I Watched Eight Men Out


This year, watching the World Series has felt strange to me.

I love baseball so, of course, I’m going to watch.  But with neither the Rangers nor the Astros playing this year, I don’t really have anything invested in who wins.  The last time the Red Sox were in the series, I wanted them to win because the city was still recovering from the Boston Marathon bombing but this year, the Red Sox are the team that defeated Houston for the American League Championship.  I guess I want the Dodgers to win but it feels weird to cheer for a National League team.  The Red Sox are currently up 2 to 0.  That doesn’t mean that the Dodgers are out of it but they’ve got some ground to make up.  Luckily, they’ll be playing at home tonight.

Since there wasn’t a game last night, I watched Eight Men Out, a 1988 movie about the 1919 World Series.  I love this movie.

In the 1919 World Series, the Cincinnati Reds faced off against the Chicago White Sox.  The 1919 White Sox team was considered to be one of the best in the history of baseball and they entered the series of heavy favorites.  When they lost 5 games to 3 (the 1919 World Series was a best of nine series), a lot of gamblers lost a ton of money but there were a few that made a fortune.  Even before the series was over, there were rumors that several members of the White Sox were paid off to intentionally lose the game.  The scandal grew so large that the franchise owners agreed to appoint a judge named Kennesaw Mountain Landis as the first commissioner of baseball.  Eight White Sox players were accused of taking money to throw the game.  Even though they were acquitted of all the criminal charges, Landis still banned all eight of them from ever again playing major league baseball.  Among the players who were banned, 6 were definitely in on the fix.  However, both Buck Weaver and Shoeless Joe Jackson would go to their graves insisting that they hadn’t thrown a single game.

Eight Men Out tells the story of that World Series and how the White Sox came to be known as the Black Sox.  The film begins with various gamblers all approaching different players and offering them money to throw the World Series.  Fed up with being taken for granted and mistreated by management, some of the players agree immediately while others, like pitcher Eddie Cicotte, are more reluctant.  When the owners of the White Sox cheats Cicotte out of a bonus, Cicotte finally decides to accept the gamblers’s offer.

The best part of Eight Men Out are the scenes that contrast how the White Sox play when they’re throwing a game to how they play when they’re trying to win.  Even though they’re getting paid to lose, the players are depressed and angry after a loss.  When they play to win, they’re happy because they’re doing what they’re good at and they’re amazing to watch.  Those scenes are what baseball are all about.

Eight Men Out is a movie that loves baseball almost as much as I do and I recommend it to anyone else who loves the game.  It’s got a big cast and they’re all very good, even Charlie Sheen who plays one of the players.  My favorite performances were John Mahoney’s as the disappointed White Sox manager and John Cusack’s as Buck Weaver, who does nothing wrong but suffers the worst of any of the accused players.

If you’re just not feeling the World Series this year, check out Eight Men Out.

The Real 1919 Chicago White Sox

Why We Love It’s The Great Pumpkin Charlie Brown


It’s all about faith.

It’s The Great Pumpkin, Charlie Brown first aired in 1966 and it has aired every year since.  For 52 years, audiences have watched as Charlie Brown gets a rock, Snoopy flies his doghouse, and Linus and Sally spend the night in the pumpkin patch, waiting for the Great Pumpkin to show up.  I watched it every year.  Usually, I watch it twice.

Why has It’s The Great Pumpkin, Charlie Brown withstood the test of time?

Some of it is the animation.  Snoopy flying that doghouse makes me smile every time.  So does Lucy and Linus searching for the perfect pumpkin and Charlie Brown’s messed up ghost costume.  (How clumsy is Charlie Brown with a pair of scissors?)  I love that, if you pay attention, you can actually see the rock getting tossed in Charlie Brown’s trick or treat bag.

Some of it is because we can relate to the characters.  Who hasn’t done a happy dance when, like Charlie Brown getting an invitation to Violet’s party, they feel like they’ve finally been accepted?

But for me, It’s The Great Pumpkin, Charlie Brown is all about faith.

It’s about Charlie Brown’s faith that Violet meant to invite him to her party.  Even after Lucy tells him it had to have been a mistake, Charlie Brown still goes to the party.  It’s about Charlie Brown’s faith that he’ll get candy.  Even after he gets a rock at every house, he still keeps trying.  He doesn’t give up.

It’s about Snoopy’s faith that he’ll defeat the Red Baron, even though World War I has long since ended and doghouses can’t actually fly.  No matter how many times his doghouse is shot down, Snoopy keeps chasing his enemy.

And finally, it’s about Linus’s faith that some night, the Great Pumpkin will emerge from a sincere pumpkin patch and will bring toys to all the good children on Halloween night.  It doesn’t matter that people laugh at him.  It doesn’t matter that he might miss out on the chance to get candy.  What matters is that Linus believes and nothing can shake that belief.  Even when Sally abandons him, Linus stays in that pumpkin patch and waits.

And when the night passes without the Great Pumpkin showing up, Linus doesn’t give up.  Instead, he says that he’ll find a new pumpkin patch next year and a new one after that.  Linus will wait every year the Great Pumpkin because he has something more important than candy.  He has faith.

And, every year, we’ll be right there waiting with him.  Because even if we don’t believe in The Great Pumpkin, we do believe in Linus.

It’s all about faith.

It’s The Great Pumpkin, Charlie Brown gets an encore airing tonight on CBS.