And another thing …
I keep meaning to mention that Thursday was William Stafford’s birthday. He was a wonderful poet, born in the town of Liberal, Kansas in 1914. He died in 1993 and has in the habit of writing a poem a day. On the day he died, his daily poem included the line: “‘You don’t have to be good,’ […]
Some Contests, Some Catch-Up
Well first off, the soccer news. The USWNT beat China 1-0 (and won the Four Nations Tournament) on a 2nd half goal by Shannon Boxx - an amazing header! Way to go Boxxy!
It sounds like the team had a tough first half and got a bit of a “talking to” from Pia (who by report didn’t look happy […]
-
Subscribe via Feed or E-Mail!
Now it's November
-
The Latest Numbers
B-ball, Other Sports, and Women’s Sports Blogs
Blogs We Like
Bookeaters' Blogs
Living Skillfully
News, Politics, the World
Soccer, etc.
- American Soccer News
- Beulah’s Site
- BigSoccer
- Boston Breakers
- Canadian Women’s National Team
- Damallsvenskan Newsblog
- Damallsvenskan Soapbox
- Fair Game Blog
- From a Left Wing
- NCAA Women’s Soccer Tournament
- Nike Soccer-USWNT
- Soccer Science
- Soccerblogs
- The Offside-WPS
- The Sideliner
- USA Women’s Soccer
- USSF Site - USWNT
- WNT Blog
- Women in Coaching
- WPS (Women’s Professional Soccer)
The Finer Things
Things to Check Out
Recent Comments
- truth: I too hear “Deutschland Uber Alles” whenever someone says Homeland Security. That would be change I can believe in, changing...
- Alice: I’m thinking of taking in “Frozen River” tonight (I think it’s 5:45) if you’re so inclined. Great to have you...
- JordanCornblog: It was the 11/5 game in Cincinnati that Hope missed. (http://www.ussoccer.com/artic les/viewArticle.jsp_11075584.h tml)...
- smellyt: icckkk. double aackk. what a great video you found– i think- or maybe not. i hope i can sleep tonight without my forearm throbbing...
- Alison: Thanks, Jordy, I appreciated learning about these fabulous photos. And yes, I can feel the air coursing back into my lungs. I came across...
- Ski: How is it that you can post with no Internet access? You are an amazing woman.
- CB: Dowd from the cold-blooded heart…..Frank Rich had a great column last Sunday. It Still Felt Good the Morning After Almost every...
Recent Trackbacks
- %3C%3Ca%20href%3D%22http%3A%2F%2Fwww.childrensgolfblog.org%2Fstore%22%3Egolf%20store%3C%2Fa%3E: ...
- Brazil: Extra time drama as Germany, Brazil, Japan, USA advance - Summary
- Bookmarks about Goal: - bookmarked by 2 members originally found by xfrancois on 2008-07-21 USWNT Beats Brazil 1-0 on...
- JordanCornblog: Soccer Sundries and a US Women's B-ball Preview
- Soccer News Aggregator: Happy B-day Arianna - Plus the Usual Soccer Stuff and Other Miscellany
-
Here's the Latest
-
Pages
Posts by Category
The Old Stuff
JordanCornblog Cloud of Tags
abby Australia Barack Beulah Brazil Breakers Bush Canada Carli Carli Lloyd CharlieHopbrew Clinton debate Dubya GOP Hillary HollyCornblog Huffington John McCain JordanCornblog McCain NH Norway NY Times Obama Oly Olympic olympics palin Phillies Pia Pia Sundhage President Red Sox Republican Sarah sarah palin soccer US USWNT Wambach wnt women's soccer WPS YouTube
-
Where We're From ...
-
Recently Seen at Red River
Religulous: Bill Maher skewers the rampant "illogic" of religion in this free-wheeling film. His wit is right on target and as barbed as you'd expect. I found myself squirming every once in awhile. I don't mind you picking on the Pope, Bill ... but same as with Michael Moore ... sometimes when you set up "common folks" to look like fools, I cringe. Still, Religulous is worth a look for sure. The best point Bill makes? That conservatives of a religulous bent are about finding answers - while liberals are about asking questions. I can go with that!
 Roman de gare: This was an intriguing, surprising, suspenseful, funny, quirky movie that I thoroughly enjoyed. The characters and plot lines are deftly developed. You should definitely check it out if you get the chance!
