Saturday, March 6, 2010

The Greatest Hits of All Time

When I was very young, I loved Oldies radio. Specifically, I loved WTRG, Oldies 100.7. I remember sitting in the back of our Ford Taurus station wagon, facing backwards, singing along to The McCoys or The Turtles, Manfred Mann or The Hollies, The Mamas and the Papas or The Chiffons. Those were good times.

Looking back, I loved Oldies radio like I loved my parents. I wasn’t too cool for Petula Clark, and I didn’t mind grocery shopping with my mom. I didn’t mind singing ‘Surfer Girl’ with my dad on the way to see his parents in Farmville.

Then, something happened. I guess it was around the time I turned 13. I had my own Sony boombox, and I stayed up late listening to G105, hoping to hear Jamie Walters ask ‘How Do You Talk To An Angel’ or something from Robin S.

At the same time, Mom and Dad weren’t cool anymore. In fact, I’d started to resent them. They hadn’t changed; I had. The radio station in the car stayed tuned to WTRG, but I tuned out, preferring my Walkman and the mix tapes I’d recorded off of other stations. At home, while my younger brother would be downstairs baking cookies with Mom, I’d be shut away in my room, composing my latest manifesto.

It’s a natural part of growing up, this inevitable distance we put between ourselves and our parents during adolescence. We reject them and everything we associate with them. Those songs we used to tap our feet to? Our parents’ songs. We try to find our own way, determined to be anything but our parents.

In time, we need our parents. A year or two into college, and we realize how much it is that we need them, both emotionally and financially. We start going through some very adult experiences, and the best adults we know are at home.

At some point, we mature enough to give those old songs a listen again. And like our parents, they’ve been there for us all along.

Oldies radio grew in popularity in the late 1970s when people realized disco sucked. Prior to that, it was rare for a radio station to play anything more than three or four years old. So, disco comes along and sucks, and people want to go back to the music that they loved. And it was great music.

But everyone has to go through an evolution, much like radio did back then. For a while, we distract ourselves with our Ace of Base or Soundgarden, our Stone Temple Pilots or Alice in Chains. Some of that music is great. Some of it is not. And I don’t believe everything recorded prior to 1970 is fantastic, either. But there is a reason that the great music endures.

One time, my dad and I walked up to the counter at Camelot Music in Berkeley Mall in Goldsboro. A Ray Charles song was playing over the store’s PA. Dad asked the young woman at the counter, “Why don’t they make music like this anymore?” She suggested he might like D’Angelo. He didn’t.
Over the years, my dad has been an early adopter of technology. I was in third grade when he bought the family’s first CD player. He let Jason and I each pick out a CD at Camelot, and I went with New Kids On The Block’s Hangin’ Tough. Jason chose the soundtrack to The Wizard of Oz. Guess which one is on my iPod? A few years after that, Dad bought one of the first CD car adapters, and we hooked it up in Aunt Babe’s old Thunderbird on the way to a Boy Scout camping trip. When we figured it out, Dad was thrilled to have Patsy Cline come through his car stereo. I wasn’t ‘Crazy’ about Patsy then, but it was a neat moment when the first strains of that song began.

In my middle years of high school, I began to listen to punk rock. Not scream-your-lungs-out punk rock, but something that was teetering on the early edge of the emo explosion. Blink-182, MxPx . . . that stuff. Fine, and still fun to go back and listen to on occasion. Then I went through a classic rock stage, something I’m still thankful for. Incidentally, as we get decades away from the 1970s, classic rock and Oldies have started to bleed together on the airwaves. That’s probably, OK, but despite what Wikipedia says, they are not the same thing, and the people of my parents’ generation will tell you that.

But the Oldies were always there, always in the background. I couldn’t get away from the Four Tops, and I soon found myself not wanting to.

Just after college, I began to work as a bank teller at the front of a grocery store. The music they played over the PA grated on my nerves. It wasn’t Oldies, and it wasn’t Classic Rock; it was Soft Rock. It was stuff like Kenny G and Whitney Houston and REO Speedwagon and early Mariah Carey. In other words, it was mostly crap.

Looking back, I’m sure the music played at that grocery store was specifically chosen so that people would buy more produce or something. But for someone ostensibly trying to sell checking accounts, it was debilitating. So much so that on one particularly nauseating morning, I wrote down every single song and artist that I heard. Forty-three of them. That wasn’t a good use of my time, my manager informed me.

Our only saving grace was a small portable radio another employee brought in. And the only station we could get clearly was WTRG. It was a throwback to my younger days, and I realized there’s a reason those songs have endured. They’ve always been there for me.

