Monday, February 23, 2009

These Are Not The Roids You're Looking For

Like Scottish tartans and Christmas all traditions are fake, but one of the things I like about America is how transparent the country has always been about the fakery. The Thanksgiving Parade in NYC is about marketing a department store. Saint Patrick's Day was invented by German-American beer companies as a way of getting their loyal customers to drink even more. But sometimes people forget that these traditions are completely bogus and solemnity descends like ether before a Civil War amputation. One of the most solemn and talked about occasions every year is the election to the Baseball Hall of Fame which gets treated like a Presidential Election when really it should be seen as something like the Academy Awards or better yet the Golden Globes or my favourite, the Razzies.
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The closed shop of the Baseball Writers Association of America or BBWAA (apparently these literary geniuses can't spell the word baseball) and the Veterans Committee and other special committees elect players (and also managers and, yawn, umpires, journalists and officials) deemed worthy to stand next to Babe Ruth, Honus Wagner, Ty Cobb, Christy Matthewson and Walter Johnson - genuine superstars who were the first inductees. The motto of the HOF is: "Preserving History, Honoring Excellence, Connecting Generations"; but the steroid era has made a farce of that. We now know that at least a fifth of all players were taking steroids up to 2004. How do you compare the numbers of a steroid player to a non steroid player of this or another era? (Or come to that today's players to players of the segregated era?) You can't.
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It's impossible to say when the steroid years began except possibly by examining photographs of Barry Bonds's head over the decades, but my guess is the early 1990's and that means you're going to have throw out twenty years of data if you really want to "honor excellence." Though they won't will they? They'll sweep it all under the rug and pretend everything is fine. But thats ok, we should let them do that but we should also stop pretending that it means anything. The Baseball Hall of Fame was set up in Depression Era Cooperstown as a tourist attraction on the, at best dubious, claim that local boy Abner Doubleday "invented baseball." Like the Oscars, which appeared at roughly the same time, the whole thing was a wheeze to drum up business. It still is. The HOF is a private organization, only tangentially connected to Major League Baseball and who it puts it in its hall of heroes should not concern us in the slightest. The Babe was great because he was the Babe, not because he has some ridiculous plaque in a silly museum in an out of the way town in upstate New York.
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Remember Mr. Blackwell's list of the worst dressed women in America? It used to be a one line AP story that would raise a titter from the anchors during the "happy chat" portion of the local news. That's the way we should treat elections to the Baseball Hall of Fame. "Mary, I see that A-Rod is in the baseball HOF." "Oh, really, well now we have Dan with the weather."

24 comments:

Ian F said...

Adrian, it's basic human psychology, trying to pretend you don't care just means you care all the more.

Brian O'Rourke said...

"The Baseball Hall of Fame...you will never find a more wretched hive of scum and villainy."

Just kidding.

John McFetridge said...

Nice post, quite the can o' worms.

But really, baseball? Why should teh "steroid era," be any different than the "racism era," or the "gambling era," or the "moving the team to California era?"

I don't really understand why we're opposed to steroid use by professional athletes anyway. So much of their training is physically harmful in the long run (do American pro football players still have a life expectancy of less than 60 years? The long term effect of concussions is clear, but we're not about to stop athletes from slamming their heads into things - balls, each other...) why is this one thing singled out?

seanag said...

But speaking of fashion...

No, I know it's way too early to try and derail this thread, and besides, I probably know even less about fashion than I do about baseball.

However, the Oscars are on tonight, and these days, commenting on (i.e., mocking)the women celeb's fashion seems to be about 90% of the entertainment, at least at any Oscars gathering I've ever been to. It's not my favorite part of the evening,frankly.

The weird thing, and maybe this does tie back into the actual subject here, is that though a ceremony like the Oscars is ridiculous, it also matters. Winning an Oscar actually means something in terms of opportunity and money. Not sure if this is true for the Hall of Fame stuff or not.

Take it away, guys. Although it occurs to me that with your international following, Adrian, baseball and steroids may not be the hot button topic you think it is.

adrian mckinty said...

Ian

No, I really dont care. I care about baseball but the HOF, like Camelot in MPATHG, is a silly place.

adrian mckinty said...

Brian

Well of course you win the moral superiority prize.

adrian mckinty said...

John

Yeah thats my point, such as it is. The fix was in early and the numbers dont work until the first of the integrated players retires in the late 50's. And they expanded the number of games played every year (hence the asterixes etc.) and then we're into the 70's, when many players began taking drugs, so the whole comparative stats thing is meaningless.

Yeah the average life expectancy of a retired line backer is 58 which is horrifying.

adrian mckinty said...

Seana

I couldnt care less if its a hot button issue or not, I only blog about things which are of interest to me, which is why the threat of the Battlestar Galactica post is looming large especially after last week's terrible episode which was a very jump the shark, derail the momentum piece of crap.

adrian mckinty said...

Seana

And to be honest it was almost impossible for me to resist the pun when I thought of it.


My view of the Oscars is similar to Andrew Sullvan's though I havent seen Milk.

Clare said...

Hi Adrian,

I really should just email you directly, rather than leaving these comments that don't fit in with the chat. But I wanted to tell you that my cousin has just married a dubliner. I saw him yesterday and I was telling him about your books, and I mentioned your name. He said "Adrian Mckinty, he's kind of famous"... so, there you go! famous

adrian mckinty said...

Clare

Oh no this is better its good to let everyone know how lucky they are receiving personal correspondance with the "famous" Adrian McKinty.

