Showing posts with label Morgen. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Morgen. Show all posts

QUICK SUNDAY UPDATE

Sparks Of Insanity By Vinny "Bond" Marini Sunday, December 16, 2007 13 Of Your Sparks



TIME TO DONATE SOME RICE TODAY!
<-----------------------------------------------

Build your vocabulary, feed the hungry...

Over at Anndi's, you will learn that over 7 BILLION grains of rice have been donated...7 BILLION folks...and we just checked the site and we are over 8 BILLION..that is since October 7th...less than three months! THAT is inspiring.



Though we never post on the weekend, we know we always get visitors...so...



TONIGHT...Turnbaby and Matt-Man together on the BlogTalk radio...Check out the left sidebar to get to TurnBaby's show


Also...do you love "It's A Wonderful Life"?

Check out the newest incarnation produced and directed by MO...You can find it HERE



Football and some chili today....

This week, we will be doing some special Tuneage each day...hope you come by to sit and enjoy...



Enjoy your day...stay warm...it is freezing here



Tons On Thursday

Sparks Of Insanity By Vinny "Bond" Marini Thursday, November 15, 2007 28 Of Your Sparks

Psssssssssssssst...yeah you...c'mere.........look to your left...yeah that's right...over there....NOT RIGHT!


YOUR LEFT...
<--------

OK, better, now ya see that new button over there? The one that says FREE RICE? Well this wonderful idea came to us from the Lady of the Luggage, our sweet friend Anndi...

All y'all must go over and check out her POST TODAY and PUSH THE BUTTON!...

Use your vocabulary skills and feed people today.

Thank you Anndi...


Our friend Layla (aka Barbara) from Writing From the Inside Out, bestowed upon us, this new award...

Be The Blog award

We love getting and giving our bling. We went to the site of the creator of this award, Me & My Drum and this is what it says about the award...

Earlier this year I was tagged with the blogging tip meme in which the tip I offered was “Be the Blog“. That phrase stuck with me because I think that really sums up what a successful blogger does. And what I mean by successful is that they make it their own, stay with it, are interactive with their readers, and just plain have fun.

Since then I’ve been thinking about creating an award of my own, but with so many out there, it’s hard to find a niche that remains untapped for recognition. So I said, “What the heck?”, and decided to shape the phrase into an award called (you guessed it): Be The Blog.

So, with that in mind, we bestow upon the following...the BE THE BLOG AWARD. Now, if you do not like the 'midnight oil' version, there is a pink and a Cabernet version over at Me & My Drum...


Grab your bling kids....and spread the word...



We went on a rant over at Travis' site yesterday over the music selections chosen on the "Dancing With The Stars" program. If you are a regular reader over there, you know Travis has also complained about it this year.

Well this past week, it was just the worst you could imagine.

A Viennese Waltz to the theme from "Harry Potter"???? OH sure, as Travis pointed out, that is some romantic music to choreograph....sheesh

The other sore thumb was a Cha Cha to the ROLLING STONES "Brown Sugar"!.... Are they out of their ever lovin' freakin' mind?????

The rest of the music was also very weird. If you are going to ask someone to dance the jive, why would you not do it to a Big Band Sing song?

This is our first season watching this show, and we have enjoyed it greatly (OK OK, it has much to do with the SHOES, but we still enjoy!)...but we did find our mind wandering...
HA NOW THAT IS A KICK...HIS MIND WANDERING...SINCE WHEN DOES HE HAVE ONE
WHY ARE YOU SO CRUEL
LISTEN WHOOSIE...I AM THE BAD VOICE..GET WITH THE PROGRAM
BUT WE COULD HAVE SO MUCH MORE FUN IF YOU WERE NICE..OUCH...STOP THROWING THINGS..


Would you two please quit it out!

Where were we? OH yeah...with the sucky music selection, we found ourself not enjoying the dancing as much as we should. Hopefully this was a one week situation where they asked a couple of tone-deaf interns to do the selections...



Welcome back to "Make fun of celebrities" on The Couch:


Puff n' Stuff...um Diddy Doo...um Puff Doody...Well whatever he calls himself
must have reached into his wife's closet for that number


Tara"Gimme a drink & I will flash ya" Reid
in her Nort' Joisey look



Sharon Stone proving that it was not a stunt double

in that scene from "Basic Instinct" and that she is all woman



And from the "You can get 'em from places other than Joe's",
the Timberlake checks out the crawly things on his timbersnake



Stealing one from BeckEye...
(go on, call my attorneys!)

