Category Archives: Current Events

“Woody Wednesday” Biography of Woody Allen

Here is a great link on Woody Allen.

With at least four distinct phases throughout his long career, writer-director-actor Woody Allen was one of the few American filmmakers rightly labeled an auteur. From the irreverent absurdity of his early satires like “Bananas” (1971) and “Sleepers” (1973) to his chronicles of neurotic New Yorkers in “Annie Hall” (1977), “Manhattan” (1979) and “Hannah and Her Sisters” (1986), Allen’s obsessions with beauty, psychiatry, intellect and relationships existed in all his work. Unique among filmmakers, Allen made highly personal films with mainstream money while managing to exert creative control over the product – all the while earning a high-level of critical respect and numerous Academy Awards. By keeping budgets low, the prolific filmmaker reached his mostly urban audience on a regular basis, churning out one movie practically each year. His creative fires never extinguished, as he directed dramas like “Interiors” (1978), morally ambiguous tragicomedies like “Crimes and Misdemeanors” (1989) and period comedies like “Bullets Over Broadway” (1994). Even when stepping outside of his comfort zone with “Everyone Says I Love You” (1996) and “Sweet and Lowdown” (1999), Allen had the creative acumen to pull it off. Though he suffered personal scandal over his romantic involvement with adopted daughter, Soon Yi Previn, as well as a professional nadir with “Small Time Crooks” (2000) and “The Curse of the Jade Scorpion” (2001), Allen regained his critical stature with “Match Point” (2005), “Vicky Christina Barcelona” (2008) and “Midnight In Paris” (2011), which cemented his place in cinema history as one of its finest directors.

Allen Stewart Konigsberg was born on Dec. 1, 1935, in Brooklyn, NY. He was the only son of Orthodox Jewish parents Nettie, a bookkeeper, and Martin, who held a series of odd jobs, including waiter and jewelry engraver. Growing up in the middle class neighborhood of Midwood, Allen spent his free time at the local movie theaters where he was drawn into the worlds of the Marx Brothers and Humphrey Bogart. In stark contrast to Allen’s screen persona as an awkward outsider, he was well-liked in school, playing on the baseball team and entertaining students with card tricks and jokes. When he was still a teenager, he began selling his jokes to newspaper columnists and officially adopted the pen name Woody Allen. He was contributing material to such programs as “The Colgate Comedy Hour” (NBC, 1950-55) and Sid Caesar’s “Your Show of Shows” (NBC, 1950-54) before he even graduated from Midwood High School in 1953. After a brief stint at New York University where he purportedly failed a film course, Allen wrote for Caesar’s “Caesar’s Hour” (NBC, 1954-57) while writing jokes for comics and nightclub performers including Carol Channing, Art Carney and Buddy Hackett. He eventually took the stage and became a stand-up comedian himself, honing the intellectual “schnook” persona that would become his trademark.

Allen’s stage act was uniquely New York – Jewish, intellectual, guilt-ridden and anxious, with an insecure, halting stammer. His monologues poked fun at everything from sex and marriage to religion and politics and his refreshing personal style proved popular in liberal Greenwich Village cabarets and on college campuses. During the early 1960s, Allen found more and more outlets for his imagination and humor, publishing short stories in the New Yorker, co-writing a musical comedy revue called “A to Z” and writing his first feature film, the farcical “What’s New, Pussycatfi” (1965), directed by Clive Donner. Allen also starred in the film that served as an introduction to career-long recurring themes of romantic complications and a reliance on psychotherapy. He married Broadway actress and singer Louise Lasser in 1966 (an earlier teenage marriage had ended in 1962) and debuted as a filmmaker of sorts when he re-dubbed a minor Japanese spy thriller with his own irreverent dialogue and plot, releasing it as “What’s Up Tiger Lilyfi” (1966). That, along with the James Bond spoof “Casino Royale” (1967), which he co-wrote and acted in, launched one of the most successful and unusual careers in American filmmaking history.

Following the production of two more stage plays – “Don’t Drink the Water,” about a New Jersey family spying in an Iron Curtain country, and “Play It Again, Sam” (1969) about a film critic who invokes the spirit of Humphrey Bogart to guide him through life – Allen wrote, directed and starred in “Take the Money and Run” (1969). The unceasingly funny parody of both gangster films and cinema verite documentaries starred Allen as an unlikely escaped convict. The loose structure, lack of technical polish, and indebtedness to his nightclub one-liners was also evident in “Bananas” (1971), a satire lambasting both politics and mass media that starred Lasser as an idealistic leftie with a groupie-like admiration for a South American rebel leader who turns out to be her ex-boyfriend (Allen) in disguise. Another madcap satire, “Everything You Always Wanted to Know About Sex (But Were Afraid to Ask)” (1972), consisted of a series of loosely related shorts debunking various sexual myths while poking fun at the era’s self-help craze. The already prolific filmmaker followed up with a screen adaptation of his stage production “Play it Again Sam” (1972), which established Allen’s indebtedness to classic films and began his long association with actress Diane Keaton. Allen’s marriage to Lasser had ended several years earlier and Keaton took over the role of Allen’s girlfriend, muse and star of his films.

As the 1970s progressed, Allen began to find his voice as a filmmaker, rounding out his “slapstick” period with “Sleeper” (1973), about a health food store owner cryogenically frozen and thawed out after 200 years. “Love and Death” (1975) marked a leap forward for Allen, raising philosophical questions and showcasing a love of great literature and arts with its spoof of Russian culture. Allen’s aspirations to be considered a “serious” moviemaker were acutely evident in “Annie Hall” (1977), the first of his films to achieve widespread critical and box office popularity. While still anchored in comedy, it clearly tackled themes that reflected his own concerns in life and he utilized sophisticated narrative devices such as breaking the fourth wall, and relied less on slapstick and sight gags. In the lead role as Alvy Singer, the writer-director-actor solidified his screen persona as the urban, Jewish intellectual outsider; this time pursuing the love of a quirky but ethereal WASPY beauty (Keaton). Often considered the quintessential Allen movie – personal and thoughtful yet satiric and entertaining – “Annie Hall” earned four Academy Awards including beating out “Star Wars” for Best Picture, Best Actress (Diane Keaton), Best Director (Allen) and Best Original Screenplay (Allen and Marshall Brickman).

As a surprising follow-up, Allen shifted to more dramatic material and focused on the starchy, repressed WASP milieu in “Interiors” (1978). Owing more than a passing debt to Ingmar Bergman, Shakespeare and Eugene O’Neill, “Interiors” probed the angst and petty betrayals of an upper-class family with three daughters. Many critics and audience members were confounded by the deadly earnest tone, but inarguably the film was beautifully shot by cinematographer Gordon Willis and strongly acted by a cast that included Geraldine Page, E.G. Marshall, Diane Keaton and Maureen Stapleton. “Interiors” earned a surprising five Oscar nominations, including nods to Allen for direction and writing. The following year, he re-teamed with Marshall Brickman to write his most profitable (and arguably best) film, “Manhattan” (1979). With its lush Gershwin score, gorgeous black-and-white photography (again by Willis) and brilliant ensemble cast, the film marked a return to comedy peppered with autobiographical and romantic elements. It was also notable as Allen’s last film with Diane Keaton for many years, as their off-screen relationship was ending around the same time. The film engendered mild controversy over Allen’s onscreen love interest, a teenaged Mariel Hemingway.

