Thursday, December 29, 2011

In-Flight Post: Costa Rica Bound!

Granted, by the time this post hits the internets we'll be on the ground, but the content was created in-flight!

Today's travel schedule took us from LAX, through Phoenix, and onto San Jose by way of US Airways.  Oddly enough, the aircraft we're on for this second leg originated at Ontario, CA, but LAX is just...and I have to put this in quotes, "More convenient."  Though the airport was pleasantly uncrowded this morning, and my only complaint was that the starbucks immediately past security in Terminal 1 was making sub-par drinks....I'll live.

My second Sky Harbor experience was quite nice, too.  Just a quick dog-leg through the terminal to our already awaiting plane, a quick stop for lunch @ the food court (they now charge for crappy airline food on flights, so may as well grab a burger), and onto the plane.

We scored exit row seats, too, so bonus leg room!

And now the sun has just set & we've got a little over an hour to Tico-Town....stoked!


Wednesday, December 28, 2011

NYE in Long Beach: Don't Say I Didn't Let You Know

Sure sure, I'll be in Costa Rica (Arenal to be more specific) for New Year's, but I couldn't help but share when I came across this little flyer for Saturday Night's activities in the heart of downtown LBC.  I've walked by this place dozens of times and am always intrigued by the look from Ocean Blvd.  Haven't actually been to Sip just yet, but based on the layout, ammenities, location, the online menu, and the below flyer, if I were in town, this is where you'd find me on Saturday night.  Anyone who goes, let me know what you thought of the event and venue; I'm gonna need some LBC haunts when we move down here!



Costa Rica: It's About to go Down!

Less than 24 hours to our Honeymoon trip to Costa Rica, and I can barely sit still.  Yes, I know, we waited several months to go on our Honeymoon but hey, that's just how the logistics worked out.

We're set for a 9 day, 8 night trip that will take us into San Jose, then to Alajuela province to stay at the northern base of Arenal, and finally to Puntarenas province to stay at Manuel Antonio-- and I've resloved to venture over to Jaco Beach for a looksey.

Lots to do, lots to share, so keep the feed rolling as I'll be blogging from Tico-Town for the next week!

Tuesday, December 20, 2011

Take Your Eye off the Throne: This is Laker-Town!

Last night, the highly re-tooled Lakers got a pre-season smack-down from the immensely upgraded Clippers.  I've heard the reactions, the lamentations on the Lakers and the growing expectations of a young Clipper team.  I've heard the assertions that the Clippers are now the best team in town, and that the Lakers have fallen off dramatically.

Please.

Did anyone not see the raw awesomeness that was Darrius Morris last night?  No, just me?  If Derek Fisher is to maximize his utility this year, it's going to be in taking this kid under his wing and teaching him how to run The Show.

Was nobody else impressed by some of the Josh McRoberts flashes of genius?  Feel free to disagree, and maybe I'm just making a Dukie comparison, but I put J McBob on the same "basketball intelligence" level as Grant Hill and Shane Battier.

I was distraught over the loss of my favorite Laker since Nick Van Exel.  I was so excited in the summer of 2004 that I barely noticed Shaq left (hyperbole, but you get my point)  Lamar left a huge hole that isn't easily filled on the Lakers roster, and in fact it's going to take two white boys to attempt the feat.  But if any duo could fill Lamar's shoes, J McBob and Troy Murphy are the two to make it happen.

Yes, Kobe looked old and slow.  Yes, Pau looked soft.  No, Andrew did not look in shape.  Yes, MWP looks worthless on the offensive side of the court.

This is pre-season, folks.

And yes, Chris Paul was magnificent last night, and DeAndre Jordan simply owned the paint.  Blake Griffin looked solid, and the Chauncy Billups pickup looks like a steal right now.

But to the highly trained basketball eye, what did you really notice with a view from the rafters?  The Clippers certainly will put up some SportsCenter highlights this year, because they are a talented, highly athletic team.  Teams like that win games when a) other teams get caught up and try to play like them. b) other teams forget to focus on defense c) other teams are both less athletic and less disciplined.  The Lakers were guilty of both b and c last night, and consequently had the table run on them.

But the intelligence of The Show's new 4's, the speedy PG we finally have in Darrius Morris, the strength of Bynum, the finesse of Pau, and the linchpin of the Mamba will not let us fans down.  True, the path to June is not as clear this year as it had been in years past, but let's not overreact before the games even count.