OK Kiddies...this one is for you!

Write your own caption to this next one
and you might get a big 'ole prize from The Couch
(Or you might not...)




We are just feeling real good tonight (had a real nice evening), and smiling and all and this song came up on the i-Tunes shuffle...well, hell...PERFECT...All y'all might think we are crazy, but this song makes us want to get up and dance....

From the brilliant At The Fillmore East...yup...ALLMAN BROTHERS...

The back and forth between Greg's vocals and Duane's slide guitar is just incredible.

Originally recorded by Blind Willie McTell, and Duane taught himself to play slide guitar by practicing it over and over after hearing the Taj Mahal version.

Butch Trucks and Jai Johanny "Jaimoe" Johanson, the two drummers lay down a pounding blues beat while Berry Oakley completes the hot rhythm section.

This is also the song the band played at Duane's funeral with Dickie Betts taking over the slide part from that point on....

ENJOY!





Frost

Sparks Of Insanity By Vinny "Bond" Marini Monday, October 22, 2007 22 Of Your Sparks

DON'T MISS OUT ON THE BIG CELEBRATION!!!How To Get Your Peace Globe November 2007


Don't you love a cold beer in a FROSTED mug?

Don't you hate waking up in the morning in the fall and having to scrape the FROST off of your car windows before being able to drive to work?

It FROSTS my butt that Cleveland fell apart and allowed the team from Boston to gain entry into the World Series.

"FROSTY the Snowman" was a jolly happy soul.

"WHEN the FROST is on the punkin and the fodder's in the shock"...WHAT the heck does that mean?

Robert Lee FROST (March 26, 1874 – January 29, 1963) was an American poet. His work frequently used themes from rural life in New England.

My favorite is chocolate FROSTING

When we were in our twenties and we had individual strands of gray hair coming in, we actually had someone ask us if we FROSTED it.

Visit OUR FRIEND MO for more MANIC MONDAY submissions...


One of our favorites from Neil Young...nothing to do with the theme today, but it has been in our head for a few days...

Enjoy....


"OLD MAN"

Old man look at my life,
I'm a lot like you were.
Old man look at my life,
I'm a lot like you were.

Old man look at my life,
Twenty four
and there's so much more
Live alone in a paradise
That makes me think of two.

Love lost, such a cost,
Give me things
that don't get lost.
Like a coin that won't get tossed
Rolling home to you.

Old man take a look at my life
I'm a lot like you
I need someone to love me
the whole day through
Ah, one look in my eyes
and you can tell that's true.

Lullabies, look in your eyes,
Run around the same old town.
Doesn't mean that much to me
To mean that much to you.

I've been first and last
Look at how the time goes past.
But I'm all alone at last.
Rolling home to you.

Old man take a look at my life
I'm a lot like you
I need someone to love me
the whole day through
Ah, one look in my eyes
and you can tell that's true.

Old man look at my life,
I'm a lot like you were.
Old man look at my life,
I'm a lot like you were.

1972
HARVEST
Reprise Records

Personnel

Neil Young with The Stray Gators:
o Neil Young: guitar, piano, harmonica, vocal
o Ben Keith: pedal steel guitar
o Kenny Buttrey: drums
o Tim Drummond: bass
o Jack Nitzsche: piano, slide guitar
INCLUDES:
* James Taylor: banjo-guitar, vocal
* Linda Ronstadt: vocal


In the movie Heart of Gold (2006), Young introduces the song as follows:

"About that time when I wrote that song [the previously played "Heart of Gold"], and I was touring, I had also -- just, you know, being a rich hippie for the first time -- I had purchased a ranch, and I still live there today. And there was a couple living on it that were the caretakers, an old gentleman named Louis Avala and his wife Clara. And there was this old blue Jeep there, and Louis took me for a ride in this blue Jeep. He gets me up there on the top side of the place, and there's this lake up there that fed all the pastures, and he says, "Well, tell me, how does a young man like yourself have enough money to buy a place like this?" And I said, "Well, just lucky, Louie, just real lucky." And he said, "Well, that's the darndest thing I ever heard." And I wrote this song for him."



