Category Archives: Current Events

Gene Chizik does a great job at Little Rock Touchdown Club Part 4

Gene Chizik does a great job at Little Rock Touchdown Club Part 4

Punt Bama Punt

Published on Jun 7, 2012

The infamous 17-16 Auburn win over second-ranked Alabama, commonly known as “Punt Bama Punt”

I got to see Gene Chizik speak at the Little Rock Touchdown Club on Sept 30, 2013 and he did a great job. He probably took this speaking engagement because of his respect for the Broyles Award which he won in Little Rock in 2004. So many winners of that award have gone on to become head coaches and do great things. David Cutcliffe was the 2012 ACC Coach of the year and he won the award in 1998 the year Tennessee won the national title. Gus Malzahn won it when he was at Auburn in 2010 when the Tigers won the national title and now he is the head coach at Auburn. All the details are below about the Broyles Award winners!!!

Broyles Award

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Broyles Award
Broyles.JPG
Awarded for Award given to honor the best assistant coach in college football
Location Little Rock, Arkansas
Country United States
Presented by 1,500 assistant coaches representing all 117 Division One college football programs
First awarded 1996
Currently held by Bob Diaco
Official website http://www.broylesaward.com/

The Broyles Award is an annual award given to honor the best assistant coach in college football. First awarded in 1996, it was named after former University of Arkansas men’s athletic director Frank Broyles.[1] The award is presented in Little Rock, Arkansas at the Downtown Rotary Club.

Award

Every year, 1,500 assistant coaches representing all 117 Division One college football programs vote on their peers in the world of college football, and the five Broyles Award finalists are chosen by the tally of these ballots. Each head coach can nominate one assistant coach from his staff. All nominations are reviewed by a selection committee composed of some of college football’s former head coaches. The five finalists meet in Little Rock, Arkansas, where each is presented with a 1,000 dollar check, as well as a set of golf clubs and personalized golf bag. The winner received 2,500 dollars, a watch, the Broyles Award Jacket custom-made by Tom James, as well as the trophy, valued at around 5,000 dollars.

Trophy

The Broyles Award Trophy, made out of solid bronze, depicts Broyles (kneeling) and longtime University of Arkansas assistant coach Wilson Matthews (standing), watching over a Razorback football game or practice. Matthews was the coach of Little Rock Central High School before joining Broyles on the Razorback’s staff.

Selection committee members

The selection committee for the Frank Broyles Award includes many respected coaches from around the nation. The list of current committee members is as follows:

Winners

Note: The award year indicates the season it was earned.

Year Coach School
1996 Mickey Andrews Florida State
1997 Jim Herrmann Michigan
1998 David Cutcliffe Tennessee
1999 Ralph Friedgen Georgia Tech
2000 Mark Mangino Oklahoma
2001 Randy Shannon Miami (FL)
2002 Norm Chow Southern California
2003 Brian VanGorder Georgia
2004 Gene Chizik Auburn
2005 Greg Davis Texas
2006 Bud Foster Virginia Tech
2007 Jim Heacock Ohio State
2008 Kevin Wilson Oklahoma
2009 Kirby Smart Alabama
2010 Gus Malzahn Auburn
2011 John Chavis LSU
2012 Bob Diaco Notre Dame

Notes and references

  1. Jump up ^ Broyles had no authority over Arkansas women’s athletics. The school had a completely separate women’s athletics department during Broyles’ tenure.

External links

Here are some more facts about the Broyles Award:

In the prestigious history of college football, there are few coaches whose efforts have forever impacted the game. Bear Bryant, Knute Rockne, Frank Leahy and Eddie Robinson have set the standard for victories and championships on the gridiron. However, when it comes to selecting, developing and producing great assistant coaches, the legacy of Frank Broyles stands alone.

Broyles Assistant Coaches who became head coaches have won:

  • 15% of All Super Bowls
  • 5 College National Championships
  • More Than 40 Conference Titles
  • Over 2,000 Victories

Interesting Stats

89 finalists honored, representing 48 universities
(73 actual coaches honored including multi-year finalists)

13 finalist classes include 5 assistants
4 finalist classes include 6 assistants-2000, 2001, 2004, 2005 (ties in voting)

From Broyles Award to Head Coach

30 of 73 Broyles Award finalists and winners through 2012 have gone on to become
head coaches, that’s 40% of all Broyles’ finalists and winners.

20 are still active head coaches

5 of those coaches have won National Head Coach of the Year Honors

4 won conference coach of the year honors in 2012: Will Muschamp-Florida, Charlie Strong-Louisvlle, Gary Anderson-Utah State, David Cutcliffe-Duke

3 finalists were selected as head coaches following the 2012 season: Kliff Kingsbury-Texas
Tech, Bryan Harsin-Arkansas State, Paul Petrino-Idaho

Broyles Award Winners & Finalists currently serving as Head Coaches

1 Gary Patterson TCU (National Head Coach of the Year 2011)
2 Chris Peterson Boise State (National Head Coach of the Year 2006 & 2009)
3 Will Muschamp Florida (SEC Co-Head Coach of the Year 2012)
4 Jimbo Fisher Florida State
5 Charlie Strong Louisville (Big East Head Coach of the Year 2012)
6 Mark Dantonio Michigan State (Head Coach of the Year 2010)
7 Gus Malzahn Auburn
8 Gary Anderson Utah State (WAC Head Coach of the Year 2012)
9 Dana Holgerson West Virginia
10 David Cutcliffe Duke (ACC Head Coach of the Year 2012)
11 Paul Chryst Pittsburgh
12 Dave Christenson Wyoming
13 Kevin Wilson Indiana
14 Jeff Quinn Buffalo
15 Garrick McGee UAB
16 Norm Chow Hawaii
17 Paul Petrino Idaho
18 Jim Svoboda Central Missouri
19 Bryan Harsin Arkansas State
20 Kliff Kingsbury Texas Tech

Other Winners & Finalists who became Head Coaches(Currently Non Active)

21 Gene Chizik Auburn, Iowa St (National Head Coach of the Year 2010)
22 Ralph Friedgen Maryland (ACC Coach of the Year 2010)
23 Mark Mangino Kansas (National Head Coach of the Year 2007)
24 Randy Shannon Miami
25 Chuck Long San Diego State
26 Keith Burns Tulsa
27 Norries Wilson Columbia
28 Stan Parrish Ball State
29 Shane Montgomery Miami of Ohio
30 Carl Torbush North Carolina

Broyles assistant coaches & their head coaching jobs:

  • Joe Gibbs – Washington Redskins
  • Hayden Fry – Iowa, SMU, North Texas
  • Johnny Majors – Pittsburgh, Tennessee
  • Barry Switzer – Oklahoma, Dallas Cowboys
  • Jimmy Johnson – Miami, Dallas Cowboys, Miami Dolphins, Oklahoma St,
  • Jackie Sherrill – Pittsburgh, Texas A&M, Mississippi St, Washington St
  • Raymond Berry – New England Patriots
  • Doug DIckey – Florida, Tennessee
  • Pepper Rogers – UCLA, Georgia Tech, Kansas
  • Hootie Ingram – Clemson
  • Bo Rein – LSU, North Carolina State
  • Jim Mackenzie – Oklahoma
  • Jerry Claiborne – Maryland, Kentucky
  • Jim Carlen – South Carolina, Texas Tech
  • Pat Jones – Oklahoma State
  • Bill Lewis – Georgia Tech, East Carolina, Wyoming
  • Richard Williamson – Tampa Bay, Memphis State
  • Richard Bell – South Carolina
  • Bill Pace – Vanderbilt
  • Charley Coffey – Virginia Tech
  • Harold Horton – Central Arkansas
  • Ken Turner – Henderson State
  • Ken Stephens – Central Arkansas, Lamar
  • Jesse Branch – Southwest Missouri St, Henderson State
  • Fred Akers* – Texas, Purdue, Wyoming
  • Ken Hatfield* – Arkansas, Clemson, Air Force, Rice
  • Houston Nutt* – Mississippi, Arkansas, Boise St, Murray St

* Players under Broyles, not assistants

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Dan Hampton at the Little Rock Touchdown Club Part 4 (Learning a lesson from Hampton’s mistakes)

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Dan Hampton at the Little Rock Touchdown Club Part 1

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My favorite past speakers of the Little Rock Touchdown Club and the 2013 lineup (Part 4)

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My favorite past speakers of the Little Rock Touchdown Club and the 2013 lineup (Part 3) (Vince Dooley did a great job)

