World of Sports. I'll be broadcasting my evening show on 1010 live from camp two or three times a week for the next three weeks. I don't like training camp, nor does anybody else, player or member of the media. Anyway, while I am fired up for the Bucs and the NFL to return, there is one thing, and ONLY one thing, that gets me even more excited than that. We're talking more excited than a rabbit with three dicks. What, pray tell, is that, you might ask? To quote Colorado head coach Dan Hawkins:



"IT'S DIVISION ONE FOOTBALL!!!"
Now, there is still a lot of time to go until September 1 when the Gators take the field against Western Kentucky (that, alas, will be Division one and a half football, becuase the Hilltoppers are in their final year of I-AA this season). Nevertheless, the bug has not only bitten me, but burrowed under my skin and layed eggs early this year. ESPN is already airing daily episodes of College Footall Live, and I have already started checking the Gainesville Sun website and various other online outlets of information for anything can find on Gator and college football in general.
Goddamnit I'm exctied.


Saturday, July 21, 2007

It's Fordy's Day

Congrats to my buddy Anthony Fordyce (Fordy), who is getting married today. I am going to the wedding later on, meaning I will be wearing a suit and tie today for only the thrid time in the past two and a half years or so. I always have to hand it to a guy who has the confidence to put his balls out on the table and get married to the right woman at the right time, especially when it's a guy of Fordy's virility. What a stud. I mean, that's how it's supposed to work, right? His bride Anne is a lovely young lady, and often comes to our softball games, which demonstrates an exemplary level of dedication.

Other Saturday notes:

- HFB to my cousin Natalie, who's 24 today.

- From the hard to believe until you think about it stat file: According to Rays Index (raysindex.blogspot.com), a Devil Rays blog that I read semi-daily, the Tampa Bay Devil Rays have the highest regular season winning percentage of Tampa's three major professional sports teams, besting to this point the Bucs and Lightning. Think about it for a second.

- From the not hard to believe at all stat file: The Devil Rays turned a 2-2 game in the 6th inning at Yankee Stadium into a 7-3 loss. They'll try for a double header split tonight when the two teams meet again at 7:05. The cursory bullpen bed-shitting in the matinee was compliments of Jae Kuk Ryu, who gave up five runs in the 6th, all with two outs. Before being picked up by the Devil Rays, Ryu was most famous for intentionally throwing a baseball at a bird while in the minor leagues, killing it. So Ryu is not only a piece of shit on the field, but off of it as well.

- Exactly six weeks and 26 minutes from right now as I type, the 2007 Florida Gators will take the field at The Swamp to play the season opener vs. Western Kentucky. Saturday's in the fall are the times when it is strangely exciting to announce the names of colors in a loud tenor, only to have others off in the distance respond by yelling out another, different color. ORANGE....

Tuesday, July 17, 2007

Clarification on the evening show

The evening show for the time being is starting closer to 6:15 than 6:00. Mike and the Mad Dog before me always go another segment past 6:00. Once Bucs training camp starts, I'm told that I'll be going straight up 6 to 7pm. For the time being, if you tune in at 6:00 and you hear a couple of guys with thick Long Island accents, now you'll know why.

Bobby Gameday to appear weekdays 6-7 pm on 1010

As many of you know, I left my old radio station back in May, and for the last few weeks have been doing some fill-in stuff on 1010 Sports The Beast, WQYK-AM. Well, starting yesterday, I am on each and every weekday in the hour of 6-7 pm. I'm doing what amounts to an evening warmup show for whatever events are taking place in sports on that particular night, but I'll also take calls and do a lot of opinion stuff, interviews, all the same things you were used to from back in the 1470 days. Should be a lot of fun, and I am grateful to the people at 1010 for giving me the opportunity. If you want to learn more, check out the station website, 1010sportsonline.com

As of right now, the show is called "The Sports Desk with Bobby Fenton". If you know me, you already deduced that this title came directly from upstairs, and that it wasn't my idea. I wanted to go with the traditional "Free Stretch with Bobby Fenton". Drew even suggested "Local Programming with Bobby Fenton", which I found hilarious. I am working on this.