In “Stardust Memories” (1980), Allen’s character of a film director is exhorted to “make funny movies,” something the character is adamant about no longer doing. Allen was sorry that audiences largely interpreted this as autobiographical, though he did follow it up with a return to slapstick in “A Midsummer Night’s Sex Comedy” (1982), where he also found a new on- and off-screen leading lady in Mia Farrow. The period mockumentary “Zelig” (1983) melded Allen’s fascination with celebrity with his growing grasp of cinematic methods. A marvel of technical wizardry, Allen intercut and merged new footage with old to recreate vintage newsreels and sound recordings. “Broadway Danny Rose” (1984) was primarily dismissed by critics as a minor outing, yet it centered on a marvelous performance from Farrow who was virtually unrecognizable as the Brooklyn-accented former mistress of a gangster. Farrow gave another outstanding lead performance as the timid, Depression-era wife of an abusive husband who finds refuge at the movie theater in the “The Purple Rose of Cairo” (1985). Another technical tour de force, the delightful fantasy took a turn when a matinee idol (Jeff Daniels) stepped off the screen to woo the unhappy woman. Tying together several of Allen’s major themes – fame, romance, fantasy and art – the film earned Best Screenplay and Best Director Oscar nominations for Allen.

For much of the decade, Allen concentrated on drama with the exception of “Radio Days” (1987), a charming memoir of life in World War II Brooklyn, threaded together by a wonderful soundtrack of the era’s hits. He was nominated for a Best Screenplay Oscar, an award he had won the previous year for his Chekhovian “Hannah and Her Sisters” (1986), a chronicle of New York family relationships and a set of very different sisters. The bloodless “September” (1987) and the Bergman-esque “Another Woman” (1988), featuring a virtuoso leading turn from Gena Rowlands, were further examinations of the emotionally bereft worlds of WASPy New Yorkers. With the outstanding “Crimes and Misdemeanors” (1989), Allen closed the decade with a pessimistic examination of the morality of murder and earned more Oscar nominations for his screenplay and direction. In a lighter mode, 1990’s “Alice,” a riff on Lewis Carroll’s Alice and Wonderland, cast Farrow as a wealthy but shallow uptown woman who receives a new perspective on life thanks to a Chinatown herbalogist. Allen had a rare starring role in a film not of his own making, playing Bette Midler’s husband in Paul Mazursky’s seriocomic look at contemporary marriage, “Scenes from a Mall” (1991) – a film which tanked miserably. Back behind the camera, his critically reviled “Shadows and Fog” (1992) was an allegory about anti-Semitism that combined homages to 1930s German expressionism and 1950s European art films but was plagued by one-note characterizations.

Though not without humor, “Husbands and Wives” (1992) marked one of Allen’s most emotionally violent films. Highlighted by jittery, hand-held cinema verite camerawork and a pessimistic view of enduring love, the film was released early by its distributor in part to capitalize on its uncanny parallels with the real-life turmoil between Allen and Farrow. Their very public break-up, spurred by Allen’s romantic involvement with Farrow’s adopted daughter, Soon Yi, was followed by Farrow’s public accusations that Allen had molested their adopted daughter, Dylan (now Malone). In the midst of all the Sturm und Drang, Allen made the frothy but fun “Manhattan Murder Mystery” (1993), which reunited him with Marshall Brickman and ex-flame, Diane Keaton. The comic thriller attempted to recreate the banter and urbanity of such seminal films as “The Thin Man,” though it proved to be a financial disappointment, overshadowed by Allen’s personal troubles – which by this time, were monumental, when Soon Yi left her family to be with Allen. By the time “Bullets Over Broadway” was released in 1994, Allen was out of the headlines and audiences were ready to embrace his work anew. The hilarious period comedy about a 1930s New York playwright (John Cusack as Allen’s screen alter ego) banked on a lush, dramatic portrayal of the era’s theater world and benefited from an outstanding ensemble cast, including Oscar-winning performances from Dianne Wiest as a past-her-prime stage diva and a nomination for Chazz Palminteri as a thug-turned-ghost writer. Under it all, the film was a successful meditation on the definition of an artist.

Allen returned to TV to adapt, direct and co-star in a small screen remake of his 1968 stage play “Don’t Drink the Water” (ABC, 1994). On the big screen, “Mighty Aphrodite” (1995) was an uneven attempt that baldly proclaimed its indebtedness to Greek theater with the use of a chorus. Allen played a middle-aged sportswriter searching for the birth mother of his adopted child, who turns out not to be the cultured woman he imagined but a prostitute. With “Everyone Says I Love You” (1996), he combined frothy 1930s musical sensibilities with his familiar themes, resulting in a mixed response that divided audiences and critics. “Deconstructing Harry” (1997) was an Oscar-nominated screenplay – a scatological and complex look at a writer’s life employing black comedy and dramatizations of his works to comment on the function of the artist in society. “Celebrity” (1998) with Kenneth Branagh doing a mannered Allen impersonation in the leading role, was considered a misbegotten, poorly cast take on the contemporary obsession with fame. Paying his own price for fame, Allen was in the tabloids again for his 1997 marriage to Soon Yi Previn, 35 years his junior. The marriage reminded all of the sordid story from only six years prior, but the couple seemed in love. The following year, documentarian Barbara Kopple released “Wild Man Blues” (1998). Rather than focusing on Allen the filmmaker, Allen the amateur clarinet player was the central character, from the Monday evening club engagement he held for decades to a European tour.

Allen the filmmaker continued to put out one movie per year for the next five years. Still dabbling in different genres and new techniques, 1999’s clever mockumentary/dramedy hybrid “Sweet and Lowdown” cast Sean Penn in one of his finest performances as a fictional 1930s jazz guitarist and hothead. He followed up with the surprisingly mainstream but highly comic heist picture, “Small Time Crooks” (2000) and the disappointing period faux noir “Curse of the Jade Scorpion” (2001). “Hollywood Ending” (2002), where Allen played a film director who goes blind, was poorly received. The target of much criticism for his series of disappointing films, Allen mined familiar territory in 2003 with “Anything Else,” which did little groundbreaking besides casting Jason Biggs in the Allen-esque lead as a young writer bedeviled by his torturous relationship with a neurotic actress (Christina Ricci), with Allen playing the role of Biggs’ conspiracy-minded mentor. He rebounded with the novel “Melinda and Melinda” (2005), which offered two parallel interpretations of the romantic troubles of a neurotic, self-destructive woman (Radha Mitchell); one tragic and one comic. The film’s intriguing structure and fresh cast, including Will Ferrell, Amanda Peet, Chl Sevigny, Chiwetel Ejiofor and Mitchell as two widely differing Melindas, made the film one of the more satisfying efforts from Allen in recent years.

