Cadillac gets an "A" from me for its modern integration of music, car, and lighting. The music's pop culture cool. The lighting is always for night, and the car's color is generally silver. The result is a clean look that communicates Cadillac as a youthful luxury brand.
Thursday, December 24, 2009
Santa Claus NORAD Santa Tracker embeded here
Ok, so this business of going to the NORAD website to track Santa Claus' trip around the World is a bit much and I'm in the middle of watching It's A Wonderful Life, so I decided to embed the tracker right here in my blog:
As of 6 PM PST / 9 PM EST, Santa Claus is in Goose Green, Falkland Islands (Islas Malvinas), but he's moving really fast! (If the embed doesn't work in your browser, click on the NORAD link.)
Merry Christmas!
As of 6 PM PST / 9 PM EST, Santa Claus is in Goose Green, Falkland Islands (Islas Malvinas), but he's moving really fast! (If the embed doesn't work in your browser, click on the NORAD link.)
Merry Christmas!
Santa Claus is in St. Petersburg, Russia
Merry Christmas everyone!! This Santa update has Santa Claus in St. Petersburg, Russia, according to the NORAD Santa Tracker. Santa's next stop is Kokkola, Finland. The time is 1:08 PST - 4:08 EST in America.
As I wrote in my last blog post on Santa Claus...
Stay tuned!
As I wrote in my last blog post on Santa Claus...
The North American Aerospace Defense Command, and the 601st Air and Space Operations Center, has tracked Santa's flight since 1955. You can track Santa's Worldwide gift delivery flight from the NORAD website: http://www.noradsanta.org The site is multi-lingual.
Or, if you want to call for tracking information, NORAD's Colorado operations center will start taking calls at 5 AM. The number is 877-Hi-NORAD (877-446-6723) toll-free. You can also send an email to noradtrackssanta@gmail.com.
Stay tuned!
Senate vote on Health Care Reform President Obama's victory
In less than one year President Barack Obama has managed to do what's never been done in 60 years: spearhead the passage of the reform of the American Health Care System. A nice Christmas present delivered from 60 of Santa Claus' elves in the U.S. Senate, plus one.
Somewhere in Heaven, Senator Ted Kennedy is smiling, and giving a thumbs-up.
(Where's Santa? Well, he's in his sleigh traveling around the World, and you can track him here.)
New Jersey Sen. Bob Mendendez is one of Santa's helpers. Senator Mendendez sent an email to me announcing this moment in history this morning. What he wrote says it all:
Senator Mendendez is right. Some wrongheadedly wrote we should forget health care reform and fix are economy. What they don't understand is our social safety net is so badly damaged that people without jobs could not have health care. That has to change. It has.
Our economy is so badly damaged that it will take years to repair if the objective is a restoration to the kind of economic power America enjoyed in the 60s. I personally think we can do it, but it takes a jettisoning of any idea that Federal Government spending is bad, period. Our economic competitor nations have no problem using government subsidy to help business, and they have taken our position as the export leader away from us. I'm referring to China and Germany and the European Union. It's time for America to wake up and stop this tom-foolery nonsense about spending.
Now that we're on our way toward a health care system that's workable, we can do that.
The Health Care Reform bill passed this morning is called the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act. According to the Democratic Senatorial Campaign Committee, the reform will result in the coverage of 94 percent of all Americans, including those estimated 31 million not insured. But what's best in addition is that it provides tax credits to small businesses.
The plan is really centrist - neither really left or right wing. It takes care of a long-standing problem that's caused many to question America's direction: it's ability to take care of its own.
The passage of Heath Care Reform means the death of the Republican Party. Can you immagine any Republican effectively explaining to an electorate why they voted against help for the uninsured? And with the electorate becoming more ethnically diverse, Republicans asking for the vote of members of racial groups who've been shut out of health care coverage is going to be an uphill battle.
Even with this, Democrats can't lose focus. The next step is the merging of the House and Senate bills into one. Some Republicans may discover logic and realize they don't want to be on the wrong side of positive change, so getting a good bill should not be a big problem.
But this is Congress.
Stay tuned.
Somewhere in Heaven, Senator Ted Kennedy is smiling, and giving a thumbs-up.
(Where's Santa? Well, he's in his sleigh traveling around the World, and you can track him here.)