Ben Rosales (@brosales12), a contributor to the Silver Screen and Roll (SSR) blog probably had the best insight to adjustments regarding last night's game, other than Mike Brown's obvious assessment that the defense needs to be stepped up (don't worry, Mike, cohesion and discipline will fix that).  Ben beat me to the tweet, noting that Mike Brown should keep Pau at the high post as much as humanly possible this season, with Drew down low.  Methinks the high-low game will work well with the Lakers' lineup, and encourage more ball movement than the triangle did.

So yes, the Lakers got smacked last night.  It happens.  But the bandwagon is barely out of the garage and people are suiting up in their red and blue to jump on it.  Feel free, but I'm going to continue driving my purp-n-yellow double-dutch bus even if people hop off because the road ahead looks rough.

GO LAKERS!
I BELIEVE

Monday, December 19, 2011

Even Tim "Tebow's" for the Same Reason You Do!

....for the attention!
 
Am I the only one that sees what is horribly wrong with the below headline?
 

Packers, Tebow lose, but Colts win

 
Yeah, I'd hope 1 person taking on a team would lose.  Badly.
 
The whole Tebow-Mania thing is an absolute disaster, and evident of many things that are wrong with our society.  Sure, blame the media for the above headline and the egomania it proliferates in this country, but it all starts with Tim himself, and his ingenious but sacreligious marketing scheme.
 
People praise Tim Tebow for being a great player (good Sunday player, I''ll consider conceding), an inspiring leader, a model Christian, and I believe that the ladies find him easy on the eyes.  But what supposedly makes Tebow who he is, is the Christian interconnection that he brings to the table.  A southern boy with a wholesome heart.  Makes great TV, right?
 
The biggest reason that I can't stand Tim Tebow is that I don't believe him.  I think it's a ploy; it's a farse.  Tim Tebow has chosen the veil of Christianity as a marketing conduit to achieve attention.  To me, that's the most hypocritical action a person can take.
 
My moment of epiphany came a couple of weeks ago when both the Tebows Broncos and Packers won on last second field goals.  I couldn't put my finger on what turned me off so much about this supposedly good guy that everyone has been gushing over until I saw Tebow's reaction to a winning field goal vs. Aaron Rodgers' reaction.  And no, I'm not a huge Aaron Rodgers fan.  But Rodgers, just as you would expect any QB to do after the winning kick, jumped up, ran onto the field holding back a huge grin while giving a mini fist-pump, found his kicker and gave him the "atta boy" that he deserved.  Rodgers celebrated with his teammates for a moment, then went about shaking hands with his opponenets.  Tebow watched the kick go through in his signature stance (praying for a camera shot, no doubt), bowed his head quickly as the ball went through the uprights, then hopped to his feet and headed over to hug....coach?  Yeah, I'm pretty sure that was the QB coach he hugged after that nail-biter of a game they just one.  Comradarie?  Lost on you, Tim?
 
I'll continue to give the guy opportunities to suprise me and change my view of him, but if this is truly who Tebow is, this arrogant individual is not worthy of being the NFL's posterboy any more than Ochocinco.

Shopping Local: LA's Santee Alley

In the spirit of supporting the 99% this Christmas season, and with the mantra of shopping locally, I decided (as I do every year) to head on down to Santee Alley in LA's Fashion District (12th, between Los Angeles St. and Maple will put you in the heart of it all) to do some of my Christmas shopping.

This place is fantastic.  It doesn't matter what you're looking for, and it's actually better to head down there without an agenda, because you come across some gems when cruising the Alley.  Be it fragrances, t-shirts and athletic wear, suits, shoes (my God, the shoes), watches and other Jewlrey, gadgets, toys, $5 sunglasses (a staple of mine), luggage, handbags, hats, and oh, the Food!

I was able to avoid the bacon-wrapped hot dogs this go-around, but that's an anomally.  And of course I found a Christmas present for my nephew before heading home.  If you've still got some shopping to do, definitely come on down to Santee Alley!

Here's some pics from the Alley and the Fashion District...


 




Thursday, December 15, 2011

Obligatory Windpocolypse Post

Since Southern California is again receiving High Wind Warnings and advisories, and thunderstorms have been brewing this afternoon (check that-- IT'S HAILING IN LONG BEACH), I thought I'd give a quick nod to the "Wind-pocolypse" of two weeks ago.