New Lightning Logo?

We have known for a litttle while now that the Tampa Bay Lightning have been planning a slight logo tweak to coincide with the NHL's leaguewide release of the new, sleeker, Reebok designed uniforms this season. The team colours and basic design of the uniforms is to stay the same, which is good. I like our colours.The change is supposedly just a little bit of a twist on the logo, or so we're told. Well...

As many of you know, I care a great deal about sports uniforms and colours. I think they are of vast importance, are the foundation of the identity of a team or school, and don't get enough attention paid to them by most people. There are, however, others like me, which is how I know about a uni-dedicated website called uniwatchblog.com. It's one of my favorites, and its author, Paul Lukas, also does a bi-weekly column on espn.com. Anyway, the Lightning are scheduled to unveil their new stuff at "Ice Fest" in August. But Uni Watch claims to have its hands on the new look logo already, and posted the design yesterday. If, and I STRESS IF, this is correct, the new look Tampa Bay Lightning...


...will look like this.


I have to say, I really, REALLY hope this is all just a mistake, and that the new marks are something else. As of right now, this is all preliminary, and it's certainly possible that bad intelligence is to blame and that this won't be the design after all. But if it is....my god.

I really don't know where to start here. This is supposed to be a simple change. If anything, they should have just taken the word "Lightning" out of the old logo and left everything else the same, or even if they wanted to tweak the letter font for "Tampa Bay", fine, but not to this. I really dislike the lightning bolt on this new one, too, much too pointy and the way it's half white and half blue just doesn't work. And the state of Florida on the secondary logo is waaaaaaaay too jagged looking. It wasn't that way in the old one and I don't know why it needs to be changed. The state doesn't look like that at all. And the proposed lettering font with the big serifs, espeically the one on the "B" in "Bay", I mean, I'm speechless. This has to be a mistake, right?

Well, it very possibly could be. Upon seeing these mock-ups, I immediately contacted my guy with the Lightning, who will remain nameless here. Let it suffice to say that he is as dependable and trustworthy as can be, and wouldn't jerk me around. He said that he is not allowed to talk about the new logo, which I respect. But when I e-mailed him back with a diatribe on how bad I think this proposed one looks, he simply replied back:

"You are assuming pretty strongly that these are actually the new marks."

I didn't press him any further. I don't know about you, but it sounds like a glimmer of hope still exists to me. At least for now, it's all we have. We'll see in August.

Friday, July 13, 2007

Bats Silenced As Gens Lose Championship, 5-4

The Hillsborough Generals put the tying run on second and the winning run on first with one out in the bottom of the last inning of last nights division championship game vs. the T-Bags, but were unable to convert in a gut-wrenching 5-4 loss.

"This is the kind of loss that will leave you talking to yourself," said LF Bobby Fenton. "I will go to bed tonight, and I will wake up tomorrow morning, all with absolutely no idea how we lost that game."

The Generals uncharacteristically had trouble scoring runs all evening, and went into the bottom of the last down 5-2. After a ground ball out to lead off the inning, the Gens were able to get one run across and load the bases with one out and the score 5-3. Their one-two hitters, Fenton and Matt Fisherman, were next up, and a hit by either one would have at least tied the game.

"Things looked good," said catcher Artie Fordyce. "I would take us in that situation with those guys coming up ten times out of ten."

Fenton laced the first pitch into the left centerfield gap, but the ball hung for just an instant and allowed the T-Bags centerfielder to run it down. A tag up run came across to make it 5-4, and that left the table still set for Fisherman.

"I honestly thought I had won the game right there," said Fenton. "I thought it was in the gap to clear the bases, but that little [expletive deleted] ran it down. Give him credit."

Fisherman, one of the best General hitters throughout his career, flew out to right field to end both teams's seasons. He left abruptly after the game without speaking to the media.

The rest of the Generals lingered in the players parking lot afterwards, drinking beer out of the trunks of their cars and pondering how they let slip away a game against a team they had beaten twice and slaughtered once in the regular season.

