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June 4, 2006 - June 10, 2006 Archives

June 4, 2006

TONIGHT'S "SOPRANOS": HO HO HO, HOS

All that hype for the "last episode of the season" (actually the middle episode of a season HBO greedily split in two) and we get a Soprano Family Christmas? You gotta be kiddin' me.

The episode set up fireworks that never came, except for an explosion that didn't kill Phil Leotardo. Christopher slept with, and did heroin with, Tony's unconsummated real estate slut, but Tony didn't whack him when he found out. The proposed Tony-Phil/Sack truce fell apart, but nothing happened except Phil ended up in the hospital with a heart attack. A.J. brought a Latina single mother home as his date for Christmas at mom and dad's house and bought her an expensive piece of jewelry- at the mall!- and Tony didn't get pissed off. The only Tony moment came with Dr. Useless, when he complained about Christopher and mused about his own screwed-up attraction to classy broads, but it led to nothing. Even a scene with Uncle Forgotten and Bobby Bacala was a throwaway. Oh, and Tony was worried that Carm would hire a private eye to look for Adriana (whose mom lay in the hospital after self-inflicted wrist-slashing), so he had Silvio take care of the inspectors so that house she was building would be on again and she'd have something to do. Problem solved.

One future problem: the FBI agent tipped Tony that they'd heard the Sheepshead Bay guys talking about revenge against him. Just a heads-up. And now, if they DON'T whack Tony in the final eight episodes, it'll be yet another plot point that went nowhere. I didn't think I'd WANT to see Tony get it, but, hey, you hint it, you have to deliver it.

And it was all wrapped up in Thanksgiving and Christmas family gatherings. How very King Family.

On the other hand, at least the Vito story's over. Poor Johnnycakes. And we have until January to imagine colorful ways that Tony might get hit. Paulie Walnuts, with the lead pipe, in the Pork Store? Phil Leotardo, with the candlestick, in the Bada Bing? The feds, with the revolver, in the North Caldwell McMansion? We'll have to wait.

At least we'll have Johnny Drama to keep us company.


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June 5, 2006

LATE NIGHT RANDOM

Random late-night thoughts:

1. To the guy who squeezed the water out of his bathing suit onto my towel in the Torrance Y shower room today, thinking it was his- pay attention to where you put your towel, moron. Offer to go down to the first floor and get a fresh towel for the guy whose towel you just doused. And switching to Japanese and feigning inability to speak English doesn't wash when you appear to understand what people are yelling at you. Geez.

2. 6-6-06 is meaningless except as a stupid marketing ploy for a needless movie remake. They were skywriting it over Hollywood when I arrived at the ballpark tonight- guys, it's cheesy. Maybe it'll make a fortune- probably will- but it's way cheesy. Please, let us hear no more of this.

3. My World Cup pool teams: Argentina, Portugal, Croatia, Ghana. Not too bad. 'Course, now that I have them, they'll disappoint. (Not that Ghana has much disappointment room, but the other three... And now you know what some folks do in a baseball press box while the Mets are pounding Brett Tomko)

Enough for tonight.


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June 6, 2006

TRAVEL TIP

Travel tip: Don't.

Gotta pack, got work still to do before leaving, way too busy. Talk to you tomorrow.


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June 7, 2006

SLEEPING IN THE CITY THAT NEVER SLEEPS

Another interminably long day, mostly involving travel. Up at 3:45, out the door by 4:30, airport by 5, flight at 7, landed at 3:30 Eastern, then an almost two hour cab ride to Manhattan and I'm worn out. Hate to lose a whole day like this, but that's how it works out. (The red eye is not an option- I did that to Florida for a while and it was worse) At least JetBlue has TV, but after the endless cycle of SportsCenter repeats and a whole bunch o' "Password" and "$10,000. Pyramid," your mind turns to Jell-O.

Which is what my mind is now. So I'm turning in. Remember, convention coverage starts Friday. I bet you already kinda know what I'm gonna write about that. (See last year's entries)


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June 8, 2006

THIS WEEK'S "THE LETTER FROM ALL ACCESS NEWS-TALK-SPORTS": LEARNING FROM ALLEN LUDDEN

Almost forgot to post this week's All Access "The Letter" weekly newsletter, and since the text version got screwed up, there's actually a good reason other than sheer laziness to do so. So...:

This week: learning from Allen Ludden, with a special guest appearance by Bert Convy.

I spent most of Wednesday flying across the country, and it took me almost as long to make it from JFK to Manhattan as it did from Long Beach to JFK. In that time, I learned three valuable lessons. Those were:

1. Simple is better.

2. The Church of the Open Door in Brooklyn appears to keep all of its doors closed.

3. When you look at the weather report for your destination and it says "rain, heavy at times," you might want to consider packing a raincoat. Might be advisable, 's all I'm sayin'. Would have been a good idea had I thought of it in California rather than on the plane.

For purposes of talk radio, though, Lesson 1 is the important one. And that's where Allen Ludden comes in. JetBlue offers TV to its passengers, and that's great, except that whenever I fly, it happens to correspond with when TV is at its worst, daytime. I always fly when ESPN replays the same SportsCenter over and over and over and over and over until you can do the commentary verbatim, right along with the anchors. How many times can you watch the same exact highlight reel of Ortiz' homer, then Bernie Williams' homer, then that Melky Cabrera catch to rob Manny of a homer? Maybe it's better if you're a Yankee fan. But I always end up watching channels I'd never otherwise watch, in this case GSN, the erstwhile Game Show Network, which was, on Wednesday, in full "Password" mode.