Even better was his next project, “Match Point” (2005), an entirely serious, morality-minded effort featuring Jonathan Rhys Myers as a social climbing tennis pro who believes he would rather “be lucky than good,” who finds himself torn between his comfortable, practical, status-confirming union with a loving wife (Emily Mortimer) and his torrid affair with a sensual but ultimately demanding American actress (Scarlett Johansson). Allen did not appear as an actor in the film, and even more significantly, neither did New York City: the film was shot entirely in London. “Match Point” demonstrated that Allen still had considerable power as a filmmaker and fresh subject matter to explore as a screenwriter. His continued significance as a writer was validated with an Academy Award nomination for Best Original Screenplay. “Scoop” (2006), a comedy about an American journalism student in London, and “Cassandra’s Dream” (2007), a morality tale about a pair of brothers also set in London, earned lukewarm reviews but his fourth European outing, “Vicky Cristina Barcelona” (2008) was a critical pick. An evocative new locale and a well-matched cast including Allen’s latest muse, Scarlett Johansson, as well as Penelope Cruz and Javier Bardem, spelled a return to Allen’s strength with intelligent and thoughtful romantic comedies. The filmmaker’s next project was “Whatever Works” (2009), starring Larry David. After writing and directing his fourth London film, “You Will Meet a Tall Dark Stranger” (2010), Allen returned to prominence with “Midnight in Paris” (2011), an engrossing comedy-drama where a despondent Hollywood hack (Owen Wilson) dreams of writing his novel and is mysteriously transported to the past where he meets his artistic heroes Ernest Hemingway (Corey Stoll), F. Scott Fitzgerald (Tom Hiddleston) and Salvador Dali (Adrien Brody). The film received widespread acclaim – including a Golden Globe for Allen for Best Screenplay – and became his highest-grosser at the box office, surpassing “Hannah and Her Sisters.” Meanwhile, Allen earned his 22nd and 23rd career Academy Award nominations with nods for Best Director and Best Original Screenplay for “Midnight in Paris.”

midnight-in-paris-movie-image-slice-01

Great website discusses the influences on Woody Allen:

Why was the “Battle for the Beer Barrel” between Tennessee and Kentucky discontinued in 1997? (Part 1)

In the movie “Alvin York” Gary Cooper play York and 14 minutes into the move there is a scene where Alvin goes to a bar that is on the Kentucky and Tennessee line. It is a very funny scene where Alvin is trying to get drunk but his little brother fetches him home at gunpoint. A lot of times we laugh at drunks when they are pictured in comedies but in real life the results can be fatal.

I recently posted about the Battle for the Beer Barrel that started in 1925 between the Kentucky and Tennessee football teams, but was discontinued due to the tragic deaths of several Kentucky football players in 1997 in an alcohol-related car crash.

Several of my relatives live in Lowell, Arkansas where Police Chief Joseph Landers had served for years. Sadly his life was taken by a drunk driver. Below are the facts:

The Battle For The Beer Barrel (aka The Border War)

Beerbarreltrophy_display_image

The prize: The Beer Barrel

Florida Man Arrested In Chief Landers’ Death

Police: More Charges Could Be Filed

POSTED: 8:44 am CDT May 8, 2012
UPDATED: 9:08 am CDT May 8, 2012

 LOWELL, Ark. — A Florida man has been arrested in connection with the death of Lowell Police Chief Joe Landers who was killed in a motorcycle crash in April.The Florida Highway Patrol arrested Jimmy John Christo Jr. on Monday and booked him into the Bay County Jail on charges of leaving the scene of a crash with death. Additional charges are pending the completion of the traffic homicide investigation.Landers died Friday at Bay Medical Center from injuries suffered in the crash.Authorities said Landers was riding with a group of motorcyclists at 8:30 p.m. on April 27 when a driver pulled in front of him. He hit the vehicle and went over his handlebars to the ground. Christo, 52, was driving the Nissan Maxima that police said pulled in front of Landers.Deputies said Christo fled the scene but was caught a short time later. The Florida Highway Patrol arrested Cristo and charged him with fleeing the scene of a critical injury accident, possession of marijuana, possession of drug paraphernalia and other traffic violations.”From speaking to the trooper, the gentleman pretty much confessed to drinking, confessed to causing the accident, confessed to leaving the scene,” said Sgt. Paul Pillaro.

_____________
I really enjoyed the article below which appeared on May 15, 2012 in the Arkansas Democrat-Gazette:

Live life for today

Over in an instant

By Mike Masterson

This article was published today at 3:45 a.m

LITTLE ROCK — If you’re searching for evidence of how unpredictable physical existence can be, look no further than Joseph Landers, the popular police chief for 15 years in Lowell before his death, following a motorcycle accident, nearly two weeks ago in Panama City, Florida.

I’d met Chief Joseph last Christmas Day at a family gathering with my son Brandon, his wife, Sarah and granddaughter Elizabeth. Joe had come with his sweetheart, Sarah’s sister, Kelly Arnold Long.

I liked Joe right away. He was a friendly, soft-spoken, insightful and confident man with a good heart.

Yet he wasn’t your conventional buttoned-down chief of police. Instead, he was what I think of as a “working man’s” chief. Anyone who’d spent a year as part of an international police training unit helping teach (well, trying to) a timid group of Iraqi citizens to be professionals amidst such anarchy was definitely a hands-on lawman.

We chatted, took pictures, laughed and visited that Christmas morning. And when the time felt right we scattered in different directions.

I saw him several weeks later when he and Kelly came to Elizabeth’s 5th birthday party, then again a few weeks ago at Kelly’s home during an evening visit.

On that night, he was doing what he truly enjoyed: riding his Harley.

As fate would have it, it would be the same cycle he was on at a motorcycle rally in Panama City after enjoying dinner with friends. The story of what happened next has become sadly familiar to many over the past weeks.

A man identified in a Florida news story as Jimmy John Christo turned directly in front of Joe’s cycle as Joe was accelerating, sending Joe into the side of Christo’s car and over it to slam head-first onto the pavement. His pelvis was shattered and arm broken. That’s what the police report says.

In Arkansas and Florida, motorcycling adults are not legally required to wear helmets. Like many Harley owners, Joe understandably preferred to risk riding without one when he wasn’t officially on the police motorcycle back home.

Police soon found Christo, who they said had fled the scene and parked in a friend’s driveway. He’s since been charged with leaving the scene of a fatal accident, a first-degree felony. A conviction could bring up to 30 years in prison. Yet the local court saw fit to free him on a paltry $10,000 bond.

The bottom line is that Joe’s 51 years of life effectively ended in an instant. And not because of anything he’d done wrong.

Back in Northwest Arkansas, all who knew Chief Joseph were stunned and saddened in the way folks feel when someone they care for departs suddenly. The outpouring of grief and support down in Florida and at his memorial service at home was overwhelming.

If prayers could be numbered in books, those sent up on Landers’ behalf undoubtedly would easily have filled the Washington and Benton county libraries.

Joe was in great shape physically. And he’d fought like the dickens to remain in this world. His children, Kelly and friends remained by his side supporting his struggle for nearly a week.

But the damage to his swelling brain was just too extensive. Even radical lifesaving measures didn’t help. No matter what the surgeons and medical staff did, he remained unresponsive, though his vital signs remained surprisingly strong after being removed from the ventilator.

After two days in hospice, Joe surrendered and drew his final breath.

And so can too easily go the unpredictable days of our own lives, my friends. One second Joe Landers was happy, looking forward to Kelly joining him in the coming days. The next-and from out of nowhere on a Florida city street-all those hopes and dreams vanished in an instant.

I’ve become fond of quoting the late actor Michael Landon of Bonanza and Little House on the Prairie fame. Before his death, he advised each of us to get on with living our lives today, right now, this very moment because tomorrow may never come.

There’s a mysterious and uplifting footnote to share in connection with Joe’s passing.

His final posting on Facebook on the evening he died simply said he was “missing Kelly” followed by the symbol of a sad face.

Kelly told me that after flying home from Florida to Rogers, she went out the following morning to retrieve her newspaper.

There she noticed something glistening in the driveway. Bending down, she collected pieces of a small, scalloped object that, on closer examination, turned out to be a broken seashell.

But how was that even possible? Especially when the broken white shell matched the one she’d collected on the Panama City beach to bring home after being at Joe’s deathbed.

