American Idol & Votefortheworst.com

I used to be an American Idol fan. Not a huge fan, but a decent fan. A fan such that I would try and not make any plans for the night(s) American Idol was on, and I’d make a good attempt to watch it, or at the very least have it on in the background while I did some work. This year however, sucks.

This year, there is no one that catches my eye, or keeps my attention. I found that for this year, I enjoyed the show much more watching the tryouts, and I stopped watching when they all went to Hollywood.

I listen to the Howard Stern show on Sirius every day, and recently he brought to the listener’s attention a website called www.votefortheworst.com, where they describe how, in order to keep American Idol “fun”, people should vote for the worst candidate. The agreement that Sunjaya Malakar is the worst seems to be the common theme, and I agree. ๐Ÿ™‚

Accordingly, please do your best to continue to vote for Sunjaya Malakar and keep him in American Idol as long as possible, and may be if we get lucky, he’ll win the damn thing. You know that won’t make Eric the Midget happy.

Hi Fred.

Airbus A380 – First Transatlantic Flight

On Monday March 19th, 2007, France’s Airbus A380 – the largest passenger plane ever assembled – made its first transatlantic flight from Frankfurt Germany to New York’s JFK airport. On-board were not real passengers, but rather 500 Lufthansa employees and crew.

The purpose of this flight was to show off the new Airbus plane to markets in the United States.

As wide as a football field is long, Airbus has created the largest passenger plane ever put into mass production. Normally, I wouldn’t make such a big deal about a new plane. However, I do have a certain passion for aviation, and while I’m not totally thrilled with a lot of what France produces, they are doing something right when it comes to flight…

Sadly, a few years ago, after an accident, France retired the Concorde line. But, they’re back now with this new plane.

With time, come changes

In my case, it was time away. Seriously, I wasn’t in prison or anything people. I merely took a break from blogging. It became an unenjoyable chore, instead of an interesting break from reality.

For a while now, my heading had gone wider than this blog header allowed in its current form. A kind user on one of my favorite websites (www.dslreports.com) informed of this. It wasn’t so much that it wasn’t obvious to me, as it was. However, what it did bring to mind was that in addition to being ugly, it was noticeable to the reader – a distraction. So, it is with this in mind, that I have changed it. Well, not exactly.

You see, I’m not a good web designer. Sure, I can design something half decent. Anything I have done for any of my webpages has been based from a free-for-use-and-modification template that I have reverse engineered to accomplish what I set out to do. With this in mind, I decided it would be best not to edit this WordPress theme (for fear of blowing up the blog). Instead, I sort of gave my blog a new name. It is still “Theories, Predictions, Opinions, Interviews, and other Nonsense”, as shown by the subheader. From a descriptive standpoint, that gets the job done just fine. From a catchy standpoint of a recognizable name, it doesn’t. Hence, the new name of “The Ramblings of a Regular Dude.”

I’ve wanted to change the name for a while, both for style and for content, and now is a good of a time as ever.

The new name is based in part and inspired by the movie The Big Lebowski and the author Hunter S. Thompson.

Well, I’m back. Never left, really. :)

For those of you that were reading my blog when I was updating it 5-7 times a week, I do apologize for my long absence. I never went anywhere in terms of actually being absent, it’s just that I had so much going on in 2006, both business and personal. In August, my Grandfather died. It was tough then, and it’s tough now. A month later, one of my best friends – my dog Millie – was put to sleep after a short fight with cancer. Basically, I decided to focus more on my family and business relationships, and get interested in certain things that I always wanted to do. I just didn’t have it in me to keep this blog going. I felt that all that I was talking about was depressing things; in addition to the deaths, 2006 brought: an almost layoff, a car accident, and a colonoscopy. ๐Ÿ™‚ 2006 was not a good year.

Anywho, I’m back. Better and bigger. I began some work on one of my websites the other night, fixing it up and so forth, and I noticed that I had neglected the PHPBB forum there for so long that spammers had infiltrated it, and created link after link and post after post of porno spam. So, I quickly deleted all the stuff there, and got a better control of it. ๐Ÿ™‚ So, I figured that I probably should update this WordPress from 1.5.2 to its current version, 2.1.2. So that’s done, and I’m going to post more here as time permits.

Right now, I’m gently sipping some Sierra Nevada Pale Ale, and listening to the last throws of the 5″ ice and sleet storm we’re currently getting. ๐Ÿ™‚

Anyway, thanks for checking out my blog. Hopefully, I’ll be doing a little better with this thing. ๐Ÿ™‚

Grandpa Ed [8/20/1909 – 8/18/2006]

(Sorry to post two entries in a row about death, but the only coincidence of this occurance is life itself. I’ve been too busy to write, and as emotions would have it, I’ve only been inspired to write when someone I knew and someone I loved passed on.)

