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Post by billhammond on May 17, 2024 10:42:18 GMT -5
AP excerpt:
LOUISVILLE, Ky. — Masters champion Scottie Scheffler was arrested Friday morning on his way to the PGA Championship, with stunning images showing him handcuffed as he was taken to jail for not following police orders during a pedestrian fatality investigation.
In a span of three hours, Scheffler was arrested wearing gym shorts and a tee shirt, was dressed in an orange jail shirt for his mug shot, and returned to Valhalla Golf Club in golf clothes 56 minutes before he was to tee off in the second round.
Traffic was backed up for about a mile in both directions on the only road that leads to Valhalla in the morning darkness with light rain, with dozens of police vehicles flashing red-and-blue lights near the entrance.
Police said a pedestrian had been struck by a bus while crossing the road in a lane that was dedicated to tournament traffic and was pronounced dead at the scene about 5:09 a.m.
ESPN reporter Jeff Darlington said Scheffler, the No. 1 player in the world who was to start the second round at 8:48 a.m., drove past a police officer a little after 6 a.m. in his SUV with markings on the door indicating it was a PGA Championship vehicle.
The officer screamed at him to stop and then grabbed onto the car until Scheffler stopped about 10 yards later.
Scheffler was booked at 7:28 a.m. — about 2 1/2 hours before he was scheduled to start his second round. Police said he was booked for second-degree assault of a police officer, third-degree criminal mischief, reckless driving and disregarding traffic signals from an officer directing traffic.
Louisville Metro police spokesman Dwight Mitchell did not immediately return a call seeking comment and information.
Darlington watched it unfold. He said police pulled Scheffler out of the car, pushed him up against the car and immediately placed him in handcuffs.
''Scheffler was then walked over to the police car, placed in the back, in handcuffs, very stunned about what was happening, looked toward me as he was in those handcuffs and said, 'Please help me,'" Darlington said. ''He very clearly did not know what was happening in the situation. It moved very quickly, very rapidly, very aggressively.''
Mitchell told Louisville radio station WHAS the man was crossing Shelbyville Road about 5 a.m. and the bus didn't see him. Mitchell said the man was pronounced dead on the scene.
The PGA Championship posted a notice that play would be delayed because of the accident. The second round was to start 1 hour, 20 minutes later than scheduled tee times, meaning Scheffler was not due to start until a little after 10 a.m.
With cars backed up in the morning darkness, other PGA-marked vehicles tried to move slowly toward the entrance. Traffic finally began to move gradually a little before 7 a.m.
It was a surreal start to what already has been a wild week of weather — the Masters champion and top-ranked player in the world, dressed in workout clothes with his hands in cuffs behind his back amid flashing flights.
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Post by billhammond on May 17, 2024 10:36:11 GMT -5
Thereby creating another unemployed barista. I'm just sayin'. Howard, it's a freaking gas station!
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Post by billhammond on May 17, 2024 9:18:24 GMT -5
Good morning, just back from Trader Joe's, and stopped on the way home at my local Speedway station to fill my coffee mug with House blend. It's funny, but that $1.50 16-oz. fill is pretty much my favorite coffee, but then, I've never been a coffee purist. Speedway has those cool machines where you pick your blend, the bean containers rotate, grind your selection and brew it on the spot.
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Post by billhammond on May 16, 2024 6:33:57 GMT -5
So how were the tortillas? Mike
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Post by billhammond on May 15, 2024 23:06:49 GMT -5
I've been to Nico's on Grand Como Ave. with Bill. Very nice.
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Post by billhammond on May 15, 2024 18:10:47 GMT -5
Terry, what are the back and sides on this one? Purdy!
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Post by billhammond on May 15, 2024 17:49:02 GMT -5
I've just returned from a happy-hour visit to Nico's Taco's a few miles away in St. Paul, a charming place. It's one of a rising number of Mexican restaurants in the Twin Cities taking the time and effort to serve tacos and tortillas made from nixtamalized maize. The carnitas taco I just had was excellent (as was the nicely priced margarita!)
Here's an excerpt of a Pioneer Press story from 2021 that explains the process. I'm wondering if this approach is common in AZ, NM, etc.
By NANCY NGO | Pioneer Press PUBLISHED: January 27, 2021
Nico’s Tacos are changing the way we think about tacos, one nixtamal tortilla at a time.
Nico’s Tacos, with locations in St. Paul’s St. Anthony Park neighborhood off Como Avenue and in Minneapolis’ Uptown, recently started featuring nixtamal tortillas and tamales by way of a labor-intensive process of making masa using prized native, heirloom corn from Mexico.
The ancient method in Mexico of processing maize corn kernels — beloved for rendering a soft dough as well as boosting flavor and nutritional value — is starting to gain steam in the United States. Heirloom corn had previously been difficult to source, and while that is changing, the nixtamalization process is a time-consuming one that includes soaking corn in limestone water for a period of time and wet grinding it into masa.