I have written about my past visits to the Little Rock Touchdown Club many times and I have been amazed at the quality of the speakers. Frank Broyles was one of my favorites but Phillip Fulmer, Paul Finebaum, Mike Slive, Willie Roaf, Randy White, Howard Schnellenberger, John Robinson, Mark May, Gene Stallings, Bobby Bowden, Lloyd […]

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My favorite past speakers of the Little Rock Touchdown Club and the 2013 lineup (Part 1)

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Gus Malzahn does a great job at Little Rock Touchdown Club (Part 2)

I really enjoyed hearing Gus Malzahn speak at the final Little Rock Touchdown meeting on Nov 19, 2012. He covered several subjects that he covered a few days earlier at a touchdown club in Huntsville. Here are some of his comments from that meeting: But reports that he could be the next coach at Auburn, […]

Figuring out Lorde’s Christian Roots Part 11 (UPDATED)

Figuring out Lorde’s Christian Roots Part 11

UPDATED (David Bruce commented “She didn’t say she was a big Jesus believer. She said she was a big Yeezus believer. Which is a Kanye West album. Which incidentally is a blasphemous, hateful piece of garbage from what I’ve heard of it.” This sets me straight concerning what Lorde said in the video that I saw. She did not say that she was a “big Jesus believer.” )

Lorde – Royals HD LIVE (2013) Los Angeles Echoplex

Published on Aug 9, 2013

Lorde performs Royals in debut live concert at Echoplex in Los Angeles, California on 8/08/2013.

___________________

It is hard to figure out this New Zealand newcomer and her Christian roots but I am going to attempt to in this series of posts. Here is an interview where she describes herself as a “big Jesus believer.

Here is an interview from May that I found interesting.

Lorde: Behind the success story (+audio)

By Charlotte Ryan 8:55 AM Thursday May 2, 2013

Kiwi FM’s Charlotte Ryan writes about New Zealand’s break-out star of the moment, Ella Yelich-O’Connor, aka Lorde

Ella Yelich-O'Connor aka Lorde. Photo / Supplied

Ella Yelich-O’Connor aka Lorde. Photo / Supplied

I felt strangely nervous meeting Ella Yelich-O’Connor. Was I supposed to call her Lorde, her stage name? Or Ella?

Considering the hype Yelich-O’Connor has already received, this North Shore 16-year-old has been something of a mystery.

Like so many others, from the moment I heard Lorde’s single Royals and her The Love Club EP in December, I became addicted to it. I found myself playing tracks from her EP each day to fuel my habit. It also made me want to learn more about her – see who she was.

Initially, there were no videos, no press releases, no photos – just whispers of her attending Takapuna Grammar, being signed to Universal Music at the age of 13, and a drawing of a girl with long brown hair and a snake, an illustration by Sam Yong, founder of the I Love Ugly fashion label. They had been discussing her new website over a coffee and she spied his drawings, which she loved, so asked him to whip something up instead of a traditional press shot.

And the name Lorde – “Lord with an E,” she proudly explains. “I was interested in aristocracy and royalty at the time.”

She considered Duke but it was too masculine (and of course, Prince was taken).

She liked Lord – but decided to add the “e” because it “sounded nice and looked nice”. And she wants to confirm to everyone her stage name is not religious. “Lorde is like a character, something I can switch on and switch off when I’m on stage”

I meet Yelich-O’Connor in the Golden Age studio, run by her co-writer Joel Little, and where she recorded the EP.

She seems right at home in the small space, playing with the heat pump, settling into the couch, staring intently as we talk. She has spent a lot of time in this space writing and recording – 10 to 12-hour days in sometimes 50 to 60-hour weeks.

In the early days of her record label “development”, her management paired her with other local songwriters, none of whom worked out very well.

“It was really uncomfortable,” Yelich-O’Connor says, adding that she felt they didn’t take her seriously because of her age. “People thought because I was 14 they would do all the work.”

She also had to be convinced that music was for her. That didn’t happen until she met Little who, she says, was not an immediately obvious person to write with, considering his background in pop-punk outfit Goodnight Nurse and electropop duo Kids of 88.

But their partnership has proved successful. She likes him because “he doesn’t want to put his huge big signature on the music”. The writing process starts with Yelich-O’Connor coming to him with lyrics written on her laptop. She has very little technical knowledge but he pushes her, which she needs – and loves.

She talks passionately about lyrics and words. They fascinate her; she reads lots of books, she admits this probably comes from her poet mother.

She says signing a record label contract at the age of 13 was very weird. “Its such an alien thing to think about your life and career at that age. I wasn’t even sure if it was music that I wanted to do with my life.”

Universal discovered the artist when her now manager, Scott Maclachlan, also a Devonport resident, saw a video of her performing at a Belmont Intermediate School concert when she was 12.

Maclachlan contacted Yelich-O’Connor and her parents and started talking about her future.

Four years later, the Royals single entered the national charts at No1 in March – and hasn’t moved far from the top spot since. It has now gone platinum.

Royals was written in a week during the school holidays, along with two other songs on her EP. She says she is now is sick of listening to songs from the Love Club EP, though. “When you’re my age, a year ago, you’re a completely different person to the one you are now … so I listen to the EP and think it’s so terrible and I’m so embarrassed about everything that’s on here. It’s that part of me that makes me want to move on and make better stuff.”

She is still recording at Golden Age, but can’t confirm whether it’s an EP or an album she is working towards. She looks coy and excited when talking about her new recordings and it’s her new music that will define her future, and get her past the initial hype.

Talking of which, she laughs and says how crazy it is that the likes of celebrity blogger Perez Hilton have blogged about her, and lists other musicians who have tweeted her or started following her too – including the very hip and cool Grimes.

She has recently been signed to Lava Records (US label and home of Jessie J) and has two sold-out shows in Australia to add to her shows next week in Auckland and Wellington (the Auckland ones sold out in minutes).

Performance and playing live to an audience is a new thing. Even though she studied drama and performances at school and she tells me she is a great public speaker – it wasn’t performance that attracted her to become a musician.

From writing the songs, it has been a process to figure out how to translate her music to a live performance.

She’ll be backed by a live drummer (Ben Barter – Kids in Space and the Wyld) and keyboards (Jimmy Mac – Ruby Frost and the DHDFDS) but Yelich-O’Connor didn’t want to play any musical instrument on stage, so she can focus on her vocals and performance.

“There’s something very classic about a female singing alone,” she says. She credits herself as the worst dancer and says she just goes with the vibe: “Everything comes to life on stage.” She hopes her performance will be an experience for her early fans.

Her future? She lists goals – to play festivals such as Glastonbury, Coachella. She wants to collaborate with artists like James Blake (who she cites as a huge inspiration), Thom Yorke, Burial, Major Lazer and Flume, all left-field acts rather than chart-oriented pop producers.

But right here on the couch, Yelich-O’Connor comes across as very down-to-earth and grounded. And she intends to stay that way, especially with the tight team and family behind her.

“As soon as you think you are cool you start acting crazy. I don’t have a gauge of how big a deal I am. My life is very much the same,” she explains. “It’s just weird when people want to take photos of me at parties.”

WHAT’S WITH THE DOG?

“I was fascinated with aristocracy and royal families – especially their family portraits. The type of photos where they are all sitting straight, looking awkward with their animals around them and a sheaf of wheat or something sitting there strangely representing their farm or whatever.

“I wanted a big dog – so asked the photographer and he had a stylist friend who brought one in. I hope it doesn’t look too awkward …”

Who: Lorde
When and where: Galatos, Auckland, May 9 and 11, Wellington’s Mighty Mighty, May 10 (all sold out)
Listen to: The Love Club EP, out now

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By Everette Hatcher III | Posted in Current Events | Edit | Comments (0)

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Cartoons from Dan Mitchell’s blog that demonstrate what Obama is doing to our economy (A Humorous Look at Obama’s Green-Energy Boondoggle)

I have put up lots of cartoons from Dan Mitchell’s blog before and they have got lots of hits before. Many of them have dealt with the economy, eternal unemployment benefits, socialism,  Greece,  welfare state or on gun control.

Actually, I’m not sure this is humorous. Whether we’re looking at ethanol, Solyndra, or other green-energy scams that promote corruption and undermine the economy, this is not a laughing matter.

After all, we’re the taxpayers and consumers who are pushing this turkey up the hill.

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Cartoons from Dan Mitchell’s blog that demonstrate what Obama is doing to our economy Part 1

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Great cartoon from Dan Mitchell’s blog on government moochers

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Gun Control cartoon hits the internet

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“You-Didn’t-Build-That” comment pictured in cartoons!!!

