Today at THT
I watched the movie “Five Easy Pieces” for about the tenth time last night, and it never gets old. Fabulous movie. If someone told me I had a day to live, I’d probably cue it up.
But one thing has always bothered me about it. Well, not the movie, especially, but the reaction to its most famous scene. You know which one I’m talking about (and if you don’t, here it is). The reaction you often get to that are cheers for Nicholson for telling that waitress to hold the chicken between her knees. That’s great and all, but no one ever seems to remember Nicholson’s first line when they’re back in the car: “Yeah, well, I didn’t get it, did I?” referring to the toast he wanted. It’s not a scene of triumph. It’s a scene of impotent rage, and no one ever seems to acknowledge this.
Sometimes I feel like this with respect to a great article about why Jim Rice shouldn’t be in the Hall of Fame or why Derek Jeter’s defense is horrible. Sure, my first impulse is to cheer — and hear everyone else’s cheers too — but then I realize that no one’s mind has been changed. At least that of anyone who matters. Unworthy guys will be elected to the Hall, and Jeter — or Michael Young or someone else who occasionally looks slick but is actually terrible with the leather — will win the gold glove. The idiots win an awful lot, and because of it, it tempers my excitement.
Um, sorry about that, but my wife kind of hates that movie, so I had to talk to someone about it. Anyway, today at THT:
The more forceful the hip rotation, the more torque Arrieta creates between his torso and hips. The bigger the separation between his torso and hips, the more power is transmitted to the shoulder. The more power transmitted to the shoulder, the greater the potential for velocity–as long as the kinetic chain is in-sync throughout the delivery, which Arrieta’s is.
That’s what SHE said.
It seems like I’ve been doing this a lot lately, but I’m going to apologize in advance for what will be, in all likelihood, a very short day around here, as I have some business to attend to in town. Yes, I suppose that’s a rather dramatic way to put it, but I’ve always wanted to say it.
What about left-handed Presidents (Obama)?
I feel the same way about “Catcher in the Rye.” Everybody applauds Holden for his denunciation of phonies without realizing that he’s the biggest phony of them all.
The only thing I know about “Five Easy Pieces” is that one scene, which I can’t stand. Of course, I can’t stand Jack Nicholson. But if that’s the context, maybe I should check it out.