Ron McKay had an afternoon show, ‘Live from the Big Chill Bar and Grill,’ and he’d play requests. Each time he’d come back from a song, the people in the restaurant would hoot, holler and applaud. Every once in a while, I’d call in and request ‘Going to a Go-Go’ by Smokey Robinson and the Miracles, and he’d oblige. I found out that catalogs at Oldies stations are not deep, and a song like ‘Going to a Go-Go’ would only be played upon request. You’d think you were hearing ‘Going to a Go-Go,’ but it would actually be ‘I’ll Be Doggone,’ which, while a fine song by Marvin Gaye (incidentally co-written by Smokey Robinson with backing vocals by The Miracles), is no ‘Going to a Go-Go.’

By playing the Oldies against the crap pumped out over the supermarket aisles, I fell back in love with the songs that taught me what music was in the first place. It was about that time I swallowed my pride, admitted I hated the bank and moved back in with my parents, who welcomed me with open arms.

I didn’t know it then, but WTRG was dying. That fall, it became ‘The New River’ WRVA, and started playing the exact same songs I’d hated in the grocery store. Two years later, my Classic Rock station, WRDU, would become ‘Rooster Country.’ The only place we could hear any good music anymore was in our own collections. And the only place we could find the people who loved us unconditionally was in our childhood homes. Our own ‘Greatest Hits,’ so to speak.

There never was a ‘Big Chill Bar and Grill,’ where people clapped and applauded and sang along to ‘California Dreamin.’ I took for granted that such a place existed, and I would find it. As far as I knew, this bar and grill was somewhere in Raleigh, playing the greatest songs ever recorded. Was I naive? Sure. But was it too much to ask that there was such a place, and not just a lonely man in a radio booth, spinning CDs and pushing the ‘applause’ button?

There never was a ‘Big Chill Bar and Grill,’ but there should have been. Until there is one, we’ll enjoy our own CDs or mp3s, playing back the Oldies. And when we do, we’ll think of the people who first played those songs for us. Sometimes, it's OK to look back. Especially in that rear-facing back seat of a white Ford Taurus station wagon.

Thursday, January 3, 2008

The NHL seizes a 'Classic' opportunity

Did you catch any of the NHL's Winter Classic on Tuesday? Busy watching college bowl games? If so, then you missed out on a treat. By now, you've heard about the game between the Buffalo Sabres and Pittsburgh Penguins outdoors at Ralph Wilson Stadium. Amid the revelry of New Year's Day, the Tournament of Roses parade and bowl games, there was that little contest in the fourth-most popular sports league in North America. And it was fantastic.

It snowed for most of the first period. The teams changed ends in the middle of the third period and overtime to equalize any wind advantage. There were several delays to fix ice problems. But it was fantastic. The Penguins scored less than 30 seconds into the game, and the Sabres tied it up in the second period. That was it for the scoring in regulation. A scoreless overtime forced the game's biggest showcase to end with the most exciting finish in sports: a shootout. And who else but Sidney Crosby ('Sid the Kid,' 'The Next One) should score the game-winner in the shootout. It was cold. It was snowy. It was hard to follow the erratic puck at times. But it was hockey. And it was a blast.

At a time when the other three major sports leagues in the country are facing scandals (NFL- Spygate and concussion problems; NBA - Donaghy and officiating, and just plain boring; and MLB - Steroids and HGH), the NHL put on a show that could propel it back to where it was pre-lockout. If only ESPN would stop bashing the league, and if only the league would make smarter business decisions, it could crawl back in to the American sports fan's consciousness. Tuesday's game won't do any of that right away, but it's a start.


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Tuesday, July 10, 2007

Barry at the Bay

My 'Sport in Film & Fiction' class was given an assignment to write a poem in the style of 'Casey at the Bat.' Here's what I came up with (it's six stanzas longer than the original).

Barry at the Bay
by Turner Walston

The outlook wasn’t brilliant for the Giants’ nine that day,
but no one knew the score (or cared) on the field of play.
Some fans, they booed. Some fans, they cheered. But they all stood in place
for a crusty old leftfielder well off the playoff pace.

A few signs went up in the crowd: “Steroids,” “Cheat,” they read.
The batter didn’t see them – he was focusing instead.
He knew they loved and hated him, he cared not anymore.
The home run total by his name read ‘Seven-fifty-four.”

The Commissioner, he was not there, and nor was Hammerin’ Hank
(the man whose claim to destiny would soon fall in the tank).
But Aaron had no asterisk next to his regal name,
for he’d done it the right way – he’d played an honest game.