Two days shy of his 97th birthday, my Grandpa Ed passed away. In the photo here to the right, he’s the guy all the way on the right. His sister Martha is in the middle, and his other brother Carl (who needless to say needs his own domain name and book devoted to him) is on the left. Carl used to say that in this photo, he looks like Paul Castelano two days after he got whacked. ๐Ÿ™‚

My Grandpa lived a great life, and he will be missed by all. Born in Chicago in 1909, my Grandfather worked hard his whole life. By the age of 5 in 1914, my Grandpa and his family moved from Chicago to Brooklyn, NY where he lived until 1977. Until 1970, my Grandfather worked as a butcher for Swift Meats, now a division of Conagra Foods. My Grandpa was one of the few people I knew who worked hard and lived harder through the Roaring Twenties, and also during and after the collapse of the economy in 1929. Stories he used to tell me from the ‘hard days’ make anything anyone is going through, now pale in comparison. By 1977, he and his wife moved out to Long Island with my parents and myself. I was 2 at that time. He loved it out here — he had a tomato and basil garden, and loved to sit on the back deck drinking a bloody mary or two.

I’m sad, and I know it’ll take a while for me to get used to the new normal. My circumstances are a little different because I lived with my grandfather since I was 2 years old, and right now, I’m 31. I was around him my whole life. He was basically my second father.

Luckily, I have lots of wonderful memories, and even though he passed on while I was away on vacation, I did say “goodbye” to him like I always would before I leave for a trip. So, I do have some comfort in that.

I also have comfort in the way he died. He was mentally sharp right until the end, and he did not suffer in death. He ate pizza, beer and ice cream with my parents while watching the NY Giants (win and play well to boot) the night before he died, and he then passed on in his sleep – peacefully.

My Grandfather was a special man. He took care of his ill wife for many years until her death in 1996. He had a passion for cooking and baking, often dinner for himself and family until about 2 weeks before he died.

He stopped driving only 3 years ago, when he made the decision that he no longer could drive safely.

He cleaned his place himself, and in general he was very independent.

He loved to travel, and go on cruises or to Las Vegas with my parents, as well as take trips to Rhode Island to see his Son, Ed.

Boy, he loved to eat. And he loved to cook. Breakfast, lunch or dinner, he was always up for eating and also eating anything from ice cream to slices of pepperoni at 11PM. As I’d walk in the house sometimes at 10:30 or 11 at night, throwing a laundry in before I’d throw myself in my bed to sleep, he’d be bent over, looking deep into the fridge for something – anything – to eat before bed. It didn’t matter if it were ice cream, pickels or pepperoni, he loved it all.

He loved playing on the computer, and using the computer in general. He would watch TV at night until about 10:30, and then he would retire to his bedroom where he’d play an hour of solitarie, check his email, read Wikipedia, use www.howstuffworks.com, or order his medication online. For someone 96 years old and playing solitaire and ordering his meds online, I consider that highly impressive.

Most of all, I know he loved his grandchildren. Just as myself, my brother and 2 cousins were able to have him a part of our lives, he was able to see 4 grandchildren grow up. The oldest being myself at 31, and the youngest being my brother at 25.

I consider myself one of the luckiest people in the world for having him in my life for as long as he was.

It’s always hard to imagine someone gone when they are still alive, and when they pass on, it’s even harder to imagine them gone. It’s only been a week, and I’m still struggling with the notion of the empty apartment downstairs. Everything down there is how he left it when he went to bed – it’s like a time capsule.

While I’m not a large believer in God, I do believe (hope) that there is something after this life, something better. Someplace of eternal peace and happiness for the soul, where all the people that have passed on will be reuinted. While I am in no rush to get there, I do think about the date when I will see my grandfather again. And when I do, it’ll be great.

Bye for now, Grandpa. Thank you for being such a wonderful part of my life, and you will be missed by many. I’m glad I was able to say that to you in person many times, not just reflect upon it at the time of your death. Until we meet again, be well, and say hi to Grandma and the rest of the bunch for me. Remember to tell Grandma that ‘yes’, Alex Trebeck is still doing Jeopardy!, and Pat Sayjack & Vanna White are still doing Wheel of Fortune! ๐Ÿ™‚

—–
In Loving Memory of Edward
Born Agust 20th, 1909
Entered into Eternal Rest August 18th, 2006

God grant me the Serenity
to accept the things I cannot change….
Courage to change the things I can and
Wisdom to know the difference.

Amen.

———–

Tribute to a Man

Sorry that I haven’t posted anything in about 30 days, I’ve been busy with both my day and night jobs, some family get-togethers, and some damn nice weather that has limited my personal computer time. ๐Ÿ™‚

The post today is a sad one, and is a happy one at the same time.