New Jersey Sen. Bob Mendendez is one of Santa's helpers. Senator Mendendez sent an email to me announcing this moment in history this morning. What he wrote says it all:
Today Senate Democrats passed the most sweeping health care reform package this country has ever seen, and we couldn't have done it without your help.
I can't emphasize enough what this legislation will mean for millions of Americans without adequate health care. It reduces costs for families, increases access, adds choice and competition, and forces insurance companies to put patients first. "Pre-existing conditions" will no longer exist. And seniors will enjoy reduced drug costs and the assurance that Medicare will continue to provide the great care they deserve. Strident GOP objection won't change any of these facts.
The measure will be reconciled with the House version and then signed by President Obama. And not one moment too soon. It's fundamentally wrong that Americans who get sick or injured can be kicked off their insurance, become bankrupt and lose their homes. We're better than that, and this legislation proves it.
Senator Mendendez is right. Some wrongheadedly wrote we should forget health care reform and fix are economy. What they don't understand is our social safety net is so badly damaged that people without jobs could not have health care. That has to change. It has.
Our economy is so badly damaged that it will take years to repair if the objective is a restoration to the kind of economic power America enjoyed in the 60s. I personally think we can do it, but it takes a jettisoning of any idea that Federal Government spending is bad, period. Our economic competitor nations have no problem using government subsidy to help business, and they have taken our position as the export leader away from us. I'm referring to China and Germany and the European Union. It's time for America to wake up and stop this tom-foolery nonsense about spending.
Now that we're on our way toward a health care system that's workable, we can do that.
The Health Care Reform bill passed this morning is called the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act. According to the Democratic Senatorial Campaign Committee, the reform will result in the coverage of 94 percent of all Americans, including those estimated 31 million not insured. But what's best in addition is that it provides tax credits to small businesses.
The plan is really centrist - neither really left or right wing. It takes care of a long-standing problem that's caused many to question America's direction: it's ability to take care of its own.
The Death of the Republican Party
The passage of Heath Care Reform means the death of the Republican Party. Can you immagine any Republican effectively explaining to an electorate why they voted against help for the uninsured? And with the electorate becoming more ethnically diverse, Republicans asking for the vote of members of racial groups who've been shut out of health care coverage is going to be an uphill battle.
Even with this, Democrats can't lose focus. The next step is the merging of the House and Senate bills into one. Some Republicans may discover logic and realize they don't want to be on the wrong side of positive change, so getting a good bill should not be a big problem.
But this is Congress.
Stay tuned.
Santa Claus is coming; track Santa on Christmas Eve 2009
It's Christmas Eve 2009 and Santa Claus is on his sleigh. You can track Santa Claus' trip using NORAD.
The North American Aerospace Defense Command, and the 601st Air and Space Operations Center, has tracked Santa's flight since 1955. You can track Santa's Worldwide gift delivery flight from the NORAD website: http://www.noradsanta.org The site is multi-lingual.
Or, if you want to call for tracking information, NORAD's Colorado operations center will start taking calls at 5 AM. The number is 877-Hi-NORAD (877-446-6723) toll-free. You can also send an email to noradtrackssanta@gmail.com.
The North American Aerospace Defense Command, and the 601st Air and Space Operations Center, has tracked Santa's flight since 1955. You can track Santa's Worldwide gift delivery flight from the NORAD website: http://www.noradsanta.org The site is multi-lingual.
Or, if you want to call for tracking information, NORAD's Colorado operations center will start taking calls at 5 AM. The number is 877-Hi-NORAD (877-446-6723) toll-free. You can also send an email to noradtrackssanta@gmail.com.
Wednesday, December 23, 2009
Cal vs Utah - Cal's Poinsettia Bowl loss is very disappointing
In watching Cal vs. Utah, we saw Cal's season in microcosm: a strong start followed by a surprisingly disappointing middle, then a promising final quarter that comes up short. The Cal vs Utah game, again like the season, was lost by our Cal Bears due to a combination of a poor offensive game plan, terrible execution by quarterback and receiver, little defensive pass rush, a lack of use of the blitz, coaching inflexibility, and poor tackling.
The California Golden Bears lost the Poinsettia Bowl to the Utah Utes 37 to 27. This was a game Cal could have won.
It started off with promise: Cal Running Back Shane Vereen (20 for 122, 6.1 yard average and two touchdowns) ran for 36 yards and a touchdown on Vereen's nifty stop to let the defense flow by him, then shooting through the resulting hole like a missile. Cal's Defense followed that with Eddie Young's 31 yard interception return for a touchdown. The Bears were up by a quick 14 and Utah could have folded.