No matter to our batter though, he was quite sure of that.
The record would be broken here tonight, in this at bat.
The pitcher was a late call-up. He shook there in his cleats.
He knew the batter’s résumé, his records and his feats.

The catcher gave his mate a sign. The rook nodded his head,
stepped slowly off the rubber, nervous, filled with dread.
The pitch cut through the summer air. It seemed to hang all day.
But “ball” bellowed the umpire – it was low and away.

The hitter stepped out of the box. He looked far down the line,
and thoughts about his legacy he let enter his mind.
How was it they’d remember him? A statute? Medal? Plaque?
He stepped back in – he would know soon, with one more lethal whack.

The pitcher nodded once again. “Fastball,” he thought. “High.”
And despite his reluctance to throw that to this guy,
He sent the heater on its way – delivered in the zone.
It should have hit McCovey Cove (with help from growth hormone).

But it wasn’t to his liking, the batter seemed to think.
He didn’t have to put just anything into the drink.
The umpire hollered “Strike one,” and so the count was even.
The fans of course were on their feet, and none of them were leaving.

The batter thought again about the sum of his career,
but not his growing hat size or his now-bulging rear.
He’d earned fame and stardom and a private place to dress.
He could be rude to fans now, his teammates and the press.

And yet still they followed him, and his quest for the mark.
The network’s Pedro Gomez seemed to live at the park.
The slugger had enough locker room for both he and his ego,
where he could ask “Why hate me? Because I am a negro?”

Long ago in Pittsburgh he’d been a lithe outfielder.
He’d won a couple of Gold Gloves. He was a good base-stealer.
But then one day he realized – the stars, they were the sluggers.
It didn’t quite come naturally, so he became a drugger.

So what, it was against the rules? The rules? Apply to him?
And everyone was doing it – the needles at the gym.
And so he signed in Frisco – became a burly ox.
No one asked about doping – they were asking ‘bout his knocks.

The cream, the clear, the insulin, the human growth hormone.
Clomid, Deca-Durabolin and testosterone.
Giants brass looked the other way. He was their star, you see.
He’d never tested positive, it was “allegedly.”

He snapped back to the present and his feet dug in the dirt.
His muscles bulged against the sleeves of his size 52 shirt.
He waited for the kid to pitch, to get ahold of one,
to send a record-tying ball high into the sun.

But this ball, when delivered to the catcher, got away.
It bounced against the backstop as the umpire halted play.
The batter scowled and shook his head. He stepped back from the plate.
The kayakers and boaters in the Bay would have to wait.

The next pitch, it broke late. The rook had had some nerve!
He’d baffled the veteran with a risky hanging curve.
The batter swung and missed! At 43, he had been flummoxed!
What was it that confused him? The injections in his buttocks?

A third ball bounced up off the plate. The catcher gave a hop.
The count was full for the slugger to give the ball a pop.
The pitcher got the signal. He found the perfect grip.
The windup – the delivery – roared back and let it rip.

The batter saw it coming. A ball high – it was simple.
He turned his head and closed his eyes. The ball glanced off his temple.
The Giant fell and hit the dirt. The ump said, “Take your base.”
The trainer rushed the batter’s box and saw a blinking face.

The crowd simply fell silent. No, not a word was spoken.
For both the player’s helmet and his career were broken.
The next day on the radio, they couldn’t help but talk.
If his head hadn’t grown so much, it would have only been a walk.



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Wednesday, March 7, 2007

Lindsey Hunter!?

So, Lindsey Hunter was suspended 10 games for testing positive for a banned substance. Lindsey Hunter!? Lindsey's a little guy!

My first reaction was that Lindsey Hunter was the last person in the NBA I would expect to test positive for a banned substance. Then I read this article. Hunter tested positive for phentermine, which is used primarily for weight loss. Hunter said the pill belonged to his wife.

"We do that at our house -- if I've got a head cold, I might grab one of her pills," he said. "It was just a bonehead mistake on my part."

The boneheaded mistake, besides this quote, was apparently grabbing a diet pill for a head cold. The boneheaded mistake will cost Hunter $202,000 in game salaries. Sheesh.

Side point: if you're a professional athlete, and your livelihood depends on your game eligibility, how can you not know what is and isn't banned by your league? Are you so busy practicing and playing games that you can't read a label? Seems like I'd be intimately familiar with what I could and couldn't put in my body, if messing up might cost me six figures.

