Don’t go in the water!
Jaws is 50 years old today. Here’s how it all began.
Don’t go in the water!
Jaws is 50 years old today. Here’s how it all began.
Jaws was first released 50 years ago today. Whenever anyone mentions Jaws, I hear today’s song of the day in my head.
Today’s music video day is not just a Backstreet Boys video. It’s also the very first video that the Backstreet Boys ever made and it’s for their very first single! Just look at how young everyone used to be.
The main theme of this video seems to be that the Backstreet Boys are terrible boyfriends but it doesn’t matter because they have got it going on! Their real girlfriends play their video girlfriends in this video and Lou Pearlman, the creepy man behind all the good times, is in the video too. My favorite Backstreet Boy was Brian.
Enjoy!
The Rangers are losing again so I’m going to treat my sorrows with a scene that I love from a baseball movie. In this scene from 61*, Roger Maris gets his sixty-first homerun of the season and he breaks Babe Ruth’s record.
I love this scene because it’s what baseball is all about.
4 Or More Shots From 4 Or More Films is just what it says it is, 4 shots from 4 of our favorite films. As opposed to the reviews and recaps that we usually post, 4 Shots From 4 Films lets the visuals do the talking!
Here are four shots in beautiful black-and-white!
4 Shots From 4 Beautiful Black-and-White Films
Do you remember O-Town? They were the boy band that was formed for a reality television series. Back in the day, Lisa and I watched every episode and we still thought the name stood for Orgasm Town until we realized the band was from Orlando. Even thought they could actually sing, O-Town was still the boy band that made other boy bands seem tough.
O-Town may have been featured on Making The Band but they had nothing to do with Diddy. (O-Town was the first season, before Diddy was a part of the program.) The mastermind behind O-Town was Lou Pearlman, which isn’t much better but I don’t think Pearlman’s ever been accused of putting a hit out on anyone.
This music video was from O-Town’s 2016 comeback. Enjoy!
Tripp Spence (Harry Connick, Jr.) is a lawyer who cheated on his taxes. He goes on the run with his 13 year-old son, Derrick (Shawn Salinas). They settle in Las Vegas with new identities. Tripp now goes by Glenn Ryan and Derrick’s new name is Mickey. Because Derrick was given the identity of someone who was a year young than him, he is still eligible to play one more season of Little League baseball. Mickey leads his team to victory after victory and that’s no surprise. He’s a year older and a head taller than all the other players. Eventually, Mickey takes his team to the Little League World Series, where he plays a team from Cuba. Glenn knows that, with all of the publicity, the IRS is going to catch him but all that matters is that his son get to play in the big game.
I love baseball and I can get pretty sentimental when it comes to watching a Little League game. I tear up at both version of The Bad News Bears. I also like Harry Connick, Jr. What I don’t like is cheating and it bothered me that this whole movie was built around a father encouraging his son to cheat. There wasn’t any reason why Mikey had to be thirteen. It wouldn’t have changed the plot that much if he had actually been twelve and still eligible to play. It’s one thing when major leaguers cheat by corking their bat or wiping something on their pitches. They’re adults and everyone knows that it’s a part of the game. But to encourage your son to cheat at Little League? That’s low.
Mickey was written by John Grisham, who loves baseball but who still should have known better.
For today’s song of the day, I decided to reach back to 2001 for this track from Al Marconi.