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Cartoons about Obama’s class warfare

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Cartoons on Obama’s budget math

Dan Mitchell Discussing Dishonest Budget Numbers with John Stossel Uploaded by danmitchellcato on Feb 11, 2012 No description available. ______________ Dan Mitchell of the Cato Institute has shown before how excessive spending at the federal level has increased in recent years. A Humorous Look at Obama’s Screwy Budget Math May 31, 2012 by Dan Mitchell I’ve […]

Funny cartoon from Dan Mitchell’s blog on Greece

Sometimes it is so crazy that you just have to laugh a little. The European Mess, Captured by a Cartoon June 22, 2012 by Dan Mitchell The self-inflicted economic crisis in Europe has generated some good humor, as you can see from these cartoons by Michael Ramirez and Chuck Asay. But for pure laughter, I don’t […]

Obama on creating jobs!!!!(Funny Cartoon)

Another great cartoon on President Obama’s efforts to create jobs!!! A Simple Lesson about Job Creation for Barack Obama December 7, 2011 by Dan Mitchell Even though leftist economists such as Paul Krugman and Larry Summers have admitted that unemployment insurance benefits are a recipe for more joblessness, the White House is arguing that Congress should […]

Get people off of government support and get them in the private market place!!!!(great cartoon too)

Dan Mitchell hits the nail on the head and sometimes it gets so sad that you just have to laugh at it like Conan does. In order to correct this mess we got to get people off of government support and get them in the private market place!!!! Chuck Asay’s New Cartoon Nicely Captures Mentality […]

2 cartoons illustrate the fate of socialism from the Cato Institute

Cato Institute scholar Dan Mitchell is right about Greece and the fate of socialism: Two Pictures that Perfectly Capture the Rise and Fall of the Welfare State July 15, 2011 by Dan Mitchell In my speeches, especially when talking about the fiscal crisis in Europe (or the future fiscal crisis in America), I often warn that […]

Cartoon demonstrates that guns deter criminals

John Stossel report “Myth: Gun Control Reduces Crime Sheriff Tommy Robinson tried what he called “Robinson roulette” from 1980 to 1984 in Central Arkansas where he would put some of his men in some stores in the back room with guns and the number of robberies in stores sank. I got this from Dan Mitchell’s […]

Gun control posters from Dan Mitchell’s blog Part 2

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We got to cut spending and stop raising the debt ceiling!!!

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Gun control posters from Dan Mitchell’s blog Part 1

I have put up lots of cartons and posters from Dan Mitchell’s blog before and they have got lots of hits before. Many of them have dealt with the economy, eternal unemployment benefits, socialism,  Greece,  welfare state or on gun control. On 2-6-13 the Arkansas Times Blogger “Sound Policy” suggested,  “All churches that wish to allow concealed […]

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Gun Free Zones???? Stalin and gun control On 1-31-13 ”Arkie” on the Arkansas Times Blog the following: “Remember that the biggest gun control advocate was Hitler and every other tyrant that every lived.” Except that under Hitler, Germany liberalized its gun control laws. __________ After reading the link  from Wikipedia that Arkie provided then I responded: […]

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On 1-31-13 I posted on the Arkansas Times Blog the following: I like the poster of the lady holding the rifle and next to her are these words: I am compensating for being smaller and weaker than more violent criminals. __________ Then I gave a link to this poster below: On 1-31-13 also I posted […]

Gene Chizik does a great job at Little Rock Touchdown Club Part 3

Gene Chizik does a great job at Little Rock Touchdown Club Part 3

I thought Chizik did a great job at the Little Rock Touchdown Club on Sept 30, 2013. He talked a lot about his faith and this story below shows how much he cares about reaching out to those who need help. One thing he said that greatly interested us hog fans was about the 3 things you need to get a national title. 1. A great QB. 2. Some Luck. 3. Great Team Chemistry.

I had wondered why Tennessee did not get a national title that year that Peyton Manning came back for his senior year or why Florida did not get one the year that Tim Tebow came back for his senior year. They both were great quarterbacks!!! The reason is very simple and that is they did not have the luck that the Vols and Gators had when they did win the national title. Think about Florida against Arkansas in the SEC Championship game in 2006 and they are down in the fourth quarter and the Gators have to punt the ball away to Arkansas but then Reggie Fish of Arkansas fumbles the ball and Florida gets a touchdown that puts them ahead.

In 1998 which was one year after Manning graduated from Tennessee the Vols are 8-0 but down to Arkansas with less than 2 minutes in the game and Arkansas is driving in Tennessee territory. However, Arkansas fumbles and the Vols come back and score the winning touchdown to win 28-24 over my hogs!!!

You got to have all three of these things that Chizik spoke about to get a national title!!!!

Mission trip to Liberia life-altering experience for Auburn players

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gene-chizik-scrimmage.jpgGene Chizik talks to his team after Saturday’s scrimmage (Todd Van Emst, Auburn).

AUBURN, Alabama — The mission was to help others, but Auburn coach Gene Chizik had something more in mind when he decided to take seven veteran players to Liberia over spring break.

Chizik’s goal was to expand their horizons beyond the day-to-day grind of college and football.

“It was very eye-opening,” Chizik said. “The group of young men got a great experience of what life is like outside the United States.”

Based on awed comments from players who returned from Africa last month and dived immediately into spring football, the trip accomplished its purpose.

“It was a great experience. You really can’t put it into words,” said linebacker Daren Bates. “The people there probably saw us as helping them, but they really were helping each and every one of us.

“It was amazing. I never thought I’d be able to go overseas like that to Africa, but it was a blessing to go.”

Bates, receiver Emory Blake, quarterback Clint Moseley, defensive back T’Sharvan Bell, offensive lineman John Sullen and defensive linemen Ken Carter and Dee Ford accompanied Chizik and his wife, Jonna, to the West African country. Auburn team chaplain Chette Williams and his wife, Lakeba, helped organize the trip.

It’s the second time that Chizik and Williams have taken players on a spring mission. Two years ago, they went to the Dominican Republic.

The athletic department did nothing to publicize the trip to Africa. A request for photos to accompany a story was politely turned down. Without player comments on Twitter and other social media, Chizik and his crew might have traveled there in anonymity.

The Auburn group worked on the ground with Samaritan’s Purse, which describes itself as an international Christian relief and evangelism organization that “provides spiritual and physical aid to victims of war, poverty, natural disaster and disease.”

Liberia, which was founded by freed slaves from the United States, is still recovering from a bloody civil war that ended in 2003.

Even so, players found Liberians warm and welcoming.

“It was experiencing the different culture that lives a completely different way than we do,” Chizik said. “The overall mission of the trip was to let them realize and understand that we all have hard times, but there’s a bunch of people out there that have got it much more difficult than we do. And that was made very loud and clear.”

Bates said he’d never been outside the country, but didn’t hesitate when Williams asked him to come on the trip.

“I said yes right on the spot,” Bates said. “I couldn’t pass that up. I had to go.”

He said he was inspired by the people he met.

“Every place we went, it opened our eyes,” Bate said. “From what we have over here in America and going to Africa and see what they struggle with and the pride and the ability they have to get up every morning to go to work to make money or get food for their family, I can’t even put a perspective on it.”

Moseley said he’d scarcely been out of Alabama, so Africa “was a culture shock at first,” but he ended the week with a life-altering experience.

“I can’t really explain it or do it justice. It’s the best trip I’ve ever taken, for sure,” he said. “It really doesn’t register in your mind until you actually see it.”

One girl who described her 2-mile daily trek to get clean water stuck in his mind.

“She was just telling us that, not crying or wanting pity,” Moseley said. “That really made me think about we have it really good over here.”