But the Utes didn't.
Utah did what I wish Coach Jeff Tedford would do: forget offensive balance and go for the opponents defensive weakness. In this case it was Cal's Defensive Secondary. But Utah didn't attack by throwing deep; they used a steady mix of screens, wide receiver bubble screens, play action passes, and short swing passes, and crossing routes.
On many occasions Cal missed tackles, and was so confused on defense that Cal Defensive Coordinator Bob Gregory was "calling scared", leaving his charges in base three-four, and three-three-five defenses. If Cal blitzed, it was one person, sending four. That was it, except for one time late in the 4th quarter when Gregory elected to turn them lose as Utah threatened to score. The Cal Defense came up with a great stop.
At first, I thought Utah's own bad play calls were going to help Cal. Like failing to realize that Cal wasn't going to play straight man-for-man against their three-to-one-side receiver set. Instead, Cal's Gregory left two defenders against three receivers. Utah didn't exploit that in the first quarter of the first half.
But in the second quarter, they did, calling receiver screens because they had the numbers advantage. Watching Cal not adjust to this was punishment on Festivus. Painful.
That set the tone for the game.
Once again, Cal Quarterback Kevin Riley (20 of 36 for 211 yards, one touchdown and 2 interceptions for a passer rating I'm not going to post) was left to suffer under a game plan dictated by Coach Tedford's stubborn need to establish a running game, even when the defense was loaded to stop Shane Vareen. When Cal did throw, the passes were downfield to receivers running into a defense that was sitting back waiting for them to come to that depth.
Utah gave Cal the chance to call simple five yard "stick" passes, and Cal didn't do it.
But not all of it was Tedford and Cal Offensive Coordinator Andy Ludwig's fault. Riley made some predictably terrible throws. Specifically, the flat passes he always has missed on all year long, but Tedford and company keep calling them. Look, Riley needs to learn to make that throw, but he's not done it all year long, I don't know why they think he's going to get religion when they call it.
I have the impression Coach Tedford calls some offensive plays that they may not have practiced because they're the right technical call, but Riley's not the right person to make the throw that's called for.
But one throw Riley did not make was all his fault. On a third and eight in the fourth quarter with about 10 minutes left, Riley dropped back and looked to his right with Utah blitzing backers on the left. Instead of Riley calmly throwing to Vareen in the right flat with green space, Riley held the ball and got plastered. Riley's got to develop that all important feel for the rush. If he wants to survive.
I could write for days about this game, but it's Festivus, Christmas is a day away, and I'm getting ready and helping my Mom, and I don't coach Cal's Offense and they don't ask me to send them plays.
All I do is write this funky blog.
Oh, did Cal miss Jahvid Best? Yes. But Shane Vareen's done a wonderful job. Hats' off to him.
GO BEARS!
Stay tuned.
Cal's uphill battle toward success
The California Golden Bears lost the Poinsettia Bowl to the Utah Utes 37 to 27. This was a game Cal could have won.
It started off with promise: Cal Running Back Shane Vereen (20 for 122, 6.1 yard average and two touchdowns) ran for 36 yards and a touchdown on Vereen's nifty stop to let the defense flow by him, then shooting through the resulting hole like a missile. Cal's Defense followed that with Eddie Young's 31 yard interception return for a touchdown. The Bears were up by a quick 14 and Utah could have folded.
But the Utes didn't.
Utah did what I wish Coach Jeff Tedford would do: forget offensive balance and go for the opponents defensive weakness. In this case it was Cal's Defensive Secondary. But Utah didn't attack by throwing deep; they used a steady mix of screens, wide receiver bubble screens, play action passes, and short swing passes, and crossing routes.
On many occasions Cal missed tackles, and was so confused on defense that Cal Defensive Coordinator Bob Gregory was "calling scared", leaving his charges in base three-four, and three-three-five defenses. If Cal blitzed, it was one person, sending four. That was it, except for one time late in the 4th quarter when Gregory elected to turn them lose as Utah threatened to score. The Cal Defense came up with a great stop.
At first, I thought Utah's own bad play calls were going to help Cal. Like failing to realize that Cal wasn't going to play straight man-for-man against their three-to-one-side receiver set. Instead, Cal's Gregory left two defenders against three receivers. Utah didn't exploit that in the first quarter of the first half.