I work for a national healthcare company that specializes in intraveneous (IV), injectible (IM), and inhalation (INH) therapies at home. On service with us, we have people with simple infections that will heal, and we have other people that are terminal and will die any day. Yet, no matter what the disease state, we provide patients with a bit of normalcy to their lives — they don’t have to stay in the hospital for the length of their therapy, or more importantly, they can die at home, at piece and with their family. We provide more than medications — we provide normalcy for patients, and that is such a good thing.

I can’t (and won’t) mention names here, and even first names have been changed to protect the identity of the people in question.

We have a patient on service for about 3 years now, and her name is Michelle. She’s in her early 60’s, and her husband – John – god bless his soul – takes care of her from daybreak to sunset, and all of the time inbetween. Michelle has been on many, many antibiotics with us through the last two years, only because the doctors don’t know what the root cause of her symptoms are. Basically, they don’t know what she has, but they keep trying things to see what works.

Michelle has been stable for quite a while, living a somewhat normal life at home. Sometimes, her WBC counts would get down too low, and she would have to go for a transfusion. John, always by her side, and always acting on her behalf as her spokesperson, morally, ethically, sensibly, and lovingly.

He would e-mail or call me once or twice a week, to let me know how she was doing and to see if we could do certain things, pending insurance clearance or pending MD orders. Or, he would give me the heads up about something happening a week from now, that I might have to handle for him — getting lab results ready, organzing a discharge from the hospital so she could come home over Christmas, or just simply letting him know what he leb results were so he could make a determination on whether or not Michelle needed a transfusion.

This past Thursday, I helped organzie the paperwork and the set the “wheel in motion” so that Michelle could come home over the weekend. She had taken a sudden turn for the worse, and with the doctors not being able to figure out her diagnosis much less a treatment, we were all working against time. Michelle came home on Thursday, went on an antifungal medicine, and the holiday weekend started.

Michelle died, quite peacefully in bed, and in the arms of her husband on May 30th, 2006.

I received a call today from John. Barely able to make complete sentences without breaking down, I could feel the love he had for his wife and I myself, started to lose it a little. Luckily, he asked me a question that I didn’t have an answer to because it’s not my call to make, so the HOLD button here was a lifesaver for me, as I needed to compose myself as much as he. After I found the answer, I told him and he began to tell us how professional we all were, how much we helped Michelle, how much we helped him, and to us, he was forever grateful. He had some other nice things to say about our company and the specific people in my team.

I however went on to thank him. He spent nearly every waking hour caring for his wife, and I thanked him for doing that. My grandfather did the same his wife – my grandmother – for most of her life until her death, and if it’s one thing I admire, it’s devotion to the one you life. I told John this, and after telling him to call or write any time he needs to, whether it’s personal or business, we said our last goodbyes for now, and hung up the phone, both of us not completely composed.

It’s the people like John and Michelle that make the job worth it. Many people care for others, but no one cared for anyone like John did for Michelle. Not at least in my 7 years there have I ever seen anything like it.

John, good luck to you, and Michelle, enjoy the ride and I know you’re in a better place.


“I’d like the memory of me to be a happy one, I’d like to leave an afterglow of smiles day is done. I’d like to leave an echo whispering softly down the ways, Of happy times and laughing times and bright sunny days. I’d like the tears of those who grieve to dry before the sun, Of happy memories that I leave behind when day is done.”

Coppfield Tricks ‘Em All

Did you hear this one? David Copperfield (the magician) gets robbed in Florida, and he does a magic trick so the would-be robbers think that Copperfield has nothing in his pockets. The reality is that Copperfield has a cellphone, and some other important info. I’m not kidding, really. Check out the link below. How funny is that?

David Copperfield Tricks Robbers

Edit: April 4, 2007 – Dead link to article, changed to working link.

Dish Reaches Carriage Agreement with Sportsnet NY

I’m thrilled! The Dish Network reached a carrier agreement with Sportsnet NY, home of the NY Mets, only days after my last blog post. I was getting a little discouraged since they remained the only national provider that did not reach an agreement with SportsNet NY. I had written to the CEO (“ceo@thedishnetwork.com”) asking for them to pickup this station, so when it was announced the other day that they did reach an agreement, I did something that I hope many people did — email “ceo@thedishnetwork.com” to say thank you. And, I got a personal reply.

Thank you Dish!

Mr. *********,

I appreciate the email and the kind words toward DISH. I hope you enjoyed last nightรขโ‚ฌโ„ขs game and the many that will follow. I hope the Mets have a great season!