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Figuring out Lorde’s Christian Roots Part 10 (UPDATED)

Figuring out Lorde’s Christian Roots Part 10

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ZMTV – Lorde Interview (Polly Speaks to Lorde Before The iHeartRadio NZ Launch)

Published on Sep 18, 2013

Polly Gillespie sits down with the gorgeous international star Lorde before her performance at the iHeartRadio NZ Launch

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This interview from the video above also gives a little more insight into Lorde.
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A great article by Mat Viola on the morality discussion in the Alfred Hitchock movie “Rope”

A great article by  Mat Viola on the morality discussion in the Alfred Hitchock movie “Rope”

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Episode VII – The Age of Non Reason

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Dr. Francis Schaeffer – Episode 8 – The Age of Fragmentation

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Francis Schaeffer- How Should We Then Live? -8- The Age of Fragmentation

Joseph Rozak·

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LEmwy_dI2j0

I love the works of Francis Schaeffer and I have been on the internet reading several blogs that talk about Schaeffer’s work and the work below was really helpful. Schaeffer’s film series “How should we then live?  Wikipedia notes, “According to Schaeffer, How Should We Then Live traces Western history from Ancient Rome until the time of writing (1976) along three lines: the philosophic, scientific, and religious.[3] He also makes extensive references to art and architecture as a means of showing how these movements reflected changing patterns of thought through time. Schaeffer’s central premise is: when we base society on the Bible, on the infinite-personal God who is there and has spoken,[4] this provides an absolute by which we can conduct our lives and by which we can judge society.  Here are some posts I have done on this series: Francis Schaeffer’s “How should we then live?” Video and outline of episode 10 “Final Choices” episode 9 “The Age of Personal Peace and Affluence”episode 8 “The Age of Fragmentation”episode 7 “The Age of Non-Reason” episode 6 “The Scientific Age”  episode 5 “The Revolutionary Age” episode 4 “The Reformation” episode 3 “The Renaissance”episode 2 “The Middle Ages,”, and  episode 1 “The Roman Age,” .

MORALITY WITH ROPE

“There are no moral phenomena at all, but only a moral interpretation of phenomena.” – Friedrich Nietzsche, Beyond Good and Evil

“The mere material world suggests to us no concepts of good or evil, because we can discern in it no system of grades of value.” – Alfred North Whitehead

“No known race is so little human as not to suppose a moral order so innately desirable as to have an inevitable existence. It is man’s most fundamental myth.” – Joseph Wood Krutch, The Modern Temper

“I just wanted to illustrate, in an entertaining way, that there is no God and that we’re alone in the universe, and there is nobody out there to punish you. That your morality is strictly up to you. If you’re willing to murder and you can get away with it and you can live with it, that’s fine.” – Woody Allen, on Crimes and Misdemeanors

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Alfred Hitchcock’s Rope stars Farley Granger and John Dall as thinly disguised versions of Leopold and Loeb, the brilliant students and self-described Übermensch who considered themselves exempt from the laws and morals of “ordinary” men, and put their philosophy into action by murdering a young boy for kicks. For them, killing a human being was just another experience, scarcely distinguishable, morally speaking, from any other action – like, say, squashing an ant. In Rope the names have changed to Phillip (Granger) and Brandon (John Dall), but the attitudes are the same. They murder a mutual acquaintance for the thrill of it, arguing that “the few are those men of such intellectual and cultural superiority that they’re above the traditional moral concepts. Good and evil, right and wrong, were invented for the ordinary, average man, the inferior man, because he needs them.”

Not surprisingly, the film doesn’t endorse this view. In the end, Mr. Smith himself, James Stewart, shows up brimming with moral indignation to deliver an impassioned argument against the duo’s dastardly deed, saying, “…we’re each of us a separate human being with the right to live and work and think as individuals, but with an obligation to the society we live in. By what right did you dare decide that that boy in there was inferior and therefore could be killed? Did you think you were God, Brandon? Is that what you thought when you choked the life out of him? I don’t know what you thought or what you are but I know what you’ve done. You’ve murdered! You’ve strangled the life out of a fellow human being who could live and love as you never could…”

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The message is as obvious as is it predictable: murder is wrong! Few would argue with this statement. It seems to be a self-evident truth. But is it? I’m afraid the issue isn’t so black and white. Stewart’s character believes murder is wrong. John Dall’s character believes murder is right. Who’s correct? The problem is that we cannot logically decide between these competing moral claims unless there is an objective standard of morality to which we can repair for adjudication. Only such a standard would provide us the means to resolve disputes between people whose notions of right and wrong differ. The question is, though, does such a standard of morality actually exist?

First, a few definitions are in order:

Subjective:

  • 1) Based on or influenced by personal feelings, tastes, or opinions.
  • 2) Existing in the mind; belonging to the thinking subject rather than to the object of thought.
  • 3) Proceeding from or taking place in a person’s mind rather than the external world.

My favorite color is green. That is a subjective sentiment. That green is my favorite color need not imply that green is or should be everybody’s favorite color. It is not the “right” color, in any objective sense. Nature has not, after all, indicated a color preference.

Objective:

  • 1) Not influenced by personal feelings or opinions in considering and representing facts.
  • 2) Not dependent on the mind for existence; actual.
  • 3) Anything which actually exists, as distinguished from something thought or felt to exist.

2+2=4. That is an objective fact. Take two objects from here, two objects from there, put them together, and you have four objects. There’s no room for individual interpretation or preference. It is not right for some and wrong for others. There is only one valid answer. 2+2= 5 may be identified as an error, notwithstanding the ramblings of Dostoyevsky’s Underground Man, because math is not a subjective matter.

Morality

  • 1) Principles concerning the distinction between right and wrong or good and bad behavior.
  • 2) Of or concerned with the judgment of the goodness or badness of human action and character.

Murder is wrong. That is a moral claim. To which category do moral claims belong: subjective or objective? Is asserting that “murder is wrong” an objective fact like “2+2=4″, or is it a subjective sentiment like “my favorite color is green”? Is there an objective standard of morality to which we can refer to settle the matter? Or do questions of right and wrong, good and bad, fall into the subjective realm, amounting to nothing more than personal preference? I would argue that, whether we like it or not, moral claims belong squarely in the latter category.

The laws of math and logic are universally applicable. There’s no denying them. 2+2=4 is necessarily true. Furthermore, 2+2=4 was so even before the advent of humans. Let’s say a prehistoric squirrel gathers 2 nuts from under one tree, two nuts from under another tree, and then takes them all back to his nest. How many nuts does this squirrel have? He has 4, obviously. Is it any less true just because a human isn’t around to compute it? Did humans magically make 2+2=4 simply by thinking it? I don’t think so, and that’s because the laws of mathematics inhere in reality. Humans discovered mathematical laws; they didn’t invent them.

Morality doesn’t work that way. A moral claim like murder is wrong is not necessarily true. Right and wrong, good or bad, do not exist in nature. They are merely human constructs that help us get along, very much like the rules of courtesy. The universe, I’m afraid, is perfectly indifferent to morality. Whether one chooses to observe a moral rule like murder is wrong or stealing is bad is an entirely subjective matter, no more obligatory than, say, the rule instructing us not to split infinitives. Let’s say a bigger squirrel comes along and steals the smaller squirrel’s nuts. Has the bigger squirrel acted immorally? Was he “wrong” to steal the nuts? Obviously not, and that’s because the rules of morality do notinhere in reality. Humans didn’t discover moral rules; they invented them.

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Allow me to return to Rope for a moment. I’ve never been a fan of the film. Its gimmicky one-set, long-take approach is hardly conducive to Hitchcock’s strengths as a director. Hitchcock himself acknowledged this, pretty much dismissing the film as a stunt: “When I look back, I realize that it was quite nonsensical because I was breaking with my own theories on the importance of cutting and montage for the visual narration of a story…no doubt about it, films must be cut”.

Also problematic are the stilted performances, particularly Granger’s awful turn as Phillip the Boobermensch. Just about everything he does or says is a howler. Perhaps my favorite bit is when he frantically calls out to “Brandon! Brandon!” when he sees the rope hanging out of the chest which contains the body. Brandon tells him to pull it out, and Phillip whines “I can’t”, as if he were totally incapable of functioning on his own. Later, when Stewart picks up the rope, Phillip hysterically whimpers, “He’s got it! He’s got it! He knows, he knows, he knows…” I mean, jeez, couldn’t Brandon find someone better than this guy with whom to carry out the “perfect crime”?

Thematically, the film offers a conventional, noncontroversial and comforting take on morality. During Stewart’s concluding diatribe on the immorality of murder, Brandon, himself now reduced to the level of Boobermensch, mutely stands around (as only characters in films based on plays are wont to do) allowing Stewart to prattle on without offering a counterargument, as if he’s been stunned speechless by the persuasive power of Stewart’s devastating argument. (For a vastly more insightful, unsettling, and intellectually challenging exploration of the “morality of murder” see Woody Allen’s masterful Crimes and Misdemeanors).

After watching Rope I happened to notice that the Self-Styled Siren, a popular classic movie bloggerette, had posted a tribute to the late Farley Granger, which consisted mostly of a defense of the “severely underrated Rope“. Her many followers quickly chimed in with their usual assent. All very boring, frankly. No one bothered to mention anything about the heady philosophical issues at the film’s core. I mean, what an opportunity to discuss Nietzsche, morality, murder, nihilism etc.! I felt the conversation could use some livening up, and so I posted the following:

“There’s nothing wrong, objectively speaking, with snuffing out a human life, notwithstanding all of Stewart’s histrionic protestations to the contrary.”