She says there’s no question in her mind where this little crushed shell (now saved in a bag) came from and how it wound up 900 miles away in her particular Northwest Arkansas driveway.

For Kelly, it was Joe’s way of letting her know he’s still missing her and is still with her. And I wouldn’t begin to tell her any differently. How about you?

———◊-

———

Mike Masterson is opinion editor of the Arkansas Democrat-Gazette’s Northwest edition.

Editorial, Pages 13 on 05/15/2012

Print Headline: Over in an instant

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ryan dunn Jackass dead in crash

Bam Margera’s First Interview After Ryan Dunn’s Death

Ryan Dunn and his friends moments before they died.

Flickr user Eric Lewis posted the image below with a caption that says the photo shows what’s left of Dunn’s car.

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Every conference has their football rivalries and the SEC is no different. The rivalry games are the best games of the season. Win against your biggest rival and even a bad season becomes good. Lose and the season is lost, even if that was your only loss.

The best rivalries have two things: A name and a trophy. In this slide show I have three things: A name, a trophy and at least one SEC Team.

This is how we do it in the SEC!

 

The Battle For The Beer Barrel (aka The Border War)

Beerbarreltrophy_display_image

The prize: The Beer Barrel

The original Battle for the Beer Barrel was conceived in 1925 by a Kentucky booster club for the football rivalry with Tennessee, so that the series would have a trophy similar to Purdue’s Old Oaken Bucket and Michigan’s Little Brown Jug.

Tennessee held a 60-23-9 edge in the series with Kentucky when the Beer Barrel trophy game was discontinued due to the tragic deaths of several Kentucky football players in 1997 in an alcohol-related car crash.

In addition to the schools’ rivalry, blood banks in the home cities of each university (Lexington, Kentucky and Knoxville, Tennessee) compete to see who can raise the most units of blood. This is known informally as the Blue-Orange Crush.

Tennessee leads the series 72-23-9

_________________

Kentucky finally broke the streak this year in a hard fought game with the Vols.

From Wikipedia:

Most consecutive wins over one opponent (NCAA football)

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

 

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The following is a list of the all-time leading NCAA Division I FBS (Football Bowl Subdivision) college football single-opponent winning streaks. Teams are ranked by the number of consecutive wins they’ve posted against a specific opponent. All streaks of at least 20 games are in the list.

Most consecutive wins over an opponent
School Opponent Number From Through Uninterrupted series Notes/References
Notre Dame Navy 43 1964 2006 Yes Navy won in 2007[1][2]
Nebraska Kansas 36 1969 2004 Yes KU won in 2005[3]
Oklahoma Kansas State 32 1937 1968 Yes [3]
Nebraska Kansas State 29 1969 1997 Yes [3]
Clemson Virginia 29 1955 1989 No, the games were played over a 35-year period. [3]
Penn State Temple 29 † 1952 Present No, the games have been played over a 60-year period. Penn State won in 2011.[4] Penn State has an unbeaten streak dating back 10 more years. Temple’s last win over Penn State was a 14-0 victory in 1941.
Texas Rice 28 1966 1993 Yes [3]
Syracuse Hobart 26 1906 1931 Yes [3]
USC Oregon State 26 1968 1999 No, the games were played over a 32-year period. [3]
Tennessee Kentucky 26 1985 2010 Yes Kentucky won in 2011.[5]
Florida Kentucky 25 † 1987 Present Yes Florida won in 2011.[6][7]
Penn State West Virginia 25 1959 1983 Yes [3]
Texas TCU 24 1968 1991 Yes [3]
Texas A&M TCU 24 † 1973 Present No, the games have been played over a 28-year period. Texas A&M won 23 consecutive times from 1973 to 1995, then beat TCU in the Galleryfurniture.com bowl in 2001. The two teams have not played since but A&M still holds the active streak.[8]
Nebraska Missouri 24 1979 2002 Yes [3]
Nebraska Oklahoma State 24 1974 1999 No, the games were played over a 26-year period. [3]
Penn State Maryland 24 1962 1988 No, the games were played over a 27-year period. The streak began following Maryland’s only win in the 37-game series in 1961, and finally ended with the only tie in 1989.[9]
Oklahoma Iowa State 23 1937 1959 Yes [1]
Tennessee Vanderbilt 22 1983 2004 Yes [3]
Nebraska Oklahoma State 22 1974 1995 Yes These games were a subset of the non-continuous series 1974-1999.[3]
Arkansas TCU 22 1959 1980 Yes [3]
Alabama Mississippi State 22 1958 1979 Yes [3]
Iowa Northwestern 22 1974 1994 Yes [3] In 1995, Northwestern also ended a 19 game (30 year) losing streak to Michigan and a 14 game (33 year) streak to Notre Dame.
Ohio State Northwestern 21 1972 2004 No, these games were played over a 32-year period. [3]
LSU Louisiana Lafayette 22 † 1902 Present No, the games were played over a 107 year period. [3]
Purdue Iowa 20 1961 1980 Yes [3]
Oklahoma Baylor 20 1901 2011 No, the games were played over a 109 year period. Baylor ended the streak with a 45-38 victory in 2011.[2]

† Active Streak

[edit] References and sources

  1. ^ “Notre Dame’s NCAA-record 43-game win streak over Navy ends”. ESPN.com. 3 November 2007. http://sports.espn.go.com/ncf/recap?gameId=273070087. Retrieved 2007-11-03. 
  2. ^ “Navy 46, Notre Dame 44 – Play by Play”. ESPN.com. November 3, 2007. http://sports.espn.go.com/ncf/boxscore?gameId=273070087&confId=18. Retrieved 2007-11-03. 
  3. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s “Streaks and Rivalries” (PDF). Official 2007 NCAA Division I Football Records Book (NCAA): p. 112. 2007. Archived from the original on 2007-09-30. http://web.archive.org/web/20070930220759/http://www.ncaa.org/library/records/football/football_records_book/2007/2007_d1_football_records_book.pdf. Retrieved 2007-11-07. 
  4. ^ “Penn State vs Temple Historical Record”. stassen.com. http://football.stassen.com/cgi-bin/records/opp-opp.pl?start=1951&end=2011&team1=Penn+State&team2=Temple. Retrieved 2008-09-23. 
  5. ^ Associated Press (November 26, 2011). “Kentucky ends 26-game skid vs. Tennessee, which will miss bowl”. ESPN.com. http://sports.espn.go.com/ncf/recap?gameId=313300096. Retrieved November 26, 2011. 
  6. ^ Associated Press (September 24, 2011). “Florida clocks Kentucky behind Jeff Demps’ 157 rushing yards”. ESPN.com. http://espn.go.com/ncf/recap?gameId=312670096. Retrieved November 26, 2011. 
  7. ^ “History of Opponents”. GatorZone.com. 2007-08-10. http://gatorzone.com/football/history/opponents.pdf. Retrieved 2007-08-10. 
  8. ^ “All-Time Football Scores: TCU”. aggieathletics.com. http://www.aggieathletics.com/sports/m-footbl/stats/tcu.html. Retrieved 2008-05-07. 
  9. ^ “Penn State vs Maryland Historical Record”. stassen.com. http://football.stassen.com/cgi-bin/records/opp-opp.pl?start=1961&end=1989&team1=Penn+State&team2=Maryland. Retrieved 2007-12-31. 

Is Bobby Petrino through or will he return as a top coach in the future?