I think however your friend might have been having you on. I've never even done a book signing never mind a reading in Dublin

John McFetridge said...

So, I started watching the Oscars and Hugh Jackman said Meryl Streep has had 15 nominations in her career so far and with those kind of numbers you just have to think steroids.

seanag said...

Well, we are actually getting personal correspondence from the sort of famous Adrian McKinty. I expect the famous Adrian McKinty will be a whole other matter. Though I don't think you would have to have done a book signing in Dublin to be known or even famous there.

Doesn't Brian win the moral superiority prize with surprising regularity? You guys must have memorized all the same movies.

Maybe it's because I came in late and had a lot else going on today, but I thought the Oscars were even more stultifying than usual. It may just be because I didn't have a huge investment in any of the movies, but it seems like the industry gets more ingrown and self-congratulatory with every passing season. I have to say that I pitied the supporting actors that were up against Heath Ledger. They didn't have a snowball's chance winning over the tragically dead. Which is too bad, because it might actually have done one of them some good. Unlike poor Heath.

I must say that you and John McF are quite persuasive about the stats being thrown off to the point of meaninglessness when it comes to comparison. What I think you could be wrong about is whether the powers that be can sweep any of this stuff back under the rug again. Even if officially it's possible, unofficially it will be otherwise, and I would predict that souring the fan base. From what I've heard, it's not necessarily the steroids per se, but the culture of deceit that's demoralizing.

adrian mckinty said...

John

Meryl's pretty good though aint she?

I was on a plane a few months ago and watched Out of Africa for the first time and was very impressed by her brittle uptight performance whereas Redford was just playing Redford, which I suppose is what they were paying him to do.

It was still confusing to me though because the book has a very different agenda and viewpoint and set of stories.

But anyway back to Meryl, if they're going to make Spielberg an honorary knight they should make Meryl an honorary Dame.

adrian mckinty said...

Seana

I missed the whole thing this year, but I did catch a "highlight" of Hugh's musical number. I thought they stopped doing those things a few years ago. I also saw two stoner kids watching films and goofing on them, I guess it was a reference to a film I didnt see because I recognised the beefier one from something but I dont know where.

Nate Silver predicted all six big categories exactly categories. So he called the World Series, the Election and the Oscars. I'm emailing his blog right now and asking who's going to win the 2010 World Cup.

Brian O'Rourke said...

Hey Seana,

This is the first time I've won the dubiously titled moral superiority prize. I just hope it's not the last. And as Adrian has remarked before me and him are quasi-kin.

Adrian,

That stoner bit was a reference to Pineapple Express. I recommend NOT wasting your time with that one. It's an action/buddy comedy "spoof" that didn't work on any of those levels. Simon Pegg and co. did it perfection in Hot Fuzz.

adrian mckinty said...

Brian

It may be time now that I'm in my 40's to get over my Star Wars obssession.

This is one of the funnier Downfall Parodies .

seanag said...

Oh, don't give up your Star Wars obsession.

Brian, I am misremembering,then. But, really it's a relief. A lawyer who wins a moral superiority prize too often, is probably bound for the kind of internal conflict that leads to breakdown.

That was a nice post you linked us to, by the way. Electricity without wires! But of course I'm thinking of two television shows where the stealing of copper wire is a major plot point, and wondering what the screenwriters will do once metal conductivity proves worthless.

Technically, I should post this on the 'Terraforming Mars' post, but either of you might like this site which is actually taking votes on which 'object' in space the Hubble telescope focuses on next. (If one of them appears to be a massive comet hurtling toward earth, you might want to choose that one.)

Brian O'Rourke said...

Adrian,

"George Lucas raped my childhood."

I just about woke the whole neighborhood up I was laughing so hard. Great link.

Yeah, I'm still obsessed with SW too. Though I am getting better. I no longer try to convince people that The Phantom Menace is a good movie.

Seana,

A lawyer who wins a moral superiority prize too often, is probably bound for the kind of internal conflict that leads to breakdown.

So when will Grisham have his breakdown?

I kid, I kid. Cool website you linked us to.

Brian O'Rourke said...

Oh and one other thing--I was devastated when Google quashed this.

adrian mckinty said...

Seana

The Hubble's great isn't it?

Nice to know too that they're going to fix it.

The thing about a comet coming for the Earth is that we'd need about three years notice before we could even attempt to save ourselves and even then it probably wouldnt work.

adrian mckinty said...

Brian

Grisham's sitting pretty, seems very happy with his lot and his life.

And if there's such a thing as karma how come Bin Laden's been laughing his ass off for the last 8years.

And Cheney's yucking it up too isnt he?

Brian O'Rourke said...

Adrian,

With regard to karma, there's really only two possibilities:

1) there is no such thing
2) the universe/god/what have you is pretty twisted

seanag said...

I missed the whole Hugh Jackman opening, which I was sorry about, since, though song and dance is a throwback, musical theatre is actually his first and probably only true calling.

I have to admit that though I heard about them thinking of abandoning Hubble, I kind of missed a few beats where this issue got resolved. But I'm glad too. It seems to demented to have even thought of giving up on it.

Brian, no, I can't really account for Grisham's seemingly continuing sanity. Maybe it's just that he doesn't actually practice law anymore that accounts for it.

As far as karma goes, I'm more of a Book of Job kind of gal myself. But as a friend of mine once explained it, karma doesn't all get meted out over one lifetime...Talk about your loopholes. A lawyer's construction if ever I heard one.

If I watch anymore of those Downfall parodies, the original movie would be ruined for me forever, and I actually thought it was really good.