But in the second quarter, they did, calling receiver screens because they had the numbers advantage. Watching Cal not adjust to this was punishment on Festivus. Painful.
That set the tone for the game.
Once again, Cal Quarterback Kevin Riley (20 of 36 for 211 yards, one touchdown and 2 interceptions for a passer rating I'm not going to post) was left to suffer under a game plan dictated by Coach Tedford's stubborn need to establish a running game, even when the defense was loaded to stop Shane Vareen. When Cal did throw, the passes were downfield to receivers running into a defense that was sitting back waiting for them to come to that depth.
Utah gave Cal the chance to call simple five yard "stick" passes, and Cal didn't do it.
But not all of it was Tedford and Cal Offensive Coordinator Andy Ludwig's fault. Riley made some predictably terrible throws. Specifically, the flat passes he always has missed on all year long, but Tedford and company keep calling them. Look, Riley needs to learn to make that throw, but he's not done it all year long, I don't know why they think he's going to get religion when they call it.
I have the impression Coach Tedford calls some offensive plays that they may not have practiced because they're the right technical call, but Riley's not the right person to make the throw that's called for.
But one throw Riley did not make was all his fault. On a third and eight in the fourth quarter with about 10 minutes left, Riley dropped back and looked to his right with Utah blitzing backers on the left. Instead of Riley calmly throwing to Vareen in the right flat with green space, Riley held the ball and got plastered. Riley's got to develop that all important feel for the rush. If he wants to survive.
I could write for days about this game, but it's Festivus, Christmas is a day away, and I'm getting ready and helping my Mom, and I don't coach Cal's Offense and they don't ask me to send them plays.
All I do is write this funky blog.
Oh, did Cal miss Jahvid Best? Yes. But Shane Vareen's done a wonderful job. Hats' off to him.
GO BEARS!
Stay tuned.
Christmas Cards give way to E-cards - sort of
As I start to send out Christmas Cards e-cards, having mailed the paper Christmas Cards, I wondered if the same online rush to read, buy, and even try products online had severely impacted the card industry at Christmas.
Unfortunately, it has, but not in any way to as great a degree as I suspected.
One of so many cool aspects of Christmas is shopping for cards and laughing at selections, sometimes with people you don't even know. But Christmas Card shopping is more and more an online process. The Toronto Sun reports that Canadians buy about 6 percent to 7 percent of their greeting cards online, and in America the purchase of traditional cards has slowed, but not by much.
But while the e-card market is not growing so fast that paper cards are a thing of the past, the number of makers of e-cards has grown. AsiaOne.com reports that where there were 80 companies making e-cards seven years ago, there are 250 today. I attribute that to the ease of online product-making that software allows. Special and inexpensive hosting platforms and graphic software programs form a great foundation for an online card-making business.
On top of that, we can add Facebook. Now, you can send Christmas e-cards over the popular social network. And with over 350 million people on Facebook, chances are you can cover all of your friends in one card-sending session.
If there's any other reason for a slight drop in traditional card-giving it's the bad mood this terrible economy has put the collective nation in. The Seattle Times reports this season's shaping up as a "ho-hum year" for cards in general. A number of retailers, including Walmart and Target, are seeing drops in card buying.
Still, I think the reason traditional Christmas Card buying has not fallen off as much as I thought it would have is that it's still a part of the Christmas shopping rush. Buying cards just goes with shopping at stores, so the fun, social aspect of Christmas Card shopping will be with us for years to come.
Thank God.
Merry Christmas!
Unfortunately, it has, but not in any way to as great a degree as I suspected.
One of so many cool aspects of Christmas is shopping for cards and laughing at selections, sometimes with people you don't even know. But Christmas Card shopping is more and more an online process. The Toronto Sun reports that Canadians buy about 6 percent to 7 percent of their greeting cards online, and in America the purchase of traditional cards has slowed, but not by much.
But while the e-card market is not growing so fast that paper cards are a thing of the past, the number of makers of e-cards has grown. AsiaOne.com reports that where there were 80 companies making e-cards seven years ago, there are 250 today. I attribute that to the ease of online product-making that software allows. Special and inexpensive hosting platforms and graphic software programs form a great foundation for an online card-making business.
On top of that, we can add Facebook. Now, you can send Christmas e-cards over the popular social network. And with over 350 million people on Facebook, chances are you can cover all of your friends in one card-sending session.