Tuesday, March 6, 2007

Boo to a booing ban

The organization that oversees scholastic sports in the state of Washington is considering banning booing at high school games. I can understand disciplining someone for offensive chants or language, but simply booing?

"They're student-athletes," they'll say. "They don't deserve to hear that."

Maybe. But maybe sometimes they need to hear it.

This is another step in the sissification of our society. Kids can't know adversity, it seems. We have to eliminate it for them. They can't know disappointment. We have to eliminate all roadblocks. Let's not keep score. Let's not allow fans to voice their displeasure.

What happens to that athlete after he graduates? There is booing in the real world. The restaurant doesn't get your order right? Boo. Someone cuts you off in traffic? Boo. You don't get the first job you apply for? Boo.

But what happens to those that have known no disappointment? Are they a loser because the world doesn't revolve around them? No. But what are we teaching them if we've already eliminated every challenge they might face?

If you do everything for them, they come to expect that. Then, when they're 18 and don't get accepted to their first college choice, or 22 and don't get the first job they want, they won't understand what that's like. And what value does success have if it's all they've ever known?

So we need to hear the boos, because only then will we understand how good the cheers sound.

Monday, March 5, 2007

Blood Feud between Duke and North Carolina

The Tar Heels are the #1 national sports story today, so I'm comfortable re-posting my HeelsBlog entry from earlier today.

Obviously, Adam Lucas has the access that the rest of us don't, and he captures the essence of the Tar Heel emotions in yesterday's piece.

Billy Packer is a psychic. A clairvoyant. A mind-reader. I didn't get to hear him (sad, I know) on television because I was at the game, but I've had several opportunities to listen to his thoughts on the Henderson-Hansbrough incident. Let's review them:


"It was not a nasty, I mean obviously, the contact was strong, but Henderson was not looking for a cheap shot there."

Oh really, Billy? So you've got Bonnie Bernstein reporting live from inside Gerald Henderson's head, neurons firing neurotransmitters across synapses, and you know what's going on?


"I don't think it was a dirty shot at all by Henderson, just one of those deals, you're going after the ball."

Right. The ball that had left Tyler's hand and was away from his face.

"Here's something you can say, 14.5 seconds to go, North Carolina 12 up, what's Hansbrough on the floor?"

Well, he's #50 in white, but I think you meant why is he on the floor. Well, a) there was a sub for Tyler at the scorer's table, but Tyler was shooting free throws, and Mike Copeland couldn't come into the game yet. Hansbrough did not come out with Miller or Terry so those two could get their own curtain calls on Senior Day.

If we're using that logic, why is Henderson on the floor? He was Duke's best player that day, and before Tyler hit the free throw line, all of Duke's starters save the fouled-out Greg Paulus were in the game. If their best player is in the game, why can't we have our best player in the game?

If Duke believes it can come back (and with K's fouling and time out strategy, they sure acted like they were trying to win), why can't Carolina believe it can still be beaten? We've had a history of giving up late leads this season. I don't see any problem with Carolina competing to ensure victory until the buzzer.


"The fans are booing something that was not an intentional foul at all. You can see there, Henderson's coming across the lane, and it was elbow on nose."

Thanks for the brilliant insight.

The worst part of this whole incident is that it overshadowed a brilliant Hansbrough performance. A classic Tar Heel performance in this rivalry. He was unstoppable Sunday. Well, you had to draw blood to stop him, and even then he still wanted a piece of you. Tyler was pushed and hit all game long, and the Blue Devils got away with it. Not anymore.

Don't forget to read Pat Forde.

"This was not a premeditated knockout.


However, Henderson appeared to be going in with the intent to deliver
an enthusiastically hard foul. There is a place in the game for hard
fouls, for forcefully preventing easy baskets, for occasionally
planting an opponent on his rear end.


But when the hard foul goes wrong, for whatever reason, you run the
risk of it accidentally turning into assault and battery. Like this."

Welcome

Welcome to TurnOnSports. My name is Turner. I created TurnOnSports to give myself a forum to react to what's going on in the world of sports.

The idea is to take (usually) one story a day, Sunday through Thursday, and give you my take. It may be something that might have slipped through the cracks, or it might be what everyone's talking about. Today, the latter is the case. Should be fun.

More than two years ago, I started HeelsBlog so that I could react to happenings in University of North Carolina athletics. Now, I start with TurnOnSports.

Oddly enough, I registered this domain name more than a year ago, but did not have the time or energy to start this up. I still don't have the time or energy, but I'm giving it a go. So here goes nothing. Enjoy. . .