Sincerely,

David Laslo

Executive Office of DISH Network

CEO Escalations

David.laslo@echostar.com

—–Original Message—–
From: Jeff
Sent: Thursday, April 06, 2006 11:34 PM
To: CEO
Subject: Thank You for Adding Sportsnet NY-David

As an 18 month subscriber of The Dish Network that e-mailed you “begging you” to negotiate an agreement with Sportsnet NY – the home of the NY Mets – I want to specifically thank you for the recent news of this channel being added. I had been recently worried that you would not pickup this channel. It was a pleasant suprise coming home from the bar where I went to watch the game to come home and see the press release that a deal was struck between Dish and Sportsnet NY.

Thank you so much for adding this station. If the channel was not added, I would have had to switch to DirecTV, and based upon my friend’s review of it (he has it because his family loves the Yankees and DirecTV carries YES!), he doesn’t recommened DirecTV to anyone that doesn’t need it. It honestly would have pained me to switch from Dish because we love it so much. My mom *loves* Dish – she’s big into the DVR and recording programs.

I’ve been reading www.satelliteguys.us and www.dbstalk.com daily for the last 2 months, awaiting news of Dish adding this channel. I was very encouraged by the uplink to ch 438 at the end of March, described by posters at those websites.

Thank you again for adding this. I’m sure many people (including myself) e-mailed to add this channel, and I hope that just as many say “thank you” for adding it. We Mets fans here in NY really appreciate it, and it does mean a lot.

Jeff
NY.

No NY Mets, and I Live on Long Island

Springtime is a great time of year. The change back to daylight savings, warmer weather, driving with the windows down, and baseball. Baseball is by far my favorite sport. It’s my favorite sport both to watch, play and listen to. The NY Mets have been my baseball team since about 1981. Through the horrible early 1980s, the 1986 Word Series, the late 1980s fade-out, the horrible 1990s, and the rebirth in the last few years of a promising team. However, as of typing this, I can’t watch them.

Once upon a time in the 1990s, the NY Mets were broadcast on WWOR (Channel 9). It was an OTA station (over the air). If you didn’t have cable TV, it wasn’t a problem. Fiddle with your rabbit ears on the TV, and you could watch the Mets. In the eatly 1990s, both the Mets and Yankees moved off of WWOR and WPIX respectively, and moved to their own regional sports networks (RSNs) with the Mets splitting time between WPIX and MSG and the Yankees going to their own YES! network.

When the Yankees started YES! in the early naughts, Cablevision – the cable operator in this territory – refused to pickup the YES! network. They didn’t carry the station for a year, and Cablevision customers who were also Yankees fans were forced to go to DirecTV, as DirecTV carried and still does carry the YES! network.

On March 16th, 2005 the NY Mets started their own RSN called Sportsnet NY. Soon after this date, Verizon was the first TV provider to get a carrier agreement with Sportsnet NY. That’s just fucking great, because hardly anyone is eligible for FiosTV yet in NY. (Verizon has rolled out Fios Internet to some communities including mine since Feb 2005, but their Fios TV will be held up by political redtape in each municipality.) Cablevision signed Sportsnet NY a few days later, learning their lesson when they failed to sign YES! in a timely mannor. On opening day, too late to see the first game, DirecTV came to an agreement with Sportsnet NY, and the first broadcast on DirecTV will be tomorrow, Wednesday 4/5/06.

I have the Dish Network, and I’ve been extremely happy with it for the 17 months I’ve had it. However, they don’t carry the YES! network and they don’t at the current time carry Sportsnet NY. They say they are in deep discussion with Sportsnet NY, but that’s just saying that neither side has agreed to relinquish any of their outrageously high demands at the current time.

So, here in lies the problem. I live on Long Island, 15 miles away from Shea Stadium, but due to the fact I have The Dish Network, I will be unable to watch the large majority (+130) of NY Mets games unless Echostar (Dish) comes to a carriage agreement with Sportsnet NY.

If they do not, I move to DirecTV. And I’d hate to do that because we like Dish here, and my friend does not like DirecTV. He hates Cablevision, but members of his family are Yankee fans, so for him, it’s Cablevision, DirecTV or nothing. ๐Ÿ™‚

How I long for the days when I could tune the rabbit ears to a fuzzy channel 9 and watch the Mets whenever I wanted.

Charlie Sheen Takes One for the Team

Well, Charlie Sheen is one brave soul. He made Hot Sharts Part Deux. ๐Ÿ™‚ Also, he came out publically recently, and basically asked what many thousands of people are asking in this country – “what really happened on 9/11/01.” A lot of people (including myself) are of the belief that we are not being told the whole story, that there are large gaps in both information and evidence.


Video
Article #1
Article #2

Hopefully, over time, more people will start asking questions and the media will be fair to all.