I had to chuckle at the Siren’s response:

“Mat, I would address your objections to Rope, but the last line of your first comment has, frankly, scared me to death.”

Apparently, for the Siren, a proposition qualifies as worthy of dispute only if it preserves her cozy feelings of security and well-being. (Not that there’s anything morally wrong with that, of course). This is a woman who could tell you everything you never wanted to know about old Hollywood stars – like, say, all the juicy details of the secret love affair between Jeanette Macdonald and Nelson Eddy – but when the discussion turns to a genuinely challenging subject, particularly one that frightens her, she’ll go all mum on you. (One suspects that a CAT scan of the Siren’s brain would reveal that the region controlling appreciation for classic Hollywood movies, technically known as the hippoclassic cinebellum, is grossly overdeveloped).

But I digress. Saying “there’s nothing wrong, objectively speaking, with snuffing out a human life” is, of course, not the same as saying, “there’s nothing wrong, subjectively speaking, with snuffing out a human life.” The operative phrase here is “objectively speaking”. I don’t personally condone murder. I don’t personally like murder. I’m happy to see this prejudice of mine codified as the law of the land. I cannot provide a reason, however, why murder is objectively wrong. But there’s no shortage of folks who try to provide such a reason. I’ll now examine some of the more common arguments, and explain why I find them wanting:

The Self-Evident Argument

People often respond to the suggestion that there’s nothing objectively wrong with murder with simple incredulity. For them, apparently, the proposition that murder is wrong is self-evidently true. They might respond by saying things like, “if you don’t know why murder is wrong I really don’t know what to say to you.”

Of course, this is in fact no argument at all. Here’s one thing they might say: “murder is objectively wrong because…” If one doesn’t need a reason to justify his belief that murder is morally wrong, then neither does a murderer need a reason to justify his belief that murder is morally right. After all, murderers have their own “self-evident truths.” We’re no closer to resolving the dispute with which we started. If one person says “murder is wrong” and another says “murder is right”, how do we logically decide between these competing moral claims in the absence of an objective standard to which we can refer to settle the matter? “Because I strongly feel that murder is wrong” does not, I’m afraid, constitute an objective standard.

The Golden Rule – Do unto others as you would have them do unto you.

Why should anyone necessarily adopt this rule? A sadistic murderer, for example, derives pleasure from inflicting pain on others. He values his own pleasure above everything else. He considers his own pleasure to be the greatest good, and if morality is purely subjective as I am arguing, then maximizing his pleasure, which would entail torturing his victim to death, is, for him, the right thing to do. Why then should he not adopt the rule that torturing people to death is good? Why should he care about the victim? What obligates him to care for her?

Most of us find the behavior of a sadistic murderer nauseating. That is true. But unless an objective source of human worth and moral obligation exists, we have no logical grounds to say that his sadistic behavior is morally wrong. In fact, in the absence of an objective standard of morality we have to forfeit altogether our cherished notions of morally right or wrong behavior. Good and bad, right and wrong, become vacant categories. Assertions like “murder is wrong” mean nothing more than “I don’t like murder.”

Survival of the species

All animal species possess characteristics which have historically contributed to the perpetuation of their species. Humans are no different. Some attempt to infer a moral imperative from this fact. The argument goes something like this: that which preserves life, such as empathy, is good, and that which destroys life, such as murder, is bad. There are several problems with this position:

First, it commits the fallacy of trying to derive an “ought” from an “is”. That certain behaviors tend to preserve life is a fact. That we ought to behave in ways that tend to preserve life is not. The first is a truth-statement, the second a value-statement, and never the twain shall meet. You simply cannot logically derive a value from a fact.

Second, it begs the question: why is life/survival good? Millions of species have already gone extinct. Why should anyone necessarily care if the human species goes the way of the dinosaur? Why is human life any more valuable than any other animal species?

Third, it commits the naturalistic fallacy. Allow me to quote G.E. Moore:

“The survival of the fittest does not mean, as one might suppose, the survival of what is fittest to fulfill a good purpose – best adapted to a good end: at the last, it means merely the survival of the fittest to survive: and the value of the scientific theory just consists in showing what are the causes which produce certain biological effects. Whether these effects are good or bad, it cannot pretend to judge.”

Just because something is “natural” doesn’t make it “good” (or “bad”, for that matter). Often that which preserves life also destroys life. Aggression, no less than empathy, is a characteristic which has facilitated human survival. Vanquishing entire tribes of people has generally been successful throughout human prehistory and recorded history. Just ask the descendants of the North American Indian – if you can find any. The point is that one has to be awfully selective when attempting to base his morality on what evolution has wrought. After all, the “better angels of our nature” evolved right alongside the “fallen” ones.

God

There’s no way around it: the implications of atheism lead inevitably to moral nihilism.  I do think that God, were he to exist, would qualify as an objective source of moral values (though even this is debatable), since, being omniscient, he would presumably know infallibly what is good and what is bad. But first his existence would need to be demonstrated. Good luck.

rope1.bmp

So let’s take this full circle back to Rope. Here’s the full text of Stewart’s concluding monologue:

“You’ve given my words a meaning I’ve never dreamed of. And you’ve tried to twist them into a cold, logical excuse for your ugly murder. Well, they never were that, Brandon. You can’t make them that. There must have been something deep inside of you from the very start that let you do this thing. But there’s always been something deep inside me that would never let me do it. Tonight you’ve made me ashamed of every concept I ever had of superior or inferior beings. And I thank you for that shame. Because now I know that we’re each of us a separate human being, Brandon, with the right to live and work and think as individuals, but with an obligation to the society we live in. By what right do you dare say that there’s a superior few to which you belong? By what right did you dare decide that that boy in there was inferior and therefore could be killed? Did you think you were God, Brandon? Is that what you thought when you choked the life out of him? Is that what you thought when you served food from his grave? Well, I don’t know what you thought or what you are but I know what you’ve done. You’ve murdered! You’ve strangled the life out of a fellow human being who could live and love as you never could…”

Stewart, playing Rupert Cadell, delivers this entire monologue uninterrupted. Brandon and Phillip, the two supposed Übermensch, just stand around like dimwits as Stewart rants. I thought it might be fun to imagine what Brandonmight have said and done, were he not such a Boobermensch, in response to Stewart’s diatribe. The following, then, is my re-write of this scene:

Rupert Cadell
You’ve given my words a meaning I’ve never dreamed of. And you’ve tried to twist them into a cold, logical excuse for your ugly murder.

Brandon
Hey, Mr. Smith, we’re not in Washington anymore. No filibustering here. If you think I’ll allow you to go off on a rant against me unchallenged you’re gravely mistaken. First of all, I don’t need an excuse to commit murder. I did it for the same reason I do anything: I wanted to. I felt like doing it and I did it. Secondly, it wasn’t ugly. Au contraire:  it was a thing of beauty. You haven’t lived until you’ve strangled the life out of someone, my friend. It’s a fucking rush. You oughta try it some time.

The bluntness with which Brandon discusses the murder flusters Rupert. Trying to regain his composure he faces Brandon with all the courage he can muster and, with righteous indignation, says:

jimmystewart1.jpg

Rupert
The name’s not Mr. Smith! It’s Rupert Cadell!

Brandon
I stand corrected. Is that it? Are you done? Is that all you have to say?

Rupert
No, that’s not all I have to say! I have much more to say! Much more! And by the time I’m finished saying it…

Brandon slaps Rupert on the cheek.

Brandon
Well, say it, man! Say it!

Rupert
There must have been something deep inside of you from the very start that let you do this thing. But there’s always been something deep inside of me that would never let me do it.

Brandon slaps Rupert on the other cheek for good measure.

Brandon
Ok, so we’ve established that we both have something deep inside of us. That’s a sure sign that what we’re discussing here is a purely subjective matter. The something deep inside of me says that murder is good. The something deep inside of you says that murder is bad. Without an objective standard of morality, this just means that I like murder, and you don’t. So what? I like chocolate. You don’t. What’s your point?

Rupert (whimpering)
Please stop slapping me. It hurts.

Brandon
Ok, sorry, I’ll stop slapping you.

Rupert (relieved)
Thank you.

Brandon delivers a punishing right hook to the side of Rupert’s head. Rupert crumples to the floor.

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Brandon
Does that feel any better? I repeat: what’s your goddamn point?

Rupert struggles back to his feet.

Rupert
Ok, ok. We’re each of us a separate human being, Brandon, with the right to live and work and think as individuals, but with an obligation to the society we live in.