Bobby Petrino and Jessica Dorrell

Bobby Petrino and Jessica Dorrell

I was so happy a few months ago with the Razorbacks’ football future firmly in Bobby Petrino’s hands. Things were going so well.  I mentioned to a friend that I was 16 back in 1977 when Lou Holtz led the Razorbacks that season to a 11-1 record and a third place finish in the 1978 January final poll for the 1977 season. Think about the fact that it took the Razorbacks 34 seasons later to get back into the top 5 (2011 finished ranked 5th) and I am now 50 years old. IF HISTORY REPEATED ITSELF I WOULD BE 84 BEFORE WE FINISHED IN THE TOP 5 AGAIN.  We both laughed at that silly suggestion.

However, since then we have lost Petrino as our coach. That thought of not returning to the top 5 is not as silly as I first thought. (Now 6 players are off the team for now Arkansas Sports 360 has reported.) Petrino was respected nationally. Take a look at this article below that mentions Petrino as possibly returning as one of the nations best coaches.

Mike Strange: Who will be the top-ranked coaches in 2022?

Mike Strange
  • By Mike Strange
  • govolsxtra.com
  • Posted May 12, 2012 at 4:56 p.m.

No games, no spring practice. Recruiting in a lull. What’s a collegefootball fan to do?

How about reading all these lists that are proliferating because the college football media folks don’t have much to do, either?

We’ve got hot-seat lists (seeDerek Dooley), lists of the freakiest athletes (see Justin Hunter) and top pass-catch combos (see Tyler Bray-Da’Rick Rogers).

The big talker this week was the ranking of FBS coaches, from 1 to 124, by The Sporting News. Nick Saban was No. 1. Charlie Molnar of UMass was No. 124. Poor guy’s never coached a game.

Dooley, Tennessee’s coach, checked in at No. 99, right behind 66-year-old Norm Chow, who finally landed his first head-coaching gig at Hawaii, and 74 spots below Vanderbilt’s James Franklin.

Hats off to Franklin for shaking up the status quo at Vandy in his first year as a head coach. But how that justifies shooting him up the chart to No. 25 is beyond me.

We can debate the rankings — which, of course, is why they’re there — from now until the Poinsettia Bowl. But here’s my wrinkle:

What will the rankings look like in 10 years? Who’s in the top 20 in 2022?

We can eliminate Saban, Steve Spurrier and Frank Beamer. Saban isn’t going to be coaching at 70. Bill Snyder’s the only guy doing so now.

I was surprised to find 21 coaches 60 or older at FBS jobs. For the record, there are 15 older thanPhillip Fulmer, who turns 62 and qualifies for Social Security on Sept. 1.

I’m going to further rule out the AARP guys who are at least 55. Cross off Les Miles, Kirk Ferentz, Tommy Tuberville and June Jones.

The guys in the 50-54 age group are borderline. The good ones are banking a ridiculous amount of money. Will they have the drive to stay at it? Based on the examples of Beamer and Spurrier, some will.

Some won’t. I can’t see No. 14 Mark Richt coaching at 62. Can Mike Leach carry on as a 61-year-old pirate? Probably.

Perhaps the biggest enigma is the guy who could be No. 1 in 2022. Or, he could be long gone.

Urban Meyer is 47. He’s chalked up two national titles at Florida and won big at Bowling Green and Utah. He’s also burned out once already.

After a one-year sabbatical, Meyer is back in the game at Ohio State. There’s no reason to think he won’t win big again.

His kids will be out of the nest. No reason to spend more time with the family. The hunch here is Meyer will be going strong in 2022.

So will Chris Peterson. Also 47, Peterson is 73-6 at Boise State. That’s no misprint.

Sporting News ranks him No. 2 now and Peterson might still be there in 2022. The question whether he’ll still be at Boise State.

Bob Stoops (51), Oregon’s Chip Kelly (48) and TCU’s Gary Patterson (52) could easily still be coaching in 10 years. What about Brady Hoke (53)?

He was an instant fit at Michigan last year. Maybe Hoke and Meyer settle in for a Woody-Bo rivalry that brews for a decade.

Mike Gundy is a man. He’s 44. Oklahoma State’s coach is 59-30, ranks No. 10 and could be even higher in 2022.

Bret Bielema is in the same category. At 42 with a 60-19 record at Wisconsin, Bielema has excellent long-term prospects.

The Sporting News likes Lane Kiffin. I agree Kiffin’s a heckuva coach and Southern Cal is a place to win a ton of games. But I’ll bet Kiffin’s back in the NFL before 2022.

Some other relatively new head coaches will enjoy a prosperous decade. I’d bet on Jimbo Fisher at Florida State.

Maybe Franklin will be one of them. Maybe Will Muschamp, too. But one season is too little evidence for me to make that projection.

Keep an eye on Troy Calhoun, Chip Kelly, Kevin Sumlin and Al Golden. Don’t count out 48-year-old Rich Rodriguez, who starts fresh at Arizona.

Here’s a wild card: Bobby Petrino. He’s 51, banished from the current rankings but there’s still time to get back in the hunt.

And what, you’re probably wondering, about Dooley? At 43 he faces a make-or-break season. The jury is very much out.

If he’s still at Tennessee in 2022, he will have vaulted way up the rankings.

And if he is still No. 99, he won’t be at Tennessee.

Mike Strange may be reached at strangem@knoxnews.com.

Related posts:

Youtube has not been too kind to Arkansas’ new football coach John L. Smith April 23, 2012 – 3:50 pm

John L. Smith new razorback coach, Who is he? April 23, 2012 – 2:19 pm

 
 

Bobby Petrino’s phone records come out April 12, 2012 – 6:50 am

Jessica Dorrell and Bobby Petrino on ESPN together in 2011 April 12, 2012 – 6:38 am

 

How about a coach swap? :Charlie Strong to Arkansas and Bobby Petrino to Louisville April 11, 2012 – 7:37 am

 

Bobby Petrino statement April 11, 2012 – 6:51 am

 

Bobby Petrino fired, but now seeking forgiveness April 11, 2012 – 6:20 am

 

Video and transcript of Jeff Long’s press conference announcing firing of Bobby Petrino April 11, 2012 – 5:53 am

 

Bobby Petrino’s arrogance led to his downfall April 10, 2012 – 3:46 pm

 

 

Petrino 911 Call – Jessica Dorrell And Bobby Petrino Refuse Help April 9, 2012 – 7:03 am

 

Earlier concerns about Petrino’s character are coming back up again April 9, 2012 – 6:24 am

 

Bobby Petrino has achieved the American Dream, but still is looking for something more April 8, 2012 – 1:46 pm

Rex Nelson speculates that Petrino may be fired because “…trust has been so broken…” April 8, 2012 – 12:06 pm

Lying about Jessica Dorrell may get Bobby Petrino in a lot of trouble April 7, 2012 – 1:38 pm

Can Bobby Petrino, Tom Brady and Coldplay all find the satisfaction they are seeking? April 6, 2012 – 2:15 pm 

Bobby Petrino to survive this wreck? April 6, 2012 – 11:08 am

Pictures of Bobby Petrino April 6, 2012 – 9:11 am

Who is Jessica Dorrell? (with pictures) April 6, 2012 – 9:06 am

Major coverage of Bobby Petrino mistake April 6, 2012 – 6:51 am

What will be Jeff Long’s decision on Bobby Petrino? April 6, 2012 – 5:36 am

Bobby Petrino admits to an affair April 6, 2012 – 4:41 am

What impact will breaking trust with Bobby Petrino’s family have? April 6, 2012 – 4:24 am

Two choices now for Bobby Petrino: Follow the path of purity or impurity

If Bobby thinks he is bruised now, then he needs to read about the guy in Proverbs 7:10-27 and what happened to him. I really am hoping that Bobby Petrino can put his marriage back together. He has a clear choice between two paths. In the sermon at Fellowship Bible Church at July 24, 2011, […]

Jessica Dorrell was taking a long ride with Bobby Petrino April 5, 2012 – 4:52 pm

Top football stadiums in the country (Part 2)

2011 Arkansas State Football Highlights

Here is a list of the top football stadiums in the country.