On December 1st, stories ran throughout the country covering the massive wind damage and power-outages across the LA area, and in particular the San Gabriel Valley.  Pasadena, Altadena, and Arcadia were the hardest-hit communities, with my wife having to work with no power on both Thursday and Friday, and my in-laws without power to their home for nearly a week.  In addition to that, there wasn't a street even in Glendale that didn't have this chilling somewhere along the path....



Not to mention the game of "find the traffic signal" that so many people seemed to suck at, and blow right through the powerless intersections.  It took Glendale DPW a solid 5 days just to get this guy completely out of the way, though it seemed that by Saturday morning, most all of the major limbs and branches had been cleared out of the main roadway and off to the parking areas and sidewalks.  Definitley more destruction that I would have thought, but hold on tight, because it looks/feels/sounds like we've got some more interesting weather headed our way!

Costa Rica Count-Down Clock Ticks Under Two Weeks!

My wife and I are going on our long-overdue Honeymoon exactly 2 weeks from today.  Flying in to beautiful San Jose, Costa Rica, then off to Arenal for 4 days, and later to Manuel Antonio for another 4 days.  The excitement is mounting; I've never been out of the country for New Year's!  We're definitely going canopy-gliding, and I'm sure some snorkeling is in order, perhaps even a hike on the volcano.

But one of the things I've noticed most since telling people we're going to Costa Rica for our Honeymoon, is how many people have been or know people who have been!  It seems as though this is going to be one great trip, but does anyone have any activity suggestions to fill some of the rest of our time there?  Other than the obvious Honeymoon obligatories, of course!

Coming Unglued: This isn't the 1987 Lakers

I've tried my best over the past week to keep quiet, projectile retweets notwithstanding.  I've tried to withold judgement on the status of the Lakers' shortened free-agent season, but as much as Magic Johnson has been urging us all to keep patient and have faith in the Lakers' front office, I think I've run out of mine at this point.

It's enough that the rumors of a blockbuster Chris Paul-to-LA trade leaked to the media and consequently all NBA fans, creating a huge frenzy, let alone the spin put on the failed negotiations that the League office vetoed the trade at the behest of crying owners such as Cuban and Gilbert.

But to add to the failed CP3 trade, letting Lamar Odom go for nothing?  I'm sorry, but a draft pick is useless to a team like the Lakers.  And to let him go to Dallas, who swept us out of the playoffs last year, and whose owner cried at the mere mention of Paul going to the Lakers, was just wrong.  I've waited for the other shoe to drop, waited for the larger picture to come into focus, but nothing has changed.  The Lakers dropped their best all-around player out of fear, and got nothing in return.  Dr.  Buss wouldn't let this happen, if he was in good health.

Then, to replace the sixth man of the year, one of the most versatile players of this generation, with Josh McRoberts?  Really?  Hey Mitch/Jimmy, WE STILL NEED A SPEEDY POINT GUARD WHO CAN PLAY DEFENSE!  Josh Mc Roberts.  Come on!  This move rivals the multi-year contract gifted to Luke Walton a few years back, as far as bad business decisions go.

This current Lakers squad is nothing like the 1987 squad that people thought was over-the-hill.  Kareem was still better than Pau and Bynum combined at age 38; let's not forget that this man is arguably the best big man of all time, and holds the NBA career scoring record.  And in 1987, Magic Johnson was in the prime of his career, aided by James Worthy and all-defensive team perennial Michael Cooper.  Please, when you think of how stacked the 1987 Lakers were, it makes you want to find those nay-sayers from 25 years ago and heckle them all over again.  But this 2012 squad is truly aging and fragile, and in need of some serious re-tooling.

But now that Chris Paul has officially been traded to the Clips, and Dwight Howard is seemingly off the market, the big moves that the Lakers were supposed to make this offseason seem like nothing more than big dreams.  This time last week, CP3 and Superman were coming to play for the greatest franchise in the NBA; this week that same franchise is setting up for implosion in this lockout-shortened season.

But hey, maybe this means tickets on Stubhub will be cheap and I can get to a few more games this year!  There's always a silver lining, right?