If there's any other reason for a slight drop in traditional card-giving it's the bad mood this terrible economy has put the collective nation in. The Seattle Times reports this season's shaping up as a "ho-hum year" for cards in general. A number of retailers, including Walmart and Target, are seeing drops in card buying.
Still, I think the reason traditional Christmas Card buying has not fallen off as much as I thought it would have is that it's still a part of the Christmas shopping rush. Buying cards just goes with shopping at stores, so the fun, social aspect of Christmas Card shopping will be with us for years to come.
Thank God.
Dems Susan Sarandon, Tim Robbins split - political power couple
When I read that Susan Sarandon and Tim Robbins separated after 23 years together, my thoughts immediately turned to their two decades of liberal political activism. The Democratic power couple was particularly active during the 2008 Presidential Campaign.
Here's Susan Sarandon talking about Sarah Palin at Boston University in September 2008, when she says that Palin's views are "worrying" and would set the woman's movement back. She also quoted actor Ed Harris, who said Palin "would be a really large footnote in the annals of moose hunting". Saradon also expresses her thoughts on the media's coverage of politics.
Tim Robbins was no less involved in political commentary and activism. In this video originally provided by CrooksandLiars.com, Robbins appears on Real Time with Bill Maher and really gets after Steve Hayes, who tried to claim a connection between al-Queda and Saddam Hussein. Tim Robbins got the best of him:
Robbins: "You're partly responsible, you could start with an apology. You wrote a book saying there was a connection Saddam Hussein and al-Qaeda."
Hayes: "You want to know why I wrote that book? Because there was a connection Saddam Hussein and al-Qaeda."
Maher: "No there wasn't.
Robbins: "You can lie a thousand times—it doesn't make it true."
But when I think of Susan Sarandon and Tim Robbins, this photo comes to mind. It says it all. I saw it in January 2008 during the New Hampshire Primary and added it to Zennie62.com.
I found this photo on Flickr, with this explaination:
Tim Russert died on June 13, at the age of 58. He was photographed while covering a house party for presidential primary candidate, John Edwards, in Bedford NH on the eve of the NH primary in January 2008. Elizabeth Edwards speaks to Tim Russert. Also pictured are Matt Lauer, Tim Robbins and Susan Sarandon.
He really enjoyed getting out there it seems. Russert will be missed.
This is sad news. I really enjoyed seeing them in action, together.
A Festivus For The Rest Of Us (Video Bloggers) at Mediaite
YouTube,
Yahoo, MySpace,
Metacafe, DailyMotion, Blip.tv, Sclipo
and Viddler
Mediaite's one of my favorite online destinations as they take an interesting look at media and the movers and shakers that shape the formation of news today. Mediaite's Festivus on "Media Influencers" caught my eye today, because we're in a unique and fascinating period in media where New Media is not just replacing but outright destroying Old Media.
But Mediaite's take on who's doing the influcing was missing some key names and the photo's one hint. I shared my view with Mediaite Editor-at-Large Rachel Sklar and she encouraged me to offer my video-blog-based view.
Here it is: A Festivus For The Rest Of Us (Video Bloggers)
Richard Heene - Balloon Boy dad and wife should not be jailed
Richard Heene, the Balloon Boy Dad, and his wife, have been sentenced to 90-days in jail for what was really a stupid hoax of a stunt of having the industrialized World believe his six-year-old son was trapped in a weather balloon far in the sky. Wrong, of course. Bad, totally. But jail time? Nuts.
Richard Heene
I'm not at all saying he shouldn't have been punished. Not at all. But ordering Richard Heene to do jail time is too simple, stupid, and wasteful of tax dollars. The judge who laid down the sentence didn't give the matter a moment of creative thought. He just bent to mob rule. Reminds me of Frankenstein, where the screaming masses of bubble-headed town folks wanted nothing but the burning-at-the-steak of the so-called "Monster."
Nuts. And if you're angry or thinking of writing some weird comment at this point, then you're part of the horde I'm complaining about. Richard Heene should have been sentenced to make a reality TV show about a non-profit organization helping battered women recover from domestic violence assaults and violent relationships.
Yep.
My point is if Richard Heene wants to be a star, so what. Let him become one in the process of helping others rather than himself. See? There are scores of domestic violence prevention programs and organizations that go unnoticed except when a star like Nicole Kidman goes to Congress to talk about the problem.
Richard Heene could have put his considerable skills to work in getting those organizations publicity and funding.