What The Heck Is Going On?

Sparks Of Insanity By Vinny "Bond" Marini Tuesday, September 18, 2007 13 Of Your Sparks



Anyone care that it is down to 3 games in the loss column for the Yankees?

HELL YEAH ---WE DO!
WOOOOOOO



This thing called work is getting in our way again
We have not had a chance to visit since Friday

WHAT..WORK ALL WEEKEND?
Well no, but if you stopped by yesterday
you will know our brain was fried to a crisp...
That was personal

But today and tomorrow, we are totally jammed.

Will be out late tomorrow doing the client thing again...
so if there is no post on Wednesday...do not be alarmed
AND
Don't hate the absent one...we will catch up real soon..

Promise.



TONIGHT:

TINA LOUISE HAS CANCELED HER APPEARANCE ON THE RADIO HAPPY HOUR. SHE IS, HOWEVER, STILL ALIVE, THUS NEGATING THE ONLY EXCUSE I'M WILLING TO ACCEPT.


Take out your Hungry Hungry Hippos and Care Bears because Matthew Robinson and Jensen Karp, the authors of Just Can't Get Enough: Toys, Games, and Other Stuff from the 80s that Rocked, will be break dancing their way into the Radio Happy Hour to celebrate the gnarliest decade of the century! After all, Gem is truly outrageous. Truly, truly, truly outrageous.

Plus, one luck caller will have a chance to win a copy of their book by answering some 80's trivia!

Canadian comedian and voice over artist Bryan Cox will also stop by to hang out as will singer/songwriter and brains behind the " Shady Brady and Bill Belicheat" video, Ryan Parker.

All that, plus Justin the Weatherman, Vinny Bond live from his big leather couch,
HELL IF TINA AIN'T SHOWING, NEITHER ARE WE!

Your calls at 646-652-4804 and a brand new live chat function at BlogTalkRadio.com/DrBlogstein.

Holy Mother of Montana! This is gonna be some show!

Join us live every Tuesday night at 9PM ET . And if you miss us then, we're ALWAYS ON at www.DrBlogstein.com




TOMORROW:



Promise...Tuneage Tutelage on Friday and it will be

HAWT!



Money...

Sparks Of Insanity By Vinny "Bond" Marini Tuesday, August 21, 2007 23 Of Your Sparks

Our "friends" at Comcast decided to renew our Internet around 8:45PM tonight...

Gosh, we love you Comcast

snicker


Our friend Tiggerprr tagged us with a brand new meme and we have taken the challenge. It is funny, though that I wonder if a few zeros were dropped of on the amount you are given because some of the questions would require wayyyyyyyyy more than the $50,000.00 offered.

OK, here it is.... and awayyyyyy we go....



A philanthropist awards you $50,000 with the stipulation that you may use half of it for yourself and the other half you must use for the benefit of others. By “benefit of others” it can mean anything really, buying a gift for a family member or donating to a charity.

A. How do you spend the money on yourself?
This one is real simple. Half would go to Matt for college and the other half would go to pay off the debt that was accumulated during my time out of work.

B. How do you use the money for others? Please be detailed, so if you say “give X dollars to charity, let us know what charity and why you select that one.
The other half would go to Gay Men'sHealth Crisis. GMHC offers an array of programs and services to thousands of men, women, and children every year. Though some of our services are for registered clients only, there are many workshops and programs available to the general public regardless of HIV status, sexual orientation, or gender. We have had a number of friends and one family member who have been affected by this horrid disease.

C. If you were to spend part of your money to have a performer do a show for you, who would it be and why?
This is where it gets funny for me..part of my half the money...not enough to have many artists perform, but if it were possible, we would love to have a private concert for our special friends with this gray haired guy as the performer...yup....ME! No, kidding...Taylor Hicks...

D. If you were to use it on a new vehicle for yourself, what kind?
Hummmm...would like a Mustang convertible we guess...once again..not sure there would be enough for a Hyundai...LOL

E. If you spent part of it to go to a “fantasy” camp, what type would you choose?
We loved Tiggerprr's answer about a sun and pina colada fantasy camp...now that would be HAWT...but not sure that exists, so the NY Yankee Fantasy Camp would be way cool too...