Tuesday, December 13, 2011

Playing With Matches: My Thoughts on Bullying

Last week I took to Facebook after seemingly being inundated with news stories, commercials, and television episodes all touching on the topic of bullying.  Yes, bullying is both ethically and morally wrong, and is most definitely an unpleasant test of character to whomever is the target of a bully's outburst.  But I found it curious that all of the advertising and 'awareness' forces seemed to align over the past few weeks to make it a topic-du-jour; one that was staring me in the face each day.

Whenever an interpersonal conflict manifests itself, we have two choices in how to approach resolution: We can externally seek to influence the behavior of those we are in conflict with through direct confrontation, or we can internally reflect, take time to understand, rise above, and allow the conflict to resolve itself through our own personal growth.

The psychology of a bully has been, and will always be the same.  A bully is born of personal insecurity and self-loathing.  A bully needs attention.  A bully is so unhappy with their own life situation that they resort to acting out and bringing other down with them.  A bully targets someone who 'threatens' them in some way.  A bully actually begs for pity and sympathy through their action.

Now, let's clarify that physical violence transcends from bullying to assault, and demands immediate intervention.  When the name-calling devolves to pushing and shoving from a bully, it becomes abuse and must be stopped and dealt with on a higher level.

When it comes to the psychological torture imposed by bullies, it is true that advancements in technologies have made it easier for acts of bullying to be carried out.  Not only that, but technology can provide a layer of anonymity and can be far reaching, proliferating a bullied message once it begins.  But the message of the bully is still the same: Pay attention to me!

It's been brought to my attention that it is inappropriate to draw on my own personal experiences of bullying, as though getting bullied today is so different, and I cannot possibly empathize or imagine what it's like in someone else's shoes, even though I've been there.  True, technology wasn't a factor while I was growing up, but the psychology of the situation is the same as it has ever been.  But alas, I will refrain from drawing on my own experiences in demonstrating my thoughts on the current pop-culture message on the subject.

Continuing on that line of thinking, I suppose that invoking some of the following basic philosophies taught while I was growing up are also inappropriate: "Sticks and stones will break my bones, but names will never hurt me," "If you can't say something nice, don't say anything at all," "Don't let someone who's not worth your time get the best of you," "Be the bigger person and walk away," etc, etc.

But what about philosophies we as a society have been taught for 2000 years?  What about turning the other cheek?  What about forgiving someone who has wronged you seventy-times seven times?  What about the Golden Rule?  What about forgiving those who know not what they do?  See, these teachings are not easy to always follow, but are teachings that truly help an individual to develop fortitude and a solid sense of person.

And perhaps the teachings of Jesus Christ are most applicable to the bullying arena.  We're taught that Jesus loves us no matter what, and that through all trials, we must have faith, be strong, and forgive those who do us wrong.  We are challenged to leave selfish desires aside and to instead look to the needs of those around us.

What is absent from those teachings is the "Woe is me," approach that society today seems to be taking with the current anti-bullying campaigns.  Yes, it is up to authority figures to "Stomp out Bullying," but Demi Lovato's PSA comes off as just whiny.  I feel that our society enjoys shining lights on topics such as this to deliver the message: Feel Sorry for These People.

Even more simply, campaigns such as this are about loudly fighting against an injustice.  They are double-anti campaigns: against something that is "bad".  The limit to the positive message that can be delivered is simply that the "bad" thing is ended, and the level of sensationalism introduced by these campaigns makes one wonder what would happen if the creativity used in these campaigns were put to actual, productive use.

But what about a double-positive campaign: Being pro something "good."  Instead of anti-bullying, how about promotion of self?  How about a campaign that promotes bringing people together?  Wouldn't that not only leave the bully on the outside of the social circle, but also create a safe social environment?  What about reinforcing that words are just that: words.  Yes they can be emotionally painful, but at the end of the day, a bully's words do not prevent you from snuggling with your kitty, enjoying a movie with your family, or going about your day.  Words only get in the way if you let them.

So yes, while bullying is wrong, and while pop-culture spotlights the number of suicides related to bullying, I loudly roll my eyes as far back in my head as possible when continuing to come across these campaigns.  Why?  Because to quash the effects of bullying, it's up to the "victim" to develop the proper tools to deal with the situation.

Bullying is a fact of life.  Some people even view being bullied as a rite of passage.  So why not teach people how to handle it, rather than to just say that it's wrong and needs to be stopped?