Power Ranking All 124 College Football Stadiums  

By Alex Callos

(Featured Columnist) on April 19, 2012 

When it comes to college football stadiums, for some teams, it is simply not fair. Home-field advantage is a big thing in college football, and some teams have it way more than others.

There are 124 FBS college football teams, and when it comes to the stadiums they play in, they are obviously not all created equal.

There is a monumental difference from the top teams on the list to the bottom teams on the list. Either way, here it is: a complete ranking of the college football stadiums 1-124.

___________

Tennessee takes on the Akron Zips this year in Knoxville on September 22, 2012. They are in the list below and so are the Arkansas St Redwolves. I have been to Jonesboro many times and the last time I went the Memphis Tigers won on a last second field goal. With Gus Malzahn as the head coach I will be back again soon. I remember well when Malzahn was a high school coach and beat my Arkansas Baptist Eagles when Josh Floyd led the Saints to their first State Championship in 1998. A lot of things have happened since then.

Many were confused when Gus Malzahn left Auburn where he had a 1.3 million contract to come to Arkansas State where he makes around 800,000, but Gus pointed out that a few years ago he was making 70,000. I really respect the staff he has put together. John Thompson is an excellent defensive coordinator.

116. InfoCision Stadium: Akron Zips

171205_display_image

When it comes to college football in Akron, everything would have to be rated slightly below-average.

Also known as Summa Field, this stadium is one of the newest in the country, having just been built in 2009. It has a seating capacity of 30,000, making it slightly on the larger side when it comes to teams in the MAC.

 

115. Scheumann Stadium: Ball State Cardinals

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Located in Muncie, Indiana, Ball State University is a nice college town with a slightly below-average MAC Stadium.

The stadium seats 25,400 people and was built in 1967.

There is not much immediately surrounding the stadium as far as tailgating or other pregame activities go.

 

114. Huskie Stadium: Northern Illinois Huskies

Huskie-stadium2-430_display_image

Built in 1965 with a capacity of 24,000, Huskie Stadium has a unique college feel to it, but is extremely outdated and could use a little bit of a makeover.

While there is not much in and around the stadium, what it does offer is a solid fanbase that comes out to support their team, which is usually competitive in the MAC.

Now if the fans here just had an updated version of the place to cheer on their team.

 

113. Spartan Stadium: San Jose State Spartans

Spartan_stadium_dsc0768-edit_display_image

Spartan Stadium is the next in a long line of old, outdated stadiums that could use a little help.

It was originally opened in 1933 with a seating capacity of 30,456.

There are a lot of positives that go along with this stadium, as it is slightly above-average in nearly everything, but could use a little update sometime soon.

 

112. Houchens-Smith Stadium: Western Kentucky Hiltoppers

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Houchens-Smith Stadium is rather small and may not be the best place to watch a college football game, but it still has some benefits.

The stadium only seats 22,000 and was built in 1968. It does not always sell out, but the team can usually get a decent crowd no matter what their record is.

One unique aspect of the stadium is the grassy area in the north end zone, where fans can enjoy the game from a different perspective.

 

111. ASU Stadium: Arkansas State Red Wolves

300px-arkansas_state_-_field_view_display_image

Arkansas State is one of the better teams in the Sun Belt Conference and has a slightly below-average stadium with a capacity of 30,964.

It was opened in 1974 and is middle-aged compared to other stadiums.

There is nothing really special about the stadium or the area around it.

Charles Stanley and David Barton email about President Obama

4 Of 5 / The Bible’s Influence In America / American Heritage Series / David Barton

A relative sent me this email that has been going around the internet about what Charles Stanley and David Barton had to say about President Obama:

Should Christians Support President Obama?
This man was on Dr. Charles Stanley’s program “In Touch” as a guest speaker.
I almost shouted “HALLELUJAH” when I finished reading. Forward or discard….it’s your choice…but PLEASE read before you do!
[]
Dr. David Barton is more of a historian than a Biblical speaker, but very famous for his knowledge of historical facts as well as Biblical truths.
Dr. David Barton – on Obama
Respect the Office? Yes.
Respect the Man in the Office? No, I am sorry to say.
I have noted that many elected officials, both Democrats and Republicans, called upon America to unite behind Obama.
Well, I want to make it clear to all who will listen that I AM NOT uniting behind Obama!
I will respect the Office which he holds, and I will acknowledge his abilities as an orator and wordsmith and pray for him, BUT that is it.
I have begun today to  see what I can do to make sure that he is a one-term President!
Why am I doing this ?
It is because: – I do not share Obama’s vision or value system for America ;
– I do not share his Abortion beliefs;
– I do not share his radical Marxist’s concept of re-distributing wealth;
– I do not share his stated views on raising taxes on those who make$150,000+ (the ceiling has been changed three times since August);
– I do not share his view that America is Arrogant;
– I do not share his view that America is not a Christian Nation;
– I do not share his view that the military should be reduced by 25%;
– I do not share his view of amnesty and giving more to illegals than our American Citizens who need help;
– I do not share his views on homosexuality and his definition of marriage;
– I do not share his views that Radical Islam is our friend and Israel is our enemy who should give up any land;
– I do not share his spiritual beliefs (at least the ones he has made public);
– I do not share his beliefs on how to re-work the healthcare system in America ;
– I do not share his Strategic views of the Middle East ; and
– I certainly do not share his plan to sit down with terrorist regimes such as Iran .
Bottom line: my America is vastly different from Obama’s, and I have a higher obligation to my Country and my GOD to do what is Right!
For eight (8) years, the Liberals in our Society, led by numerous entertainers who would have no platform and no real credibility but for their celebrity status, have attacked President Bush, his family, and his spiritual beliefs!
They have not moved toward the center in their beliefs and their philosophies, and they never came together nor compromised their personal beliefs for the betterment of our Country!
They have portrayed my America as a land where everything is tolerated except being intolerant!
They have been a vocal and irreverent minority for years!
They have mocked and attacked the very core values so important to the founding and growth of our Country!
They have made every effort to remove the name of GOD or Jesus Christ from our Society!
They have challenged capital punishment, the right to bear firearms, and the most basic principles of our criminal code!
They have attacked one of the most fundamental of all Freedoms, the right of free speech!
Unite behind Obama? Never!
I am sure many of you who read this think that I am going overboard, but I refuse to retreat one more inch in favor of those whom I believe are the embodiment of Evil!
PRESIDENT BUSH made many mistakes during his Presidency, and I am not sure how history will judge him. However, I believe that he weighed his decisions in light of the long established Judeo-Christian principles of our Founding Fathers!!!
Majority rules in America , and I will honor the concept; however, I will fight with all of my power to be a voice in opposition to Obama and his “goals for America …”
I am going to be a thorn in the side of those who, if left unchecked, will destroy our Country! Any more compromise is more defeat!
I pray that the results of this election will wake up many who have sat on the sidelines and allowed the Socialist-Marxist anti-GOD crowd to slowly change so much of what has been good in America!
GOD bless you and GOD bless our Country!
(Please, please, please, pass this on if you agree. If you don’t agree, just delete it.)
Thanks for your time, may you and yours be safe.
“In GOD We Trust”
 
   “There is no right way to do the wrong thing.”
____________________________
 

5 Of 5 / The Bible’s Influence In America / American Heritage Series / David Barton

__________________________________________

Radek Stepanek “Tennis Tuesday”

Uploaded by on Feb 23, 2009

Highlights of the final between Andy Roddick and Radek Stepanek of the Regions Morgan Keegan Championships 2009 in Memphis.