Brandon delivers a crushing haymaker straight to Rupert’s nose. Rupert cries out in agony, blood spraying like a geyser from his broken nose.

Brandon
Sorry, Roopy, but the impulse to stay alive is not a “right.” “Rights” don’t exist in nature. “Human rights” is a purely man-made concept which has no basis in reality. If you want to pretend you have a “right” to live go right ahead, but don’t expect me to. That boy in there had no more inherent right to live than anyone or anything else does. I didn’t violate his “right” to live because he didn’t have one.

Rupert (struggling to get up on one knee)
By what right do you dare…?

Before Rupert can finish the question, Brandon wallops him with a devastating uppercut to the chin, knocking Rupert flat on his back. Barely conscious now, Rupert moans in abject pain, his head spinning.

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Brandon
Let me cut you off right there. I just got done saying that rights are purely fictitious. And then you start your next sentence with, “By what right…”? Have you not been listening? Quit sticking so slavishly to the crummy script, you fool. It doesn’t apply anymore. Are you incapable of improvising?

Brandon takes his pistol out of his pocket and kneels down to show it to Rupert.

Brandon
See this? The script says I’m supposed to hand it over to you like some fucking moron. But that ain’t gonna happen. See, that’s the difference between you and me, Roopy. You mindlessly obey whatever authority tells you. I don’t. The screenwriter wants you to be a mouthpiece for “society” and so you play along like some unthinking automaton emitting preprogrammed drivel. Well, this is my script now, and so you’d better come up with something a little more persuasive. You want the gun? Here, have it.

Brandon slams the butt of the gun down hard on Rupert’s skull, finally knocking him into merciful unconsciousness.

vertigo21.jpg

Brandon looks over at Phillip, who has been silently watching the whole time from his piano.

Brandon
Well, what have you got to say for yourself?

Phillip
You frighten me. You always have. From the very first day in prep school.

Brandon
Oh, Jesus. Can’t you say anything that isn’t in the script either?

Phillip
That’s a lie. There isn’t a word of truth in the whole story. I never strangled a chicken in my life. I never strangled a chicken and you know it!”

Brandon conks Phillip over the head with the gun, knocking him out as well, and drags him over next to Rupert. Brandon tosses a glass of water in Rupert’s face to wake him up, and then sits back in a reclining chair and lights up his pipe and waits for Rupert to regain consciousness. Rupert starts to stir, then sits up, rubbing his beleaguered head.

Phillip mumbles something. Rupert leans closer to get a better listen.

Brandon
What’s he saying now?

Rupert
I think he said, “He’s got it. He’s got it. He knows, he knows, he knows…”

Brandon
Yeah, that’s what I thought. He’s just mumbling some more gibberish from the script. Remember? That’s what he said when you took the rope out of your pocket.

Rupert
Oh yeah, that’s right.

Brandon
Guess who has the rope now?

Brandon produces the rope from his pocket and shows Rupert.

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Brandon (puffing on his pipe like a gentleman of leisure)
But let’s get back to our little discussion, shall we? I believe you were saying that we have an obligation to the society we live in or some such nonsense.

Rupert
That’s right, we do.

Brandon
Still sticking to the script, eh? I was hoping I had knocked some sense into you, but no, you’re still shackled to the illogical ideas of your creators, I see. Look, Roopy, nothing at all obligates me to care for society. I have a moral obligation tomyself and myself alone. What is good for me is the only good I recognize. Why should I care about society? Why should I be morally obligated to anybody or anything else but myself?

Rupert
Did you think you were God, Brandon? Is that what you thought when you choked the life out of him? Is that what you thought when you served food from his grave?

Brandon
Actually, I thought the burgers were a little dry myself. How was yours?

Rupert
Mine was nice and juicy. Very delici… Gosh darn it, you murdered that boy over there and you’re talking about hamburgers? What kind of monster are you? Answer the question: did you think you were God when you chocked the life out of that boy?

Brandon looks at the morally indignant Rupert with amusement and takes a long drag on his pipe.

Brandon
Getting a little demanding for a guy with his face bashed in, aren’t we, Roopy? To answer your question, no, I didn’t think I was God. I can’t very well think of myself as something I don’t believe in, now can I? I’ll leave the murdering in the name of God to your precious “society”.

Rupert
Well, I don’t know what you thought or what you are but I know what you’ve done. You’ve murdered! You’ve strangled the life out of a fellow human being who could live and love as you never could…”

Brandon
Look, Roopy, that boy over there was just a random collection of atoms with no more objective worth or value than any other piece of matter. You think his life had value. I don’t. I simply considered him unworthy of living and took the necessary steps to snuff him out of existence. You can bellow till you’re blue in the face that what I did was wrong, but you can’t objectively prove that it was.

Rupert
You’re insane, Brandon!

Brandon
Tut-tut, tut-tut. My, aren’t we rude for interrupting. You really oughta work on your manners, Roopy. Please, let me finish. You say I could never live and love as he could, and you’re right. I choose to live and love differently. I live to kill and I love to kill. His way of living and loving was not objectively any better than mine. And besides, now that that inanimate hunk of meat over there is objectively dead, I’m sure you’ll agree that he certainly cannot live and love as I can.

Rupert
You’re insane, Brandon! Insane and crazy and sick and twisted and cruel and demented and perverse and warped and abnormal and inhuman and loathsome and vicious and mean and perverted and nasty and brutal and pitiless and malicious and cruel…

Brandon
You already said cruel.

Rupert
…and unwholesome and ruthless and heartless and merciless and cold-blooded and hateful and despicable and disgusting and repugnant and detestable and abhorrent and noxious and sadistic and malevolent and evil and odious and contemptible and iniquitous…

Brandon
Oooh, iniquitous. Good one!

Rupert
… and repulsive and sickening and ghastly and nauseating and revolting and foul and abominable and wicked and monstrous and repellent and depraved…

Finally, Rupert starts hyperventilating from the strain of emitting so many consecutive insults.

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Brandon chuckles and gets up from his recliner and walks over to Rupert. He takes a long drag on his pipe and blows the smoke directly in Rupert’s face.

Brandon
Ok, let’s see. By my count, that’s 47 insults you’ve hurled in my direction in lieu of an argument. Ad hominem attacks are very unbecoming of you, Roopy. Notwithstanding your invective, the question remains: how was it objectivelywrong to snuff out that boy’s life?

Phillip starts mumbling.

Phillip
I never strangled a chicken in my life…

Brandon tosses water in Phillip’s face.

Phillip fully regains consciousness and looks up at Brandon.

Phillip
I’ve been praying I’d wake up and find out we hadn’t done it yet. I’m scared to death, Brandon. I think we’re going to get caught.

Brandon
Go on, Phillip, utter one more line from that script. Go on, I dare you.

Phillip
Have you ever bothered for just one minute to understand how someone else might feel?

Brandon
I wonder how this feels.

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Brandon puts the rope around Phillip’s neck and tugs hard. Phillip gasps for breath, his eyes bulging out of their sockets.

Rupert
Please, Brandon, stop!

Brandon releases his grip on the rope, allowing Phillip to catch his breath.

Brandon (to Phillip)
Not another word from that script. Got it?

Phillip
What the devil are you doing?

Brandon retightens the rope around Phillip’s neck. Then he hands the rope to Rupert and points his gun at him.

Brandon (to Rupert)
I’ll give you one chance to save yourself. Finish off this Boobermensch and I’ll let you live. What was it you said earlier this evening? That you’d like to have a “Strangulation Day”? Well, today is that day, Rupert.

Rupert
I was only joking, for Christ’s sake!

Brandon cocks the gun.

Brandon
Whose life do you value more, Rupert? Yours or his? Do it and you walk out of here alive. Don’t do it and you’ll end up in that chest with the other dead meat.

Rupert
No! I can’t! I won’t!

Brandon
He’s going to die whether you do it or not. If you don’t do it you’re going to die too. At least save yourself, Rupert.

Rupert
May God forgive me.

Brandon
Wait! Before you do it, let’s see if Phillip has any last words.

Phillip
I had a rotten evening.

Brandon
Yep, quoting from the script to the last. Unbelievable! Do it!

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Rupert yanks hard on the rope, choking the life out of Phillip the Boobermensch. Rupert lets the rope slip from his fingers and Phillip’s lifeless body slumps to the floor. Brandon drags the corpse over to the chest and tosses Phillip into it with the other body. He then walks back over to Rupert and puts his arm around him.

Brandon
Well, how was it? How did it feel?