“In my state and our culture, the nixtamalization process is a sacred tradition. Right now it’s really difficult to find. But it started to take off again about two years ago. You’ll see it more in big cities like Los Angeles, Chicago and Mexico City,” said Chef Alejandro Victoria, who owns the restaurant with wife Jenna and nephews Andres and Isidro. ”People are bringing it back. We’re going to see this quite a bit coming up here.”
It’s still rare in the metro area to find places sourcing corn in such a way and practicing the labor-intensive, ancient culinary technique, although a growing number are starting to feature products using nixtamalized corn. In addition to Nico’s Tacos, the product has been spotted at places such as Nixta tortilleria, which opened this past year in northeast Minneapolis and sells to local restaurants. Sooki & Mimi, the eatery from James Beard winner Ann Kim opening soon in Minneapolis’ Uptown, will also feature nixtamal.
At Nico’s Tacos, the house-made nixtamal masa is now the base for tortillas served in dishes such as tacos and enchiladas. The restaurant’s tamales are also made with nixtamal masa.
Taste the tortillas here, and you’ll find a noticeably more nutty, earthy flavor and grainier, coarser texture than mainstream ones made with powdered masa. Nixtamal tortillas vary in color, depending on the type of kernels used.
For the Victoria family, offering this at the restaurant is also a personal journey.
When Alejandro’s father, a corn grower by trade, passed away three years ago, the family had an even stronger incentive to bring the tradition to their Twin Cities restaurants. For the past three years, they’ve been busy sourcing the corn, working the fields and learning from their elders how to perfect the art form.
Corn for their restaurant is not only sourced from Mexico, but from the family’s home state of Michoacán. And one day, in addition to sourcing corn from the region, they hope to take it a step further. Their family has grown heirloom corn in the highlands of Michoacán their whole life. Many continue to do so and the family is currently working to source corn from those farms.
“It’s my indigenous heritage,” Alejandro said. “This tradition is an important piece of our Mexican heritage, and something we have been working on to bring permanently to Nico’s for several years.”
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Post by billhammond on May 15, 2024 13:59:33 GMT -5
Guy at the shop would love to buy our truck, but currently owns 9 vehicles and fears the wrath of his wife. Guy needs a new wife.
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Post by billhammond on May 14, 2024 19:45:20 GMT -5
My horrid workday (tech woes from new mothership pub system) has been eased by Genoa salami/provolone rollups and Spanish Monastrell vino. Ahhhhhh.
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Post by billhammond on May 14, 2024 8:31:12 GMT -5
It’s 5:30 AM and a pleasant 76 degrees. Wait, you mean 6:30, right?
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Post by billhammond on May 13, 2024 20:36:43 GMT -5
Got the beard trimmed today at Great Clips -- $10 for the trim, $10 for the tip, which always makes the cutter happy.
Why, oh why, can't I get used to looking down on the black tarp they wrap you in and seeing nothing but blindingly white whiskers?
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Post by billhammond on May 13, 2024 20:08:04 GMT -5
What is to become of Quinn Violins?
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Post by billhammond on May 13, 2024 18:24:26 GMT -5
Had some pizza, homemade with fabulous mild sauce and a great crust. Might have been the best pizza I have ever eaten. Seriously. You made it?
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Post by billhammond on May 13, 2024 11:13:03 GMT -5
Packing today for a long weekend in downtown Milwaukee. Willie Nelson concert is on Saturday and we thought we would head out a few days ahead and take a boat ride, go to the art museum and/or just walk near the lake. The Milwaukee Art Museum is one of the most amazing places to experience.
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Post by billhammond on May 13, 2024 10:47:00 GMT -5
Good morning. 51F-73F sunny. Yesterday got quite warm, not complaining just saying. Today will be really nice and I have one outdoor project to do but will start the day in my shop. Be careful outdoors, as we have a Red Alert for air quality thanks to Canadian wildfires.
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Post by billhammond on May 13, 2024 10:22:52 GMT -5
Did you notice how clean the windows are in their delightful home?
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Post by billhammond on May 13, 2024 9:50:27 GMT -5
OK, how was it? Were all his songs long and in G? Bill, I am not trying to be snarky, just have an honest question. Do most people listening to a musical performance have any clue what key a song is in? I know I don't. Maybe it is a matter of ignorance is bliss or knowing too much being detrimental to the listening experience. All I know is that I either like the music or I don't. I think keys are for composers and performers. They provide a basic framework to keep the music from becoming discordant and allowing a singer to match vocal range to the music. When listening to music, live, recorded, radio, I never spend a second wondering what key it is in, perhaps due to my ignorance. Am I unusual in this regard? For me, it's not the key, per se, but the voicings inherent in first position guitar chords. If you play a set in which everything is in G and has only three or four chords in each song, listener fatigue is gonna set in, even if it's unconscious, is my belief.