______________________________

From Wikipedia:

Radek Štěpánek
Country  Czech Republic
Residence Monte Carlo, Monaco
Born 27 November 1978 (1978-11-27) (age 33)
Karviná, Czechoslovakia
Height 1.85 m (6 ft 1 in)
Weight 76 kg (170 lb; 12.0 st)
Turned pro 1996
Plays Right-handed (two-handed backhand)
Career prize money $7,387,297
Singles
Career record 306–217 (at ATP Tour level, Grand Slam level, and in Davis Cup)
Career titles 5
Highest ranking No. 8 (July 10, 2006)
Current ranking No. 29 (February 13, 2012)
Grand Slam results
Australian Open 3R (2003, 2005, 2007, 2009)
French Open 4R (2008)
Wimbledon QF (2006)
US Open 4R (2009)
Other tournaments
Tour Finals RR (2008)
Doubles
Career record 184–125 (at ATP Tour level, Grand Slam level, and in Davis Cup)
Career titles 13
Highest ranking No. 13 (16 September 2002)
Grand Slam Doubles results
Australian Open W (2012)
French Open SF (2007)
Wimbledon 3R (2004)
US Open F (2002)
Last updated on: 28 January 2012.

Top football stadiums in the country (Part 1)

Arkansas VS Tulsa 2008

Uploaded by on Nov 2, 2008

Arkansas entering the field to play #19 Tulsa.

Here is a list of the top football stadiums in the country.

Power Ranking All 124 College Football Stadiums  

By Alex Callos

(Featured Columnist) on April 19, 2012 

When it comes to college football stadiums, for some teams, it is simply not fair. Home-field advantage is a big thing in college football, and some teams have it way more than others.

There are 124 FBS college football teams, and when it comes to the stadiums they play in, they are obviously not all created equal.

There is a monumental difference from the top teams on the list to the bottom teams on the list. Either way, here it is: a complete ranking of the college football stadiums 1-124.

_________________

I remember traveling to Fayetteville in 1983 with my girlfriend’s family (later to become my in-laws) to see Arkansas play against Tulsa. Tulsa was coached by John Cooper and Tulsa missed a field goal that would tied the game as time expired. The great Lou Holtz was the coach of the Razorbacks back then. It was the policy of the university to let the fans park on the grass fields near the field.

In 1986 when I was married and my wife was 7 months pregnant the policy of the university had changed and we had to park about a mile away from the stadium. She told me that our unborn child curled up in a ball the whole game because the crowd was cheering so loudly. Below is a picture of the Tulsa stadium.

124. H.A. Chapman Stadium: Tulsa Golden Hurricanes

Tulsa0115frompressbox_display_image

Starting off the list is the home of the Golden Hurricanes of Tulsa.

Also known as Skelly Field, this establishment has been around for quite some time, dating all the way back to 1930.

It is the smallest stadium in Conference USA with a capacity of 30,000, and there is just nothing special about the area of the surrounding campus or the atmosphere inside the stadium.

 

123. Kibbie Dome: Idaho Vandals

Interior_display_image

This is one of the more odd-looking stadiums starting from the outside and going in.

There is only one college football stadium in the country that is smaller than Kibbie Dome with a capacity of 16,000.

The Idaho Vandals play multiple sports here, including basketball, tennis and track, so the arena is not just used for football. One good thing is the fact that it is indoors to help stay away from those harsh Idaho fall months.

The stadium opened in 1971 and looks more like a large barn from the outside.

 

122. Bobcat Stadium: Texas State Bobcats

Bobcats_display_image

The Texas State Bobcats are a new team to the FBS level and clearly have their work cut out for them when it comes to facilities.

This is currently the smallest FBS Stadium, with a capacity of 15,968, but is under construction, which will bring the seating allotment to right at 30,000 in the near future.

Right now, it looks more like a high school stadium with the track around it. It was opened in 1981 and could certainly use some improvements.

 

121. Legion Field: UAB Blazers

Medium_legion_field_display_image

Legion Field is one of the oldest college football stadiums, having been around since 1927.

It is home to the UAB Blazers out of Conference USA, and besides being old, it is relatively large with a seating capacity of 71,594.

A large seating capacity does not necessarily make it a good stadium, though.

At one point, this was the place to be, as it has hosted 53 Iron Bowls. Right now, though, it leaves a lot to be desired.

 

120. Johnny ‘Red’ Floyd Stadium: Middle Tennessee State Blue Raiders

Blackout_display_image

Like many others, this stadium is also relatively old, having opened in 1933.

There is a seating capacity here of 31,000, and like many other smaller FBS schools, this stadium and the surrounding area do not really offer up anything special for visitors.

The atmosphere here is great when the team is winning, a trait that can be applied to a lot of commuter campuses.

 

119. Sonny Lucick Field at Hughes Stadium: Colorado State Rams

Sonny_lubick_field_at_hughes_stadium_upload_a_display_image

This stadium has nothing that really makes it stand out from the rest of the stadiums in the Mountain West Conference.

It was built in 1968 and has a capacity of 34,400 people.

When the Rams are playing good, they can average at least 25,000 fans here. When this is the case, the atmosphere is not too bad. 

 

118. Apogee Stadium: North Texas Mean Green

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The North Texas Mean Green have had some decent football teams over the years, and now they have a brand new stadium to enjoy some success in.

This stadium is one of the newer in college football, having just opened in 2011.

It has a seating capacity of 30,850 and has some very unique aspects for a small college stadium.

 

117. Yager Stadium: Miami (OH) Redhawks

Building-yager3a_display_image

Miami (OH) has produced a lot of big-name coaches over the years. Names like Ara Parseghian and Bo Schembechler, just to name a few.

Yager Stadium is relatively new, having been built in 1983 with a seating capacity of 24,286. Like many other stadiums on the list, it looks more like a large high school stadium.

Oxford is a college town with a lot to offer, but has never been a place that has shown a great deal of support for their sports teams.

MUSIC MONDAY: Five For Fighting

My son Wilson Hatcher put together this post.

I LOVE this song!!!

This is an AWESOME band!

O Brother Where Art Thou – Man Of Constant Sorrow

O Brother Where Art Thou – Man Of Constant Sorrow

Uploaded by on Oct 29, 2009

O Brother Where Art Thou – Man Of Constant Sorrow

O Brother Where Art Thou film movie comedy 2000 George Clooney John Turturro John Goodman Holly Hunter

_________________

Wikipedia notes:

History

There is some uncertainty whether Dick Burnett himself wrote the song. One claim is that it was sung by the Mackin clan in 1888 in Ireland and that Cameron O’Mackin emigrated to Tennessee, brought the song with him, and performed it. In an interview he gave toward the end of his life, Burnett himself indicated that he could not remember:

Charles Wolfe: “What about this “Farewell Song” – ‘I am a man of constant sorrow’ – did you write it?”
Richard Burnett: “No, I think I got the ballad from somebody – I dunno. It may be my song…”[1]

If Burnett wrote the song, the date of its composition, or at least of the editing of certain lyrics by Burnett, can be fixed at about 1913. Since it is known that Burnett was born in 1883, married in 1905, and blinded in 1907, the dating of two of these texts can be made on the basis of internal evidence. The second stanza of “Farewell Song” mentions that the singer has been blind six years, which put the date at 1913. According to the Country Music Annual, Burnett “probably tailored a pre-existing song to fit his blindness” and may have adapted a hymn. Charles Wolfe argues that “Burnett probably based his melody on an old Baptist hymn called “Wandering Boy”.[2]

During 1918, Cecil Sharp collected the song and published it as “In Old Virginny” (Sharp II, 233).