Rupert
I take back everything I said, Brandon. That was incredible! You’re so right, you haven’t lived until you’ve choked the life out of someone. What a fucking rush that was!

Brandon pats Rupert on the shoulder and then walks over to the phone and dials.

Brandon
Hi Mrs. Cadell, this is Brandon Shaw speaking. I’m doing well, and you? So nice to talk to you. Listen, Rupert and I have been doing a lot of catching up, and it’s getting late and so I’ve invited him to stay for the night. I hope you don’t mind. Good! And since he’s still going to be here in the morning, I would be honored if you’d join us for breakfast. Great! Say, around 8:00? I look forward to seeing you, Mrs. Cadell.

Brandon hangs up.

Brandon
Charming lady, Roopy. I hope the eggs will be better than the burgers.

Rupert
What the devil are you up to?

mcauley-vertigo-splsh1.jpg

Brandon
Well, Roopy, yesterday was “Strangulation Day”, today is “Bullet in the Head Day”.

Brandon fires a bullet into Rupert’s head, and tosses him into the chest with the other two bodies.

Then Brandon breaks the fourth wall and addresses the audience directly.

Brandon
Ladies and gentlemen, if my actions this evening have repelled you, so be it. I can’t change the way you feel. But if you think that what I’ve done is morally wrong, I would simply remind you that that’s merely your opinion. In my opinion what I have done is right. It was fun, it was exciting, and it felt oh-so-good. Your opinion is no more valid than mine. It’s just different. Your values are no better than mine. They’re just different. After all, since no objective standard of morality exists, all you’re really saying is that you don’t like murder, and all I’m really saying is that I like murder. You may think that your moral outrage toward me amounts to something more than your own paltry knot of predilections. It does not. You may think that there is a higher standard to which I may be held. There is not. Morality, as you understand it, is a myth, a fantasy, a fairy-tale. Objectively speaking, murder is neither good nor bad, neither right nor wrong. It simply is. The universe is completely indifferent to morality. Nature is utterly amoral. Nothing is wrong. Nothing is right. Nothing is bad. Nothing is good. It is simply not possible to do something morally wrong. It is only possible to call something “wrong”. But no matter how passionately you shout, it doesn’t make it so. My actions this evening were no different, morally speaking, from that of a cat torturing a mouse. I am no more morally obligated to refrain from torture than is a cat. Moreover, humans have no more intrinsic value or worth than a mouse has. The value you assign to yourself and others is purely subjective and completely arbitrary. You may feel that you and others have value and worth, but do not forget for a moment that I feel that you and others don’t. Don’t delude yourself: your feelings are no more authoritative than mine. They’re just different. Whyshould I feel that you have value and worth? After all, you’re nothing more than a chance arrangement of particles with no more inherent value or worth than any other chance arrangement of particles. If this upsets you, it is because you have an innate, deep-rooted dread of nihilism, of the almost certain possibility that you are nothing more than a product of the blind whim of nature, that your most cherished concerns are mere brute stupidities deposited in you by the mindless, amoral process of evolution, that ultimately nothing has value, nothing has meaning and nothing matters, that all your effort is futile and absurd, and that just around the bend complete and utter annihilation and oblivion await you.

Good evening.

Posted on April 26th, 2011 by Mat Viola
Filed under: Miscellaneous

Gene Chizik does a great job at Little Rock Touchdown Club Part 2

Gene Chizik does a great job at Little Rock Touchdown Club Part 2

Gene Chizik spoke at the Little Rock Touchdown Club on Sept 30, 2013 and he did a great job. He talked about his faith and how he was delivered from bitterness after he got fired at Auburn and he still makes his home in Auburn today. He talked about how to have a national championship team and he pointed out that a great quarterback is a must. He pointed out that Denver was 8-8 before they got Peyton Manning and now they are 17-4 in the last 21 games.

Here is an article that talks about Chizik’s faith:

AMAZING STORY

Gene Chizik: All In

By Shawn Brown
The 700 Club

CBN.com Auburn University head coach Gene Chizik led his Tigers to a 14-0 record last season, winning 2011 BCS National Championship. His quarterback Cam Newton, won the Heisman Trophy bringing it back to Auburn for the first time since 1985.

Shawn: How sweet is it that you’re a BCS Champion? Has it sunk in yet?

Gene: You know, I don’t know that it has. I don’t know that, that it truly sinks in fully maybe till you are done, with your career and maybe look back on it.

Gene Chizik had been an assistant coach for over 13 years. He made two more stops as an assistant, one at Auburn University and another at the University of Texas, two college football powerhouses.

Then in 2008, coach Chizik was offered his first head coaching job at Iowa State University.  Many critics questioned why a coach with his credentials would accept to go to a school that didn’t have a winning football tradition.

Shawn: What was the expectation?

Gene: The expectation that I had for us going there was for us to build a championship football team.

But in two seasons, a frustrated Coach Chizik had only lead his team to a 5-19 record.

Shawn: How did your faith help you get through that?

Gene: Oh, it was, that was the only way that we got through that. Because again, you get selfish and you get a little bit spoiled with winning. And so when you don’t, uh, you know, in my perfect weakness, that’s when he shows his perfect strength.

The next season, Coach Chizik was offered the head coaching job at Auburn. In the 2009 season Coach Chizik led the Tigers to an 8-5 record. But next season, he heard of a junior quarterback at Binn College that could help “turn the tide” in the sec. His name was Cam Newton.

Gene: The first day we’re allowed to go out and recruit, I got straight to his home. We basically lay down what we think we can provide for Cameron, and we’re getting ready to leave, and before we get ready to leave he says, ‘you know what coach, before we all leave right here, how about if we get a prayer.’ And we all stood around in a circle and he said a prayer. He said, ‘I want to pray over this before you guys leave.’ And that struck me because in my twenty plus years of doing this recruiting stuff, that’s never happened.

The rest is history. Coach Gene Chizik and the Auburn Tigers became the 2010 National Champions. Chizik is in his 3rd season with Auburn and though Cam Newton is in the NFL now, it is still business as usual. He recently released a book entitled, All In, where he shares his story and hopes to inspire readers to overcome their own struggles, just like his 5-19 record.

Gene: Everybody has their own version of 5-19, everybody in their life. And that can be a loss of a job, it might be your 5-19. The loss of a loved one could be your 5-19. God is bigger than 5-19, so don’t ever doubt that, because you can get through it.

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Lorde In-Studio w/ Kennedy

Published on Aug 20, 2013

Lorde sits down with ALT 98.7’s Kennedy to talk about new music, being signed at such a young age, and more!

______________________

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To me this song below sums up Keith Green’s life best. 2nd Chapter of Acts – Make My Life A Prayer to You Make my life a prayer to You I want to do what You want me to No empty words and no white lies No token prayers, no compromise I want to shine […]

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Keith Green – Easter Song (live) Uploaded by monum on May 25, 2008 Keith Green performing “Easter Song” live from The Daisy Club — LA (1982) ____________________________ Keith Green was a great song writer and performer.  Here is his story below: The Lord had taken Keith from concerts of 20 or less — to stadiums […]

By Everette Hatcher III | Posted in Current Events | Edit | Comments (0)

“Music Monday” Coldplay the documentary with pictures and videos (Part 1)

Coldplay Max Masters – Part 1 of 7 Uploaded on May 6, 2009 The ASTRA Award winning music documentary – Max Masters Coldplay – was voted MOST OUTSTANDING MUSIC PROGRAM for 2009. Sarah Linton Productions and The Post Box produced the Max Masters documentary to coincide with the album release of ‘Viva la Vida’. __________ […]

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The Killers – Human The Killers – Read My Mind The Killers – All These Things That I’ve Done The Killers – Spaceman I have really enjoyed the music of The Killers band. The Killers From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia Jump to: navigation, search Not to be confused with The Kills. For other uses, see […]

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Visit http://www.skillet.com for more information. Skillet – Hero (Video) Uploaded on Jun 28, 2010 © 2009 WMG no description available ____________ Great band from Memphis and I heard about them in the 1990′s but until today I had not looked into what they were doing. Here is an earlier post I did on them linked […]

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Skillet – Monster (Video) Uploaded on Oct 2, 2009 © 2009 WMG Monster (Video) A good friend of our family told us back in the 1990′s that her cousin was part of a new group called Skillet and we had no idea that the group would grow into such a big national hit. The song […]

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Keith Green – Easter Song (live) Uploaded by monum on May 25, 2008 Keith Green performing “Easter Song” live from The Daisy Club — LA (1982) ____________________________ Keith Green was a great song writer and performer.  Here is his story below: The Lord had taken Keith from concerts of 20 or less — to stadiums […]

By Everette Hatcher III | Posted in Current Events | Edit | Comments (0)

The lastest video interviews with Lorde

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Lorde Talks Pop Music Influences In AMP Radio Interview

Published on Oct 4, 2013

Ella Yelich-O’Connor a.k.a Lorde visted AMP Radio in Los Angeles recently and discussed her debut LP, “Pure Heroine” and pop music influences.