F. If you were to use it to buy season tickets for a sports team, what team would it be?
Gee, let's think about this for like a milli-second or less...yup...the Ballpark In The Bronx baBY!

G. If you were to use it to go on a cruise (assuming you like cruises) where would you cruise to?
Would love to do the Mediterranean, and get to see Italy and Sicily and Greece.

H. If you were to use it to go to NYC to see a show (or shows) what would you see?
Oh man...We would go in march and see as many of the 15 nights the Allman brothers spend at the Beacon Theatre.

I. Totally off subject (but since Fall is coming) what is your favorite carnival food (I was watching “Big” while writing this and saw them at the carnival)?
Cotton Candy! Pure sugar and air....gimme gimme gimme...yummers....



We now have to tag some people (is there a number?)...hang on a second...we need to run back to Tiggerprrs and find out...hand loose a minute....dang girl, she picked 7 people...we had 6 in mind...

OK, here we go.... DANA, JULIE, MO, THE 108, THE QUEEN OF MEME'S - MIMI, ANNDI and COCO

Hope all y'all enjoy it and have some fun...



What else would be more fitting then PINK FLOYD....



"Money" is the sixth track from Pink Floyd's 1973 album, "The Dark Side of the Moon". It is the only song on the album to hit the top 20 in the United States charts. On the original LP, it opened the second side of the album. It was written by Roger Waters.

Personally, we saw them twice. First at Stony Brook University in 1970 during the "Ummagumma / Atom Heart Mother" Tour (their real melodic psychedelic phase), and then in 1973 at Madison Square Garden for the "Dark Side Of The Moon" Tour. Both incredible concerts...



BLOGTALK RADIO UPDATE:

Dr. Blogstein and Jane will have a real interview with a virtual celebrity.

Jon "NEVERDIE" Jacobs is a real personality in the Entropia Universe, which is a virtual world. Stuff Magazine listed him in their "Top 30 Under 30" list.

He has become a real millionaire by purchasing an asteroid in the Entropia Universe in 2005 for $100,000 and building a nightclub, Club NEVERDIE on said ateroid. The club is now the #1 virtual destination hot spot and brings in an average income of $20,000 per month for him!

If you're confused, join the club but we'll get to the bottom of it!

Also, we'll get an update from embattled "Bestest" blogger Bobby Griffin who faced allegations of fraud on our April 4th edition of the Radio Happy Hour. He was booked last week but was bumped due to the Walid Shoebat segment running late.

All that, plus we'll discuss the Radio Happy Hour's appearance in the New York Post with Justin the Weatherman, we'll hear from Vinny Bond on his couch and we'll take your phone calls at 646-652-4804.

Join us live every Tuesday night at 9PM ET . And if you miss us then, we're ALWAYS ON at www.DrBlogstein.com.




We Dare

Sparks Of Insanity By Vinny "Bond" Marini Monday, August 20, 2007 20 Of Your Sparks

OK, here is the DEAL...
We never checked Mo's site this morning
but THOUGHT we had seen over on Turn's that the word was
DARE...

bwahahahahahahahahahaah
it really is DEAL...

So, we screwed up...

All y'all will just have to DEAL with that today
because we do not have time to change this post...

We really like DARE though!



We DARE Comcast to give us back our internet access,
which went out at 1:00 PM yesterday and was still out this morning.



We are the only person in the known world
who never played Truth or DARE



We TRIPLE-Dog DARE you to go over to Mimi's Dating Site
and get involved in her weekly challenge...
All y'all have snark in ya...git 'er done NOW!



Go over to Mo's and find out what others are saying...
We DARE YOU



That is all the time we have...
No music...
No photos
Just DARING words...
Hopefully we can have a fully loaded post tomorrow.




R.I.P. "Scooter"

Sparks Of Insanity By Vinny "Bond" Marini Wednesday, August 15, 2007 18 Of Your Sparks

Yes...a post about someone who played sports, but he was so much more than that...




HOLY COW! The NY Yankee family, and all of baseball lost one of the good guys Monday evening. Fiero (Philip) Francis Rizzuto, known the world over as “Scooter” passed away at the nursing home he has lived in for the last few years in West Orange, NJ.