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Post by billhammond on May 13, 2024 9:46:57 GMT -5
Excerpt from Biography website:
As one of the most popular comedians and political satirists over the last two decades, Stephen Colbert has made people laugh and cringe on a nightly basis. His comedic mind is unparalleled, supported by a razor-sharp wit and expansive intellectual curiosity, but what sets him apart isn’t just the fact that he can get belly laughs on command. The true key to the former Colbert Report and current Late Show host’s success as a humorist is his humanity and empathy, two traits that were at least in part forged by early tragedy.
Colbert spent his early years in Maryland before his large family moved to just outside Charleston, South Carolina, when his father, a doctor and academic named James William Colbert, Jr., accepted a job at the Medical University of South Carolina. Stephen is the youngest of 10 siblings, a brood that included James III, Edward, Mary, William, Margo, Thomas, Jay, Elizabeth, Paul and Peter. The tight-knit Catholic family was shattered by a horrible accident that made national headlines and broke his own little private world.
On September 11, 1974, Colbert’s father and two brothers nearest in age, Paul and Peter, were passengers on a plane making a short flight from Charleston to Charlotte, North Carolina. Eastern Air Lines Flight 212, operating on a DC-9 jet, had 82 people on board and seemed to be making a routine approach towards Douglas Municipal Airport. The flight never made it to Douglas, crashing three miles shy of its intended runway on a hillside covered with cornfields.
It was a foggy morning and the plane’s crew, according to cockpit recordings, lost track of the altitude. But it wasn’t just a matter of inclement conditions — the real problem was that the pilots weren’t exactly paying attention. “The flight crew's lack of altitude awareness at critical points during the approach due to poor cockpit discipline in that the crew did not follow prescribed procedure,” the NTSB wrote in its final report.
Regardless of the exact cause of the crash, the crash was catastrophic. Only 13 of the 82 people on board survived the initial impact, and in the end, 72 people died from the crash. Among the losses were James, Paul and Peter.
Colbert was just 10 years old when he lost his father and brothers. “There’s this big break in the cable of my memory at their death. Everything before that has got an odd, ghostly tone,” Colbert told Anderson Cooper in 2019. “I was personally shattered and then you reform yourself in this quiet, grieving world that was created in the house. My mother had me to take care of, which I think was sort of a gift for her, a sense of purpose at that point. But I also had her to take care of. It became a very quiet house, very dark, and ordinary concerns of childhood kind of disappeared.”
Colbert became something of a rebel, though in an unconventional way. While clearly smart, he was a terrible student, uninterested in studying or doing his homework. He wasn’t out making trouble, though — young Colbert was a sci-fi and fantasy geek, obsessed with playing Dungeons & Dragons and reading the Lord of the Rings. It’s an obsession he maintains to this day — his love of J.R.R. Tolkien’s classic novels always leads any “fun facts” list about the Emmy-winner.
While times were bleak, he didn’t lose himself entirely. “It was just me and Mom for a long time, and by her example I am not bitter,” Colbert told GQ in 2015. “She was broken, yes. Bitter, no.”
Growing up Catholic, Colbert found himself turning to religion in an effort to understand such a senseless, painful tragedy. That’s not to say that he became okay with what happened, but it did begin to inform his worldview as he grew up and processed the emotions that came with the loss. More than anything else, he learned acceptance, which he describes as not allowing yourself to be defeated by suffering.
“You gotta learn to love the bomb,” he told GQ. “Boy, did I have a bomb when I was 10. That was quite an explosion. And I learned to love it. So that's why. Maybe, I don't know. That might be why you don't see me as someone angry and working out my demons onstage. It's that I love the thing that I most wish had not happened.”
He struggled through high school, then hit a wall when he went away to Hampden-Sydney College in Virginia. “I didn’t really feel the loss until I was in college,” he told Oprah Winfrey in 2012. “Then, I was in bad shape... I was just so sad about it.”
While working through his feelings, Colbert began to excel once he found his passion. After two years, he transferred to Northwestern University in Chicago to concentrate on theater, then discovered improv comedy at the world-famous Second City Theater and its founder, Del Close. Colbert met his future comedy partners while in Chicago, including Amy Sedaris, with whom he created and starred in the cult hit show Strangers With Candy.
After that show ended, he joined the cast of The Daily Show. His career took off from there, turning him into a household name and injecting his biting-yet-joyful sense of humor into the mainstream. One of the most engaging interviewers on television, Colbert allows his interviewees the space to be honest and vulnerable. He too lets his guard down from time to time, an openness and empathy informed by the tragedy that changed his life all those years ago.
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Post by billhammond on May 13, 2024 8:40:28 GMT -5
68 degrees in Charlston this morning. We will be visiting Fort Sumpter this afternoon for a private, in depth, tour. But now, coffee. On holiday with your lady friend? <Charleston> <Sumter>
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Post by billhammond on May 12, 2024 23:18:44 GMT -5
Speaking of Duane Allman, this blast from the past popped up on my YouTube feed today. My toss-away hand movements were both to clear the chord soundings and to give my ailing, cramping hands some relief. Lonnie called them my "spit-valve moves." God, I miss that guy.
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