 Young at Heart: YOU HAVE TO SEE THIS MOVIE! It's a documentary about a choral group of octogenarians in Northampton, MA. Very inspiring ... definitely something to check out!
 Miss Pettigrew Lives for a Day: Enjoyable, light fare with a stellar performance by my favorite police chief, Frances McDormand!
 The Visitor: Now this was an excellent movie ... from start to finish. It was similar to Smart People in that it had an academic as the main character. However, all similarities ended pretty much right there. In this warm, funny, and wrenching movie, the characters are well and subtly developed, the plot is (unfortunately) believable ... and there are no false notes. I would urge you to see it - you won't be sorry!
 Smart People: Looks like we're getting back on track with our Tuesday night movie schedule ... for the time being. Smart People was enjoyable but left me unenthralled. (It probably didn't help that we ran into a totally enthralled movie-goer on the way in who was seeing it for the second time. High expectations may have killed this one for me.) Overall, I found the characters exaggerated and mildly unlikeable ... the dialogue stilted and self-conscious, perhaps just the way smart people talk. But then the lessons about loosening up and being less self-absorbed weren't exactly ground-breaking. Overall, it wasn't a wasted evening ... but not a movie I'll be putting at the top of my list, either.
 4 luni, 3 saptamani si 2 zile (4 Months, 3 Weeks and 2 Days): Winner of the Palm D'Or at Cannes, this film by Romania's Cristian Mungiu certainly deserves the accolades it receives. It's a realistic and emotionally unflinching story of a woman who helps her friend obtain an illegal abortion in 1987 Romania. The story is harrowing, the acting wonderful, and the cinematography amazing. This film makes Juno look like Disney pablum!
 Taxi to the Dark Side: This was a harrowing and eye-opening look at what our country has become under the leadership of Bush/Cheney after 9/11. The "road taken" has definitely been a trip to the dark side. Disgusting and important to see ... as we make our way back toward the light!
 Michael Clayton: What an excellent movie! Engaging, engrossing, well-acted. Tilda Swinton certainly deserved an award for her protrayal of what I have to think must be the secret, inner life of Condi Rice.
 Persepolis: This animated memoir is an engaging, heartbreaking, uplifting, realistic look at life in Iran during the Islamic Revolution. Go see it! It humanizes what our current regime so consistently tries to dehumanize. An important movie, Persepolis is based on the book by Marjane Satrapi.
 Margot at the Wedding: Dark, funny, tough to watch and very well acted.
 I'm Not There: Bob Dylan's not my favorite, but this was a fascinating movie to watch (albeit long) and since he wasn't there, I couldn't very well feel annoyed by him. Cate Blanchette was just amazing - and I loved the surreal, Fellini-esque feel of the Richard Gere parts.
 Atonement: Lush, compelling, painful - I especially loved Vanessa Redgrave's starkly powerful 5 minutes - and the Fellini-esque (can you tell I love Fellini?) flavor of the scenes of the evacuating troops on the beach - complete with ferris wheels - somehow depicting the disorienting horror of war in ways that blood and gore never could. Great movie!
 Juno: Well, I went to see it. I totally agree with my friends who found the clinic scene extremely misleading, off-base, and gratuitously negative in its depiction of the women's health movement and its workers. In an otherwise nice movie, this was a thoughtless lapse ... and I was sad to see so many women in Juno's age group in the theater (one of them actually pregnant) ... who'll be coming away with a false impression that could so seriously affect their lives!
 
The Savages: Wow, what a good movie! Philip Seymour Hoffman has had an amazing run this year between this, "Before the Devil Knows You're Dead," and that other movie with Tom Hanks ... the name of which is escaping me at the moment ... Charlie Somebody's War. Anyway - he and Laura Linney are just wonderful as siblings dealing with their aging/ailing father. Painful and real ... and set in gritty, wintry Buffalo ... in perfect contrast to Sun City. (The latter looks like a setting that would do David Lynch proud.) Check it out if you haven't seen it!
 
-
Search Here, There ... Everywhere!
-
The Nuts and Bolts
Latest Visitor Loactions
| Du Quoin, IL, USA | 8 |
| Mountain View, CA, USA | 7 |
| Acton, MA, USA | 3 |
| Merrimack, NH, USA | 3 |
| New York, NY, USA | 2 |
| Dover, MA, USA | 2 |
| Durham, NC, USA | 2 |
| Suncook, NH, USA | 1 |
| Warrington, The United Kingdom | 1 |
| Lewiston, ME, USA | 1 |