Born on September 17th, 1917, Rizzuto might have been one of the first to do what is now a common practice for Latin ballplayers. For years, his birth year was listed as 1918 because he was told it would add a year to his career.

Mr. Rizzuto was born in Brooklyn, NY and played both football and baseball at Richmond Hill High School. Listed on rosters as 5’6” and 160 pounds, Mr. Rizzuto played like he was 8-feet tall.

As a 16-year old Mr. Rizzuto tried out for both the New York Giants and the Brooklyn Dodgers. At that time, Casey Stengel was the manager of the Dodgers and he told Mr. Rizzuto, “Go get a shoebox” a reference to becoming a shoe-shine boy. In a twist of fate, Mr. Rizzuto was one of Mr. Stengel’s more reliable players when Casey managed the Yankees from 1949-1956!

The NY Yankees signed Mr. Rizzuto as an amateur free agent in 1937. His trip through the minor leagues brought him up to play his first major league game on April 14, 1941. He played 13-years in the majors, all for the Yankees except for the years 1943 – 1945 when he was in the US Navy during World War II. He played for the Navy’s team during those years.

Mr. Rizzuto’s career proved him to be a strong defensive player with clutch hitting skills and he is still considered to be one of the best bunters to ever play the game. In the field, he played almost his entire career at shortstop.

Mr. Rizzuto played his final game as a Yankee on August 16, 1956, when he was cut to allow the team to sign Enos Slaughter for the pennant drive. Mr. Rizzuto remembered that day as “the end of the world”, but it opened the door to a career that lasted over 40 years…as a broadcaster of NY Yankee games.



A year after he retired, Ballantine Beer, the major broadcasting sponsor of the Yankees, insisted the team hire Mr. Rizzuto as a broadcaster. The Yankees needed to fire Jim Woods, but could not afford to lose the sponsor, so Mr. Rizzuto joined the broadcasting team.

Harry Carey was known to use the phrase “Holy Cow” during his broadcasts out of Chicago, but Mr. Rizzuto always insisted he used the phrase his whole life instead of uttering a curse word. The phrase became his trademark over the years along with; “Unbelievable!” or “Did you see that!” to describe a great play. He was also famous for calling someone a “Huckleberry” if that person did something Mr. Rizzuto did not like.

His broadcasts also became a sort of “family gathering” as he would send birthday or anniversary wishes or send get-well greeting to fans during games. If Mr. Rizzuto liked a restaurant, he would tell you about it, even they were not a sponsor. He would also talk about the cannoli’s that fans would send to him and he would eat them between innings.

As the games wound down, you always listened for the infamous “I’ll be home soon Cora” message to his wife whom he married in 1943. Their marriage produced daughters Cindy Rizzuto, Patricia Rizzuto and Penny Rizzuto Yetto and son Phil Rizzuto Jr. He was the proud grandfather to two granddaughters.

When Mickey Mantle passed away, Mr. Rizzuto assumed he would be allowed to miss the game that evening and fly to Dallas for the funeral. Either WPIX, the TV network, or the Yankees refused to let him go, citing that “someone needed to do color commentary.” During that telecast, Mr. Rizzuto's emotions finally erupted and he walked out of the booth that night and announced his retirement a few days later. He was convinced to come back for one more season, did 30 games and then retired for good.



In the broadcast booth, the dialog between Mr. Rizzuto and his broadcast partner sometimes (OK, quite often!) strayed from the game, with them joking back and forth. Mr. Rizzuto always used their last names and never their first. Mr. Rizzuto was behind the microphone on WCBS Radio on October 1, 1961, the last game of the season, when Roger Maris stepped to the plate…his call:

"Here's the windup, fastball, hit deep to right, this could be it! Way back there! Holy cow, he did it! Sixty-one for Maris! And look at the fight for that ball out there! Holy cow, what a shot! Another standing ovation for Maris, and they're still fighting for that ball out there, climbing over each other's backs. One of the greatest sights I've ever seen here at Yankee Stadium!"