Sarah Ogan Gunning’s re-writing of the traditional “Man” into a more personal “Girl” took place about 1936 in New York, where her first husband, Andrew Ogan, was fatally ill. The text was descriptive of loneliness away from home and anticipated her bereavement; the melody she remembered from a 78 rpm hillbilly record (Emry Arthur, probably Vocalion Vo 5208, 1928) she had heard some years before in the mountains.

On October 13, 2009 on the Diane Rehm Show, Dr. Ralph Stanley of the Stanley Brothers, born in 1927, discussed the song, its origin, and his effort to revive it:[3]

“Man of Constant Sorrow” is probably two or three hundred years old. But the first time I heard it when I was y’know, like a small boy, my daddy – my father – he had some of the words to it, and I heard him sing it, and we – my brother and me – we put a few more words to it, and brought it back in existence. I guess if it hadn’t been for that it’d have been gone forever. I’m proud to be the one that brought that song back, because I think it’s wonderful.”

Stanley’s autobiography is titled Man of Constant Sorrow.[4]

[edit] Recordings and cover versions

‹ The template below (Cleanup-laundry) is being considered for deletion. See templates for discussion to help reach a consensus.›
Text-x-generic.svg
The embedded lists in this article may contain items that are not encyclopedic. Please help out by removing such elements and incorporating appropriate items into the main body of the article. (January 2011)
  • 1928 – The song was recorded in 1928 by Emry Arthur.
  • 1951 – It was popularized by the Stanley Brothers, on Columbia 20816, Recorded: Nov. 3, 1950, Released: May 1951.
  • 1959 – The Stanley Brothers re-recorded it on King Records 45-5269, Recorded: Sep. 15, 1959, Released: Oct. 1959. This version is probably the first with a very similar vocal arrangement as the one used in the movie O Brother, Where Art Thou?, where it is performed by the fictitious group Soggy Bottom Boys (recorded by Dan Tyminski, Harley Allen, and Pat Enright).
  • 1960 – A version of the song, “Girl of Constant Sorrow”, is included on the remastered version of the album Joan Baez, first released in 1960 on the Vanguard label.[5]
  • 1961 – Recorded by Roscoe Holcomb (Daisy Kentucky) in 1961–1962 with an arrangement more like Dylan’s than that of the Stanleys.(Music of Roscoe Holcomb and Wade Ward,Smithsonian Folkways, Smithsonian Center for Folklife and Cultural Heritage.)
  • 1961 – Judy Collins‘s 1961 debut album, A Maid of Constant Sorrow, took its name from a variant of the song that was performed on the album.
  • 1962 – It appears on Bob Dylan‘s 1962 eponymous debut album and Dylan performed the song during his first national television appearance in 1963.
  • 1962 – In their 1962 self-titled debut album Peter, Paul and Mary recorded another version as “Sorrow.”
  • 1966 – It was recorded by Waylon Jennings on his 1966 major-label debut Folk-Country.
  • 1969 – Rod Stewart performed the song on his debut solo album in 1969.
  • 1970 – It was also recorded by Ginger Baker’s Air Force on their eponymous debut album in 1970, sung by Air Force guitarist and vocalist (and former Moody Blues, future Wings member) Denny Laine. The band used the same melody, and for the most part the same lyrics (but substituted ‘Birmingham’ for ‘Colorado’). The arrangement differed, though, as this was a loosely improvised live version, with violin and saxophones, that stays very much in the major scales of A, D and E, unlike its future bluesier brethren. It was the only band single; it charted #36 on the U.S. country charts and #86 in UK.
  • 1972 – An a cappella version appears on The Dillards‘ 1972 LP Roots and Branches.
  • 1972 – Some of the lyrics were used verbatim in the Rolling Stones song “Let It Loose” from the 1972 LP Exile on Main St.
  • 1993 – “Man of Constant Sorrow” was one of many songs recorded by Jerry Garcia, David Grisman, and Tony Rice one weekend in February 1993. Jerry’s taped copy of the session was later stolen by his pizza delivery man, eventually became an underground classic, and finally edited and released in 2000 as The Pizza Tapes.[citation needed] Jerry Garcia also sang an a cappella version on June 11, 1962, at the Jewish Community Center in San Carlos, California, with the Sleepy Hollow Hog Stompers.[citation needed] Though unreleased, it has been widely circulated among traders at least since the 1980s.[citation needed]
  • 2000 – Jackson Browne and Irish accordionist Sharon Shannon recorded their version of the song in 2000. It also appeared in Shannon’s album The Diamond Mountain Sessions.
  • 2000 – The song appears in the 2000 film O Brother, Where Art Thou?, under the title “I Am a Man of Constant Sorrow.” Performed by the fictitious Soggy Bottom Boys in the movie, it was recorded by Dan Tyminski, Harley Allen, and Pat Enright. It was a hit in the movie for the Soggy Bottom Boys and later became a hit single in real life. It received a CMA for “Single of the Year” and a Grammy for “Best Country Collaboration with Vocals” and it peaked at #35 on Billboard’s Hot Country Songs chart. Dan Tyminski performed this song at the Crossroads Guitar Festival with Ron Block and live with Alison Krauss. The version used in the film is closest in lyrics and singing style to Ralph Stanley’s.
  • 2000– The folk group Donna the Buffalo did a reggae-influenced cover on their album Positive Friction.
  • 2001 – A version entitled “Soul of Constant Sorrow” appears on the 2001 album Mountain Soul by country singer Patty Loveless.
  • 2003 – In 2003, musicians Skeewiff remixed “Man of Constant Sorrow.” The song was so popular in Australia that it featured at #96 in the Triple J’s hottest 100 songs of 2003. That same year, the O Brother Where Art Thou? version of the song ranked #20 in CMT’s 100 Greatest Songs in Country Music.
  • 2006 – Osaka Popstar recorded a punk rock cover of this song for their debut album Osaka Popstar and the American Legends of Punk.
  • 2007 – Canadian hard rock group Tin Foil Phoenix released it on their 2007 second album Age of Vipers as a bonus track.
  • 2009 – Norwegian all-girl pop band Katzenjammer covered the song briefly in their 2009 US tour.[citation needed]
  • 2011 – The John Hollenbeck Large Ensemble covered the song at the Newport Jazz Festival[6]
  • 2012 – The hard-rock band Charm City Devils released a video of their cover of the song on their YouTube channel.[7] The lyric video video was a montage of images and footage from old black and white movies over which were superimposed the song’s lyrics in an ornate but damaged font consistent with the band’s branding.
  • 2012 – The poet and rapper George Watsky released a cover/remix of the song on his YouTube channel.[8] The video shows similar themes to the film O Brother, Where Art Thou?. This version of the song adds hip-hop elements (such as Watsky’s rapping for the verse).