"We were missing some guys, sure," said 2B Anthony Fordyce. "Buck, Scotty B, Swope, DeLessio, but we had the lineup to win this ballgame tonight."

Some were more heated than others after the game.

RF Bob Haught fell int that category, saying, "The T-Bags were what we thought they were, okay? They had an okay defense. We saw them twice in the regular season and blew them out. They were what we thought they were. And if you wanna crown their ass, then go ahead and crown their ass. But THEY WERE WHAT WE THOUGHT THEY WERE, ALRIGHT? And we let them off the hook!"

The Generals will regroup for a week before playing in the first round of the Hillsborough County Tournament of Champions next Wednesday at 7:00. The Generals have already qualified for that tournament by virtue of their 10-0 record and division title last season.

Thursday, July 12, 2007

Are You Ready? Second Title "There For The Taking" For Generals

Fentonia's softball team, the Hillsborough Generals, will be part of a three-way playoff to determine the City of Tampa Men's League Escambia Division Championship tonight at 7:00 at the Greco Softball Complex near USF.

After going 10-0 last season for a runaway division title, their first ever, the Gens came back from a 1-3 start to finish 7-3, tied atop the division with the T-Bags and the Big Dawgs. All three teams will convene at 7:00 tonight, with a series of coinflips determining which team gets a bye into the title game. The other two teams will play a semifinal playoff, with the winner of that also advancing to the title game. During the regular season, the Generals split with the Big Dawgs and swept two games from the T-Bags.

The Gens will be without team captain Buck, as well as Scotty B, Mike Delessio, and Swope. While these losses hurt, I will serve as acting manager tonight, and go with this lineup for both possible games:

1) Bobby Fenton LF
2) Matt Fisherman LC
3) Bob Haught RF
4) Dave Mangione P
5) Troy Howell RC
6) Artie Fordyce C
7) Jason Gordon 3B
8) Harv Fisherman SS
9) Chris Weis 1B
10) Anthony Fordyce 2B

It doesn't get any better than this.

Wednesday, July 11, 2007

Bright House Atones

First of all, HFB 54 to my Dad, Robby Fenton. When you're a kid, you think your Dad is a total god. You could be about to walk into a haunted house, with bodies sprawled all over the front porch, and as long as you're with your Dad, you'll walk right in, because next to him is the safest place in the world. Then when you get a little older, some of that adolescent teen angst can bring you over to the other end of the spectrum, and you think your Dad's a schmuck. Then, when you start to grow into an adult yourself, you realize your Dad is a regular guy. Well, I love mine. HFB, Dad.

The Bright House guy came out to One Gameday Place yesterday and switched out my cable box after I experienced the blacking out of certain channels with the old box. When we tested the new box, the exact same channels didn't work, flummoxing the Bright House guy. He then determined that my outside signal was the problem, so another guy is coming out to fix that in the next day or so. Whatever, I'm not pissed off about any of this. The point is that Bright House was very responsive to my call for service, and satellite television still eats shit.

Saturday, July 7, 2007

Linda Turner is a force of nature

When I went to Europe back in July-August of 2001, I traveled alone. I spent a few days in London, one day in Paris, and I visited my buddy Ryan, who was doing a summer abroad studying in Cambridge, just north of London. It was with Ryan and another guy from the program, Matt Bernstein, that I took the train to Edinburgh, Scotland. Edinburgh is one of the cooler, underrated cities you don't hear that much about, and we had a phenomenal time there.

Anyway, we set aside one day to head out of the city and see some of the surrounding areas of Scotland. Ryan and Bernstein went to Stirling to see the sword of the original Braveheart William Wallace or something. Being the sports nut that I am, and always having to incorporate sports in some way into every trip I take, I passed on Stirling and set out north alone for the most historic piece of real estate in all of golf - Saint Andrew's. How could I be in Scotland and not end up there?

I got lucky in that I visited on a Sunday. Aside from when the Open Championship is held there every five years, no golf is played on the Old Course on Sundays. It's closed. This actually worked out perfectly for me, because it allowed me the chance to walk the entire course, look around, and take my sweet old time soaking up all of the history the place has to offer. I was literally shaking as I stood on the first tee and set out. I'm not kidding - it was that awesome.