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Lorde’s interview with Z100 on the Elvis Duran Morning Show

Published on Sep 30, 2013

Lorde’s interview on the Elvis Duran Morning Show (Z100 New York) 30/09/13

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Lorde on Miley Cyrus Death Threats & Obsessing Over Royals

Published on Oct 4, 2013

Lorde talks with Alexa Chung about getting death threats from Miley Cyrus fans, being obsessed with royalty, and just trying to not go crazy.

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WORLD PREMIERE! Lorde. Know her. Love her. Exclusive interview. (HD)

Published on Sep 23, 2013

Thanks for watching. Subscribe to my channel. Like?! Thank you!

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Lorde: Interview

Lorde performing “Buzzcut Season” live on BBC Radio 1

Published on Sep 28, 2013

Lorde performing “Buzzcut Season” from her debut album “Pure Heroine” in her live session with Huw Stevens on BBC Radio 1

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Oct 4, 2013 1:42pm
GTY lorde jef 131004 16x9 608 Lorde: 5 Things About Chart Topping Singer

(Photo Credit: Rob Kim/Getty Images)

Lorde has the hottest song in the country with her alternative ballad “Royals,” but who is this super-talented singer with sultry sounds the likes of an Amy Winehouse or Fiona Apple? Where did this young, yet soulful 16-year-old come from and why are we just now hearing about her?  Read the five things you absolutely need to know about this amazing singer. And check out the bonus item that makes Lorde that much more likable:

      1. How else would you start, but by saying she’s a chart topper. Her song “Royals” just hit No. 1 on the Billboard Hot 100 list. Who is Lorde ahead of on the list? Only Katy Perry’s “Roar” and Miley Cyrus’s “Wrecking Ball.” Lorde also topped the magazine’s Alternative Chart, the first woman to do so in 17 years.
      2. She’s only 16!  She was born in 1996! Lorde’s topping of the Billboard Hot 100 this week makes her the youngest at No. 1 in 26 years since Tiffany’s “I think We’re Alone Now” in 1987. Lorde was signed to Universal at the age of just 13. She isn’t shy about the fact that no matter how big she gets, she’s still a teenager,  tweeting last month, “c’mon acne don’t do this now.”
      3. Lorde, born Ella Yelich-O’Connor, is from Auckland, New Zealand. Her father Vic O’Conner is a civil engineer and her mother Sonja Yelich is a poet. She was raised in the suburbs with three brothers and sisters.
      4. She likes music of all kinds. She tweeted her “favourite” video on the Internet is Nicki Minaj and said she loved the Miley Cyrus interview in Rolling Stone. She added, “new miley is SO on point with verse and pre-chorus melodies.” She also likes King Krule, and tweets about Drake and Britney Spears. Talk about eclectic. P.S. Brit’s sister Jamie Lynn Spears is a fan, who discovered her music back in June.
      5. Lorde’s funny and deep at the same time. When her debut album “Pure Heroine” dropped Sept. 27, she posted on Facebook, “I couldn’t be more proud of this thing we made, in joel’s little studio in morningside, eating the same things for lunch every day, catching the same train home, waiting for things to happen. and now they are.” But, on Twitter, she joked about hate tweets saying, “#1 on US itunes. even if it lasts an hour i feel HAPPY. downside is all these miley fans telling me they’re gonna stab my rotting corpse.” Well-played Lorde. FYI, Miley Cyrus wrote her back saying, “your music is awesome.”

Bonus: She retweets Amanda Bynes. This girl is perfection!

 

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Figuring out Lorde’s Christian Roots Part 3 It is hard to figure out this New Zealand newcomer and her Christian roots but I am going to attempt to in this series of posts. Check out this video interview: Lorde Full Interview – Splendour In The Grass 2013 – Channel [V] Published on Sep 9, 2013 […]

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Figuring out Lorde’s Christian Roots Part 2 Lorde performing “Royals” Live on KCRW It is hard to figure out this New Zealand newcomer and her Christian roots but I am going to attempt to in this series of posts. Here an article that may shed more light on this: Friday, August 9, 2013 things to […]

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Figuring out Lorde’s Christian Roots Part 1 It is hard to figure out this New Zealand newcomer and her Christian roots but I am going to attempt to in this series of posts. The Love Club EP and The Gospel – “Bravado” Posted on August 10, 2013 by cwoznicki Standard This year a new artist came […]

Gene Chizik does a great job at Little Rock Touchdown Club Part 1

Gene Chizik does a great job at Little Rock Touchdown Club Part 1

Gene Chizik did a great job at the Little Rock Touchdown Club on Sept 30, 2013 and I got to see the coach up close and he did not disappoint at all. He pointed out that schools are not being patient with coaches and not giving them time to build their programs. Southern Miss just fired their coach after one year he noted. Currently we have new coaches at Kentucky, Arkansas and Tennessee and who knows if these coaches will be given enough time to build their programs?

Chizik: Coaches will stay under fire

By Jeff Halpern

This article was published October 1, 2013 at 4:15 a.m.

At Monday’s Little Rock Touchdown Club luncheon, former Auburn Coach Gene Chizik said the “days of patience and tolerance are gone.”

Chizik’s coaching career is a prime example of that. In 2010, with Heisman Trophy winner Cam Newton at quarterback, Auburn went 14-0 and defeated Oregon 22-19 in the BCS Championship Game. A year ago, after a 3-9 season, Chizik was fired.

After Southern Cal fired Coach Lane Kiffin on Sunday morning and Connecticut Coach Paul Pasqualoni was fired Monday – and with his former boss, Texas Coach Mack Brown under fire -Chizik said he understands what’s going on.

“Whether it’s right or wrong, that’s the way it is,” said Chizik, who is now radio analyst for Sirius/XM. “It’s the culture of college football that’s been created. It’s just reality and the way it works. You look at Ellis Johnson. He was hired as the head coach at Southern Miss and after one year, he was fired, and now he’s the defensive coordinator at Auburn.”

Chizik said he’s not bitter about his departure from Auburn: “Did I want another year? Yes, I did. But the reality is that’s not the way things work.”

When asked what went wrong in his last two years at Auburn, when the Tigerswent 11-13, Chizik declined to go into specifics, other than to say, “It was the perfect storm.”

Auburn is 3-1 this season under first-year Coach Gus Malzahn, who was Chizik’s offensive coordinator in 2009-2011 and won the Broyles Award as the nation’s top assistant in 2010. Chizik said he and Malzahn remain friends and denied reports that there was friction between the two of them in 2011 when Malzahn left to become the head coach at Arkansas State, where he led the Red Wolves to a 10-2 record and a Sun Belt Conference title in 2012.

Chizik was not the first Auburn coach who was forced to leave after posting a perfect season. In 1993, Terry Bowden led the Tigers, who were on probation, to an 11-0 season.After 1-5 start in 1998, Bowden resigned. In 2004, Auburn went 13-0 under Tommy Tuberville, but was denied a spot in the national championship game. Tuberville, Chizik’s former boss, was fired after going 5-7 in 2008.

Meanwhile, Alabama, Auburn’s biggest rival, has won three of the past four national championships. When asked if there is an inferiority complex among Auburn fans when they see the success Alabama is having, Chizik said, “It would be tougher if we hadn’t won one in between. It’s a very heated rivalry and when you look across the state and see the success that your rival is having, it does make everyone anxious.”

Auburn dealt with controversy in 2010. Mississippi State boosters reported to the media that Newton’s father Cecil allegedly said it would take between $100,00 and $180,000 to get Newton to sign with the Bulldogs after Newton finished his eligibility at Blinn (Texas) Junior College in 2009. Auburn maintained it was not involved in any pay-for-play scheme. The NCAA declared Newton ineligible on Nov. 30, 2010, but reinstated him a day later on the basis was Newton was not eligible of his father’s illegal activity and there was not sufficient evidence that Newton or anyone from Auburn had any knowledge ofCecil Newton’s activity.

“It was a tough situation to go through, but as a staff we shielded the players from the allegations and we knew we didn’t do anything wrong,” Chizik said. “The thing that got me was how something that was Mississippi State’s problem to begin with became Auburn’s problem.”

Sports, Pages 17 on 10/01/2013

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