Saints punter Mitch Berger has been lost for the season with a groin injury.
To fix the problem, New Orleans has decided to re-acquire quarterback Aaron Brooks and will simply try to turn the ball over before facing a punting situation.
Tam ve’nishlam
It is completed.
Rock & Roll, Part 2 — out
Gary Glitter has been banned from the NFL. You might know his song “Rock & Roll Part 2” as “Dr. Who.” Everybody knows the song, they play it all the time at games.
Well, Gary went to jail for doing extra-bad things, and the NFL banned the song from its games. From Aversion:
The league’s iced the practice of playing Glitter’s largely instrumental pump-up song during its games, according to Newsweek. The decision was tipped after Glitter was convicted of molesting a pair of girls in Vietnam (read full story). His appeal was later overruled. He’s now serving a three-year term for the conviction.
Sorry Dave, I know how much you love that song.
I wonder if they would have taken OJ out of the Hall of Fame if he was found guilty. I’m not defending what Gary Glitter did, but what do his actions have to do with the song?
One year ago today
It doesn’t seem like it has been that long, and at the same time, it feels like the storm was ages ago. Being in the city last weekend was good, but it really drove home that there is a lot of work still to be done. There has been a good amount of progress and no progress since I was last there in May. I guess that’s the typical dual nature of New Orleans, where rich and poor live in the same neighborhoods, where we celebrate a religious holiday with drunken debauchery.
The grass is back and green again. It was still mostly dead in May. Of course, now it’s two feet tall in front of neglected houses. I guess that’s better than dead grass.
I have mixed feelings today. A lot of feelings, actually. I’m thankful that we all made it through the storm and the levees’ failure. I’m angry at the government. I’m tired of defending the city to people who don’t understand. I’m happy that the city and its people continue on, despite the hardships of everyday life that the rest of the country (myself included here in Atlanta) take for granted. I’m both hopeful and worried for the future.
The city has changed forever. That’s not good, that’s not bad, it’s just different. New Orleans breeds a hardiness of attitude and a love of tradition that will be valuable attributes in the days to come. Sure the city will change. But it will always be New Orleans, it will always be my city, my home, no matter where I live.
I’ve never had a better Hansen’s Sno-Bliz than the one I had on Saturday. It tasted like home.
To all my homies whos lives were forever changed a year ago today,
Cheers for surviving and perservering! New Orleans will rise again!!!
The Answer — Mark Simoneau
Lacking even one decent linebacker, the Saints gave away their best receiver for Eagle back-up Mark Simonea. N.O. has now added the only linebackers in the league—Scott Shanle, Jay Foreman, Tommy Polley, Scott Fujita and Anthony Simmons—that cannot break into the Saints’ starting line-up.
Tattoos…
What if the ex-new orleans folks got their tattoos on the one year anniversary?
Happy Birthday Amber!
You’re older than me. 🙂
Kent-Lucky
Has everyone seen this? This is the greatest license plate in the history of the world. How many places can say they have the TeleTubbies home town on their license plates?
I feel safe
I’m pretty sure everyone that knows me knows that I think that banning liquids from planes will not keep us safe and is purely a kneejerk reaction by the government who is more interested in cultivating a culture of fear than in actual passenger safety.
But then I saw this article: Boy boards plane without tickets, and thought of the wonderful possibilities if our government followed this situation to its logical conclusion: BAN CHILDREN FROM AIRPLANES.
Just imagine it.
A liquid-free, child-free flight.
I’d gladly give up my toothpaste and flask of whiskey to not have somebody’s spawn kicking my seat and crying incesantly.