He was also the king of malaprops and stream-o-consciousness commentary. Critics used to rip him for it, but listening to Mr. Rizzuto was always an adventure we thoroughly enjoyed…Some examples we found include:

"Uh-oh, deep to left-center, nobody's gonna get that one! Holy cow, somebody got it!"
"Bouncer to third, they'll never get him! No, why don't I just shut up!"
"All right! Stay fair! No, it won't stay fair. Good thing it didn't stay fair, or I think he would've caught it!"
"Oh, these Yankees can get the clutch hits, Murcer. I might have to go home early, I just got a cramp in my leg."
"Well, that kind of puts the damper on even a Yankee win." (He was still on the air, just after a game, when he heard that Pope Paul VI had just died. Esquire Magazine called that the "Holiest Cow of 1978.")

And if Mr. Rizzuto missed a play, he would scribble "ww" in his scorecard box score. That, he said, meant "wasn't watching."



Mr. Rizzuto was behind the microphone once again during the infamous George Brett pine tar incident and though we can not find the exact transcript, believe us when we tell you this guy was hooting and hollering the whole time…you see, Mr. Rizzuto never hid the fact that he was a Yankee and his broadcasts, like those of Mr. Carey in Chicago and others was pure “Home team broadcasting”.

Mr. Rizzuto was also infamous for his TV commercials for “The Money Store” and YooHoo Chocolate Drink.

He was also the very first mystery guest on the game show “Whats My Line?” He was also a guest on "The Ed Sullivan" show a few times.



Ah…yes kiddies, we know - when do we get to one of his most famous appearances...

In 1977 he was asked to come into a recording studio and was given a script that appeared to be describing a series of baseball plays…never knowing that it was to be used as the spoken-word bridge on a song about a young man trying to lose his virginity…the truly wonderful “Paradise By The Dashboard Light” by Jim Steinman and performed by Meatloaf and Ellen Foley (Karla Devito was the singer on the video)…



Ok, here we go, we got a real pressure cooker going here,
two down, nobody on, no score,
bottom of the ninth,
there's the wind-up and
there it is, a line shot up the middle, look at him go.

This boy can really fly!
He's rounding first and really turning it on now,
he's not letting up at all, he's gonna
try for second; the ball is bobbled out in center,
and here comes the throw, and what a throw!


He's gonna slide in head first, here he comes, he's out!

No, wait, safe--safe at second base, this kid really
makes things happen out there.

Batter steps up to the plate, here's the pitch--

he's going, and what a jump he's got, he's trying
for third,
here's the throw, it's in the dirt--
safe at third! Holy cow, stolen base!

He's taking a pretty big lead out there, almost
daring him to try and pick him off.
The pitcher
glance over, winds up, and it's bunted, bunted down the third base line,
the suicide squeeze in on!
Here he comes, squeeze play,
it's gonna be close,
here's the throw, there's the play at the plate, holy cow,
I think he's gonna make it!


It is said that Mr. Rizzuto took a lot of grief from those in his church for recording such a filthy song, and he was initially annoyed by the song’s success, but over time came to see the humor in the situation.



On August 4th, 1985, the Yankees retired Mr. Rizzuto #10 and put a plaque in Monument Park in his honor. The plaque reads in part “(he) has enjoyed two outstanding careers, all-time Yankee shortstop, one of the great Yankee broadcasters” and ”A man’s size is measured by his heart.”


We were there that day in the stadium, and the Yankees had brought a live cow out onto the field which had a halo on it (not slightly kinked at all Anndi) the infamous “Holy Cow.” At one point Mr. Rizzuto was bumped by the cow and fell to the ground. The stadium gasped and then, when we saw he was unhurt, broke into laughter and applause as he waved and walked off the field.

THE COUCH NOTE: It was a game against the Chicago White Sox that day and their starting pitcher won his 300th game…his name…Tom Seaver, who later became Mr. Rizzuto's broadcast partner on Yankee games.

During a 2001 ceremony, Mr. Rizzuto paid homage to his heir apparent as the Yankee’s greatest shortstop, Derek Jeter. As he crossed the foul line along first base, he flipped the ceremonial ball back-handed, imitating Jeter’s incredible game-saving throw to home plate that helped the Yankees win the American League Division series against Oakland.



After years of being snubbed by the Hall Of Fame Baseball Writer's and then the Veteran’s Committee, Mr. Rizzuto was finally elected in 1994.