I knew my life would change forever that day, and before that entire trip, because of the experience. Little did I know that it would change for another reason, one arguably even more profound, and one that I would be reminded of every..single...day from there on after.

I met Linda Turner out on the course.

Her and her husband Larry, both from Fort Worth, were taking in the course and the town just like I was. We started talking and ended up walking the course together. Since I was alone, they were even nice enough to take pictures of me with my camera. I gave her my e-mail address so that she could send me more pictures and so we could stay in touch. I want to stress that these were and are extremely nice people.

Linda Turner is deeply religious.

Linda Turner is a serial e-mailer.

Linda Turner is a part of my day every time I get in front of a computer.

Mind you that I am not complaining, nor making fun of her, so much as I am in awe of her. This woman keeps all of her friends on her mailing list and e-mails EVERYONE ON THE ENTIRE LIST EVERY SINGLE DAY. Even a guy like me whom she's met only once and wouldn't recognize if I broke down her door and started rooting through her fridge or something.

I want you to see a sample of some of her work. Mind you, something like the following (unedited) samples appears in my inbox 5 to 6 days a week...


From: Linda Turner
To:
Subject: have you read?
Date: Sat, 07 Jul 2007 02:08:26 +0000


Have you read the forecast? It says the rains are leaving Texas. Of course you know that means, it's mosquito time. I am sure all of you know all the things to do to help get rid of them, but if you do not, write and I will tell you. It is certaintly a relief to know it is only the females who suck blood. Enjoy the hot weather - the pool is open and it's OK to wear whatever you want because no one looks or cares about how old people look (and almost everyone I know is old). Whatever the weather enjoy it - it is a gift from God! Have a great weekend!



Another sampling...


From: Linda Turner
To:
Subject: motivation
Date: Wed, 11 Jul 2007 01:36:34 +0000

What does it take to motivate us? I think it is desire. If I want something I go for it, how about you. I wanted to bake a cake and 2 pies today so I did. I would like to want a cleaner house, but I guess I don't want it enough to clean it.

Have you heard about the Dallas weather people who have been talking about the Kingdom Possum Lake and Jose T. Garcia's?


I want to reiterate, this is an extremely nice woman who I am not making fun of. It's just that I get something of this nature ALMOST EVERY DAY, and have for years. I do not know this woman, but I think about her every time I check my e-mail.

Linda Turner is a force of nature.

Wednesday, July 4, 2007

Barbara's Bakery made me believe in cereal - and heroes - again

First of all, HFB United States, and happy Independence Day to everyone.

I have been eating multiple bowls of cereal a day ever since I was learning how to tie my shoes. In my life, I would say the number one staple of my diet, edging out pasta and various meats, is the bowl of cereal. And it's not just breakfast. I enjoy a bowl of cereal as a snack. I enjoy a bowl of cereal after a meal. If the meal is taking too long to prepare and I am hungry, I enjoy a bowl of cereal before a meal too. And I always, ALWAYS enjoy a bowl of cereal or two as the last thing I do before bedding down for the night. Cereal is stitched into the fabric of my being.

That's why the past year or so has been difficult when it comes to cereal. Put simply, I haven't gotten excited about cereal. Everytime I go to Publix, I miss that feeling. You know the feeling I'm talking about. It's the adrenaline rush of hitting the cereal aisle. And it's not only that, but it's that anticipation I always get during the first few aisles of a comprhensive shop, that little hop in your step you get when you know you're only a couple of aisles away. At Publix, I work right to left assuming your back is to the front door. I snake up and down each aisle, then I reverse field and do a perimeter sweep of the outside to finish up. I like to do this because you always want to get the cold stuff last so it doesn't sit in your cart during the shop. My mother Jeanette taught me this scheme.