You remember "Password." Everyone remembers "Password." It was on for a long time, in several different variations, mostly hosted by Allen Ludden, but the basics were always the same: you give one-word clues to try and get your partner to guess the "password." Simple. "The password is... cheese." "Cheddar..." "Cheese!" Anyone can play. A Martian could watch it for 30 seconds and figure out the rules. Game show perfection, and it lasted for decades. On the flight, I watched "Password Plus" and "Super Password" (with Bert Convy!) all the way through and played along, and it was reasonably entertaining.

And then they had some other game shows, one old one with Bill Cullen where you had to answer questions and they corresponded to a grid of octagonal squares and I couldn't quite figure out what the object was, so I switched away. And there was a newer one with Chuck Woolery that involved, well, I have no idea what that was- there were contestants and some sort of grid board with lights, but I couldn't understand the rules at all, so I didn't watch. "Jeopardy?" Yeah, watched that- answer in the form of a question, simple. I noticed that if it took me more than a few seconds to grasp how to play the game, I was gone. If I could figure it out immediately, I stayed.

That goes for talk radio topics, too. Recently, I was listening to a talk show and the host took an entire segment explaining a story in the news and the many aspects of it that could be debated, and after 15 minutes, I still couldn't figure out exactly what he was going for. If I was an average listener, I'd have been gone within a minute, maybe less. Getting to the point fast is important, but you gotta make the point easy to grasp, too. And that's the "Password" lesson: when someone tunes in at any time, whether it's the beginning of the show or halfway through a call, make it easy for that new listener to understand what the heck you're talking about. If the topic can't be boiled down to one or two simple phrases or points, a lot of people will move on to see what's on other stations.

Do I have a lot of scientific research to back that up? Nah. But I've done enough talk radio to know that it's true- the simpler and easier to grasp you make your premise, and the more you repeat that so new listeners don't have to wait to figure out what's going on, the more likely they'll stick around. But don't take my word for it- just ask Allen Ludden. (I know, I know, you can't ask him anymore, but you get the idea)

And, yes, I know, I just wrote a ton of words to make the point that you shouldn't take too many words to get to the point. At least I'm not doing a radio show.

For those of you who DO have a radio show, it's time for the weekly plug for All Access News-Talk-Sports and the Talk Topics show prep column, where you can find lots of stuff to talk about. This week so far, you'll find out why someone who found a frog in her salad ISN'T suing, you'll hear what the controversy is about Budweiser at the World Cup, you'll join the debate over teaching "character" in schools, you'll discover to what extremes people are now going to keep their job prospects bright, you'll learn why some people will pay $7,000. for a cat, you'll get up to date with the latest reason not to move to South Florida (as if gators and hurricanes and the Marlins weren't enough), you'll finally get the answer to who'd win a fight between a deer and a pit bull, you'll find out why some students' grades depend on how long they can, er, hold it in, and you'll collect several entertaining teacher-student sex scandal stories. Plus a story about Boudreaux' Butt Paste. And items and comments and links about "real" news stories like terrorism and the elections and that kind of stuff. All that plus "10 Questions With..." KHTK/Sacramento night host Carmichael Dave and the Talent Toolkit with three sites about dear old Dad, and the rest of All Access with lots of industry news and columns and the Industry Directory and stuff that will help you do your job better (and job listings, if you're looking for someplace new to do that better job).

Next week: I have no idea. Maybe something will happen at this weekend's convention. Or maybe I'll just dash off something stupid at the last minute as usual. Bet on the latter.


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June 9, 2006

CONTROL YOUR DISAPPOINTMENT

I had a late night tonight at the talk radio convention. There was beer involved. I saw a lot of friends and nice people, many of whom noted that they read this thing, and I hate to disappoint them by dashing off a note saying I don't have the time or remaining active brain cells to write much more than this tonight, but, well, I don't have the time or remaining active brain cells to write much more than this tonight.

I think sleep would be the appropriate next step. It's pretty much all I'm capable of accomplishing at the moment.


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June 10, 2006

I WANT TO BE A PART OF IT... OR MAYBE NOT

It was a breezy evening, the wind almost stiff coming off the Hudson, and the baseball field a block or so northwest of Ground Zero was buzzing as a team of pint-sized Phillies battled a kiddie A's squad. I watched for a few minutes, then walked to dinner along West Broadway up to Soho, browsing the shop windows and checking out the hipsters dining and drinking at any number of busy restaurants and bars. The sun was still out but casting long shadows across the street; the sidewalks were teeming with young people. A palpable buzz filled the air. All evening- a busy, trendy restaurant, a very cool little dessert place on a side street in the West Village, ducking into a great magazine store for a few minutes of browsing, even the E train back downtown- it felt comfortable, familiar, right to be in New York.

Once in a while, I imagine myself coming back east. Manhattan can do that to you on a night like this, when you feel more alive as part of the greatest city in the world.

And then I remember where I live now, and the New York state of mind passes. But for a few minutes tonight, it felt good to be back. Glad I got that out of my system. I'm ready to go home now.


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About June 2006

This page contains all entries posted to PMSimon.com in June 2006. They are listed from oldest to newest.

May 28, 2006 - June 3, 2006 is the previous archive.

June 11, 2006 - June 17, 2006 is the next archive.

Many more can be found on the main index page or by looking through the archives.

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