Queries from veteran Roger queriers,
First up is the noble Scott:
Is there a team you are rooting for to win the Super Bowl?
Besides the Giants, who just don't deserve it this year (41-9 loss to Carolina yesterday?), gotta be the Saints. Partly it a parochial hope that a Super Bowl appearance will once again point out the aftermath of Katrina and how much is yet undone in the recovery. Also, can't help but think it would give the city a real boost; they've already postponed some Mardi Gras events in anticipation of getting to the big game. And yes, I thought losing to the Cowboys was probably a good thing; get the loss out of their system. (So naturally they lose to Tampa Bay yesterday.) The perfect season was a curse for the Patriots a couple seasons back, so the loss to the Jets - who are still in playoff contention - theoretically will help the Colts. Or not.
What is your favorite Christmas family tradition?
I'm still grasping at any kind of tradition. We had a tree the last three years, but not the previous two. What we eat varies; this year it was lasagna! And while I sing on Christmas Eve, it's hardly a FAMILY tradition, since my wife and daughter weren't there. In fact, I didn't see my daughter at all on Christmas Eve, though I did talk with her twice on the phone. The tree decorations I used to have seem to have disappeared. So it's not so much tradition; it's jazz improv, and it's all good.
Do you do a lot of decorating inside and outside your house for the holidays?
Outside, not at all. Inside, the Christmas cards - and we got a LOT of Christmas cards this year, more than ever - go around the entryway to our living room. In fact we had so many, we put a few on the other side, the entryway back into the hallway. There's the tree. There's red garland on the railing heading upstairs. We do have a creche.
The daughter constructed a snowman from paper, which we hung up. She also made some drawings that got put around the house.
What Christmas gift made the most lasting impression on you?
That would be the Beatles in Mono box set that I got in...2009. It wasn't just that I got the music; it was something I wanted and Santa delivered that singular package that was more than Santa is inclined to spend on a one item.
What was the best Christmas gift you received as a child?
Seriously, a Johnny Seven OMA (One Man Army); I played with that forever and STILL turned out as a pacifist. Tom Hanks got one as a kid, he once told Leno.
Although the family getting a color TV in 1969, when I was 16, was huge, too; we literally saw the world in a different way. Watching the Wizard of Oz the next year, in particular, was a revelation; a "horse of a different color", indeed.
Merry Christmas to you and your family, Roger!
You too, Scott.
The best of the west, western NYS, that is, Jaquandor asks:
Do you cook? If so, what? Do you have a favorite ethnic cuisine? If so, what?
I did cook. And I was functional, not inspirational, at things like chicken. But I don't particularly enjoy it, Carol's better at it, and I get home close to 6:30 pm. I tend to make eggs, pancakes, oatmeal, grilled cheese sandwiches, those kinds of things on the weekends.
My favorite ethnic cuisine is lasagna, which I used to make in the winter, though the recent Christmas meal in fact was made by the wife and mother-in-law; I shredded the mozzarella. I also used to bake, but likewise Carol's more ept and I, rather inept. Damn, I just remember a time I confused baking powder with baking soda in a pancake recipe; it was AWFUL.
And do you have a strong opinion one way or the other on Governor Paterson?
Notice that David Paterson's positives have gone from the low 20s to the mid 30s. Still not great, and still losing to Andrew Cuomo by 40 points, should the attorney general run in a primary against him. But perhaps there is a recognition that he's at least TRYING to balance the budget, whereas the state legislature is unable/unwilling to. I wonder if those television ads, like this one are having an effect.
I have a question for you; do you think those Saturday Night Live parodies hurt him with the electorate? I've been under the impression that the NYS voters and SNL watchers are not that linked, but I could be wrong.
I can/do argue with some of his choices; his cuts to education and libraries seem particularly short-sighted. But I haven't written him off politically, especially if Rick Lazio, who ran a TERRIBLE campaign against Hillary Clinton in the U.S. Senate race in 2000, turns out to be the GOP nominee, rather than Rudy Giuliani.
ROG
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2 comments:
Huh -- how did I miss this post? Weird. Anyway, I don't know anything about the SNL parodies! I didn't even know they existed until I read this, a few minutes ago. But I can envision them, I suppose. Are they as damaging as the Chevy Chase-as-Gerald Ford ones were back in the day?
Well, "Paterson" doesn't do pratfalls. He mostly seems out of it. And I think it's becauuse he doesn't make the eye contact that most of us learn to do, which, of course, is because he's blind.
There's a guy on local public radio (controls a whole bunch if stations, actually) named Alan Chartock who thought SNL's treatment of Paterson was "shameful". I don't think so, but maybe the portrayal was a tad inept.
There was this poll (Siena, maybe?) that asked voters why they had such negative opinions of the governor. 7% said it was because of his portrayal on SNL.
I just didn't find it all that funny. Whereas Sarah Palin was hysterical, in no small part because the REAL Palin was so deserving.
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