Anyway, it used to be that a few aisles before the cereal, I would already start thinking about it, looking forward to it. Wanting to get there. When I finally did get there, picking out three or four boxes for the next couple of weeks was the highlight of the shopping experience. Somewhere along the way though, the industry got stale, to intentionally use a pun. Nothing new was coming out. Nothing cutting edge, like Sunrise, was making it. Nothing out there gave me a reason to get fired up about cereal. I was in the doldrums. I was in hell.

Enter the organic aisle at Publix, where, tucked away off in the corner of the store, is now located a whole new selection of cereals. I have just delved into this whole grain playground, but it took only two boxes of cereal to declare myself completely rejuvenated. "Barbara's Bakery" has one called "Puffins", which I get the peanut butter flavor of, and another one that is similar to cocoa puffs except that it is actually under 9,000 cc's of sugar per cubic millimeter, and (and this is the best part), IT GETS SOFT IN MILK.

Nothing pisses me off more than when cereal stays crunchy in milk. Why would I spend money on cereal that stays crunchy when I can just go pour some milk over some thumbtacks? And these idiot commericals brag about cereal that stays crunchy as if it's a good thing. Fucking terrible.

Anyway, pick out some cereals made by Barbara's Bakery. The boxes are blue, and the cereal is awesome.

Monday, July 2, 2007

The Fentonian New Year and Weekend Blowback

The Fentonian New Year officially began at 11:09 pm on Saturday night. While the official calendar of Fentonia is the same one used by the rest of the modern world, the F.R.F. (Fentonians' Republic of Fentonia) also follows a calendar whose origin is based on the day and time I was born, 11:09 pm on June 30, 1980. Therefore, this past weekend saw us flip the calendar to Year 28 (similar to the many misguided millenium arguments that went on a few years ago, it is important to remember that even though I turned 27 on Saturday, this is actually the beginning of Year 28, because THERE IS NO YEAR ZERO).

Anyway, it was a solid weekend all around, although I do miss The Chelsea Bee, who is in Costa Rica for a family wedding. There was a beach party thrown by Kevin Byrne at Reddington Shores on Saturday. I went along with Laffer, Thomas, Brock Goose and Mike Murray. Predictably, the day devolved into a festival of ogling scantily clad tail along with watching and analyzing other guys' attempts to secure said tail. Most of the guys in our group are in relationships, but not Laflin, so we made it a collective effort to help his cause. Real band of brothers type of shit, you know? The pickings were slim, though, and none of the females at the gathering really merited the kind of balls to the wall, stop-at-nothing, grind-it-out effort that Laffer, like most guys, is capable of when the girl in question is a real lottery pick.

Laffer did seemingly have a little something going with a dirty blonde (dirty as in her hair color, although she may well have been truly dirty to boot) in a polka dot bikini, even securing side by side seating with her in the gigantic 10-person tube we had floating out in the water. We did some recon on this chick while the others were in the tube playing grab-ass, only to learn that she had a kid. We all agreed there was nothing wrong with this and that Laflin should proceed with the mission.

The revelation of this chick's motherhood even prompted Thomas to deliver the line of the day. When someone said she had a kid, we all kind of looked at each other quietly as a beat passed, but then Thomas deadpanned, "At least we know she fucks."

You really had to be there to get a full sense of just how concisely on the money the statement was. I mean, he summed it all up right there.

Alas, the chick ended up flaking out, complaining of "seasickness" while sitting next to Laffer on the tube, thanks to the half-foot ripples on the Lake of Mexico. She got out, and that was that. We left without incident. The drive back, by the way, was very little highway driving, meaning we "got down in the shit" driving through Inner Pinellas. You really don't realize what a godforsaken shithole Pinellas County is until you actually get down on the surface streets, which I rarely do, and won't again any day soon.

I had a nice dinner at Iavarone's later that night with my Mom, George, both grandma's and George's grandson Justin and his teammate Mike. Justin and Mike are both in instructional league baseball in Dunedin as recent draftees of the Toronto Blue Jays. It was nice to be with the family, although Iavarone's turned out to be overrated. My center cut sirloin was tough and a little dry. Plus the Devil Rays lost their sixth in a row.

More later.