I'm personally sick and tired of seeing people like Lil Wayne or Richard Heene punished for the sole reason of saying "They're just like anyone else." Why is that important? It's not true to start with. Moreover, expressing that point of view is the byproduct of many an unhealthy ego. But it does nothing to improve society. Moreover, it may not even curb Richard Heene's desire to be on TV.
It'll just delay it 3 months.
Geez.
BART - a plug for the wifi service much needed in Oakland
I read at SFGate.com where the new BART Transbay Tube wifi service is off to "a weak start" but I'm really happy the system's being expanded in that way. I use BART Wifi to upload my videos on the go; it's that powerful.
In fact, it's so strong I've uploaded a 350 mgb video in less than 10 minutes. That's a video of about 20 minutes in length. Frankly that kind of power is expensive to obtain so BART's a really useful tool for this vlogger. That written, I've figured out a way BART can use this to its revenue advantage.
An Internet Cafe at Embarcadero and Montgomery Street stations, and Oakland City Center, 12th Street Station.
There's a huge expanse of unused space in the very front of the platform at the Embarcadero BART Station, and similar areas in Montgomery and Oakland City Center. They're perfect for small, four table, Internet cafes where people can have coffee or tea.
I know BART currently doesn't want you to have drinks on the train but they need to get rid of the rule in favor of this cafe approach. For one thing it helps create jobs and allows people who work online to have one more great place to hang out.
Such a plan means expanding wifi to Oakland. Even station agents in downtown Oakland say such a service is long overdue. Moreover, BART should work some kind of deal with the City of Oakland and the Oakland Chamber to help spearhead a fund to pay for the wifi service.
The 21st Century workplace is mobile; BART can earn revenue and become the place of choice for online workers.
In fact, it's so strong I've uploaded a 350 mgb video in less than 10 minutes. That's a video of about 20 minutes in length. Frankly that kind of power is expensive to obtain so BART's a really useful tool for this vlogger. That written, I've figured out a way BART can use this to its revenue advantage.
An Internet Cafe at Embarcadero and Montgomery Street stations, and Oakland City Center, 12th Street Station.
There's a huge expanse of unused space in the very front of the platform at the Embarcadero BART Station, and similar areas in Montgomery and Oakland City Center. They're perfect for small, four table, Internet cafes where people can have coffee or tea.
I know BART currently doesn't want you to have drinks on the train but they need to get rid of the rule in favor of this cafe approach. For one thing it helps create jobs and allows people who work online to have one more great place to hang out.
Such a plan means expanding wifi to Oakland. Even station agents in downtown Oakland say such a service is long overdue. Moreover, BART should work some kind of deal with the City of Oakland and the Oakland Chamber to help spearhead a fund to pay for the wifi service.
The 21st Century workplace is mobile; BART can earn revenue and become the place of choice for online workers.
Tiger Woods PGA Player of The Year
A quick note of congratulations to Tiger Woods for being named "PGA Player of The Year" but in light of this current scandal-plagued episode of his great life, I think the PGA should have renamed the award "Golfer of The Year".
Or perhaps the PGA was engaging in a cruel joke on Tiger Woods.
The term "player" has several meanings in American culture today. According to The Free Dictionary, they are:
1. One that plays, especially:
a. One who participates in a game or sport.
b. A gambler.
c. One who performs in theatrical roles.
d. One who plays a musical instrument.
2. An active participant: a major player in world affairs.
3. The mechanism actuating a player piano.
4. A machine that reproduces recorded audio or audio-visual material.
5. Slang One who actively seeks out sexual partners and carries on a number of sexual affairs at the same time.
Guess which of the definitions applies to Tiger Woods? Hint: more than one.
Regardless, Tiger Woods is The World's Greatest Golfer. Period.
Player of The Year
Or perhaps the PGA was engaging in a cruel joke on Tiger Woods.
The term "player" has several meanings in American culture today. According to The Free Dictionary, they are:
1. One that plays, especially:
a. One who participates in a game or sport.
b. A gambler.
c. One who performs in theatrical roles.
d. One who plays a musical instrument.
2. An active participant: a major player in world affairs.
3. The mechanism actuating a player piano.
4. A machine that reproduces recorded audio or audio-visual material.
5. Slang One who actively seeks out sexual partners and carries on a number of sexual affairs at the same time.
Guess which of the definitions applies to Tiger Woods? Hint: more than one.
Regardless, Tiger Woods is The World's Greatest Golfer. Period.
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