The man who pushed this through the Veteran’s Committee…Mr. Ted Williams. That year he made an impassioned plea to his fellow committee members claiming that the Red Sox would have won most of the Yankees’ 194o’s and 1950’s pennants if "Rizzuto would have been a Red Sox."

In usual fashion, Mr. Rizzuto said upon his induction, "I never thought I deserved to be in the Hall of Fame. The Hall of Fame is for the big guys, pitchers with 100 mph fastballs and hitters who sock homers and drive in a lot of runs. That's the way it always has been and the way it should be."

We would have loved to have been at Cooperstown that day as Mr. Rizzuto was “on his game” with a rambling speech…one part in particular still makes me smile to this day…

Mr. Rizzuto told about leaving home in Brooklyn for the first time when he was 19 years old and going to play shortstop in the minor league town of Bassett, Va., and he was on a train with no sleeper and when he got his first taste of Southern fried chicken and it was great and it was also the first time that he ever ate -- "Hey, White, what's that stuff that looks like oatmeal?" -- and Bill White, his onetime announcing partner on Yankee broadcasts, who was in the audience and stood up and said "Grits." Mr. Rizzuto then said, “I didn’t know what to do with them, so I put them in my pocket,”

One thing we did not realize is that Mr. Rizzuto was the oldest living Hall Of Famer, the honor now going to Lee McPhail, Jr.



Back in 1997, we took a trip to the Hall Of Fame and happened to be there the week before the Induction ceremony. During that week there is a town full of fans and Hall Of Famer's doing autograph signings.

Matt was 10 at the time and was in heaven being around all of these ball players. Matt’s materal grandfather was a friend of Yogi Berra’s and Mr. Berra was in town and we got to see him. But Matt’s face lit up when we got to see Mr. Rizzuto and we were going to take a picture. Normally you stood on one side of the table and the ball players were on the other. Mr. Rizzuto called Matt around to his side of the table to pose for him.

We will need to see if we can get those pictures and do a post on that trip someday.



A private, family funeral is planned. The family is working with the Yankees on a memorial to be held at Yankee Stadium, Patricia Rizzuto said.

The flag at Cooperstown was lowered to half-staff and a laurel was placed around his plaque, as is custom when Hall of Famers die.

Mr. Rizzuto, you were a class act, a wonderful family man, a great ballplayer, an enjoyable announcer and a truly funny man….




HIS CAREER HIGHLIGHTS & AWARDS
  • AL All-Star: 1942, 1950-1953
  • AL Most Valuable Player: 1950 (.325 BA, 92 walks 125 runs, 238 consecutive chances without an error – a record that still stands)
  • Babe Ruth Award: 1951 (Given to the player with the best World Series performance)
  • 1949-1952: Led the league in sacrifice hits each year
  • 1950: Led AL short stops in fielding .982
  • 1950: Led AL in singles (150)
  • 1950: Hickok Belt (awarded to top professional athlete)
  • Won 10 pennants and 8 World Series

ACCOLADES

George Steinbrenner: “I guess heaven must have needed a short stop. He epitomized the Yankee spirit – gritty and hard charging – and he wore the pinstripes proudly.”

Yogi Berra: “Phil was a gem, one of the greatest people I ever knew – a dear friend and great teammate. When I first came to the Yankees, he was like a big – actually, small – brother to me. He’s meant an awful lot to baseball and the Yankees and has left us with a lot of wonderful memories.”

Bob Feller (Indian’s HOF’er): "He was a Yankee all the way. Phil could hit, he could run, he was good on the basepathsand he was a great shortstop. He knew the fundamentals of the game and he got 100% out of his ability. He played it hard and he played it fair.”

Bud Selig
(Commissioner of Baseball): "Phil was a unique figure who exemplified the joy of our game to millions of fans,"

Derek Jeter: "Mr. Rizzuto serves as the ultimate reminder that physical stature has little bearing on the size of a person's heart. Nothing was ever given to Phil, and he used every ounce of his ability to become one of the greatest Yankees to ever wear this uniform."

Joe DiMaggio:
“The little guy in front of me, he made my job easy. “I didn’t have to pick up so many ground balls.”



In Mr. Rizzuto's honor, today we serve...

CANNOLI'S!





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