Didn't Need Plastic Surgery

Screw LeBron James. He and “his talents” made a pretty short sighted decision tonight. If he were confident that he was really the greatest, he would have stayed in Cleveland and stood for something meaningful, or gone to NYC and been the greatest Knick ever in the capital of the world… but he went to Miami to win titles that won’t matter on an All-Star team (and the Lakers are still better).

But that wasn’t even the biggest news of the day; that tile goes to what happened on the NickComan.com podcast. We broke the gender gap… pretty much as much “change” as when Obama was elected. Sure, my mom has been a guest before, but this was different… and we went all out with it.

Eliza (Jane) Crawford joined me, and the plan was… well there was no plan. We were just going to talk and see what happened. The result was an 80 minute 2 parter that follows the following progression: New Haven -> Hipsters -> TRL -> MTV -> Reality TV – > Celebrity Culture -> People Watching -> New York -> The South -> Getting Wasted in the South -> Drinking -> Drinking and Growing Up -> Growing Up -> The Future. Could we have covered that much ground if we had actually planned the thing? Hell No.

Eliza and I agree on a lot (though she finds hipsters attractive, and I do not), but what we agree on most strongly: Kristin Cavallari.

Hope Yall Enjoy it.

Play Part A Here:

Play Part B Here:

As always, the podcast can be found in the ITUNES Store or subscribed to here: http://bit.ly/9xK1Ys

And the files can be directly downloaded here:

http://nickcoman.com/theliza.m4a

and here:

http://nickcoman.com/theliza2.m4a

Likely will be back with a pod tomorrow to rip LeBron…

Word,

Nick

The Face of Sex Addiction

It’s been a while on the podcast, so for the big comeback, Tyler came to the studio, 956 Chapel in New Haven, to break down March Madness and the Woods situation. Tyler has been pro Woods/Golf/Kentucky Basketball… while I have been taking the “who cares” angle on Woods/Golf and firmly believe that John Calipari will be in prison in the next ten years… Needless to say, we had a lot to debate.

What resulted, though, was a 2 hour 2 part epic podcast that was about 50% sports and 50% college/porn/sex/pop culture.

Part One focuses on Tiger Woods… though it also hits golf in general, the sudden emergence of sex addiction in American culture, porn and the rise of the BluRay disc, the “sex talk”, march madness, and all sorts of topics.

Part Two focuses on “Yacht Week” (see below), the ultimate vacation/bro fantasy… as well as the deepest layer of hell that is the Connecticut DMV, college, girls, the Yale University, and our requiem for David Beckham…

As always, you can go in ITUNES and subscribe to the podcast here: http://bit.ly/9xK1Ys

Check out the Yacht Week Trailer Here:

Part one can be downloaded here: http://nickcoman.com/tylerepic1.m4a

And streamed here:

Part two can be downloaded here: http://nickcoman.com/tylerepic2.m4a

And streamed here:

Hope yall enjoy…

Word,

Nick

After 17 days of worldwide camaraderie, gratuitous amounts of sex in the Olympic Village, a lot of very pale white people doing activities that nobody “actually” does, and commercials featuring Canada’s finest celebrities, it is time to break down the 2010 Vancouver Games…

Best Event: Men’s Hockey…

I’m usually the first to say it: Hockey is a niche sport that is demographically doomed unless something really drastic happens. I don’t think I or anyone who watched the Olympic tournament is suddenly going to start following the NHL on a daily basis, but something did happen: We all realized that we actually really do enjoy hockey. The Canadian, American, and Russian squads were a joy to watch, and the Slovakians, Czechs, Finns, and Swedes were all compelling too. While I think the “greatest hockey game ever” talk about the final may be a little much, you can’t deny that Vancouver really did go out with bang.

One sneaky reason it was so good: Subway 5 Dollar Footlongs brought us the coverage with “limited commercial interruption”. Basically, Hockey felt like Soccer on TV (which is a good thing) – even if there wasn’t much scoring, you got to watch the entire thing without breaks and could really get a sense of the flow of the game.

The NHL should seriously consider finding a way to do this for all of their games. It may be that “drastic something”… because as much as the Olympic Tournament and Crosby OT winner was the perfect Canadian Fairy-Tail, it doesn’t change the reality that the NHL is back on today, and it is in danger of falling behind soccer as America’s 7th most important sport?

Tongue Bolt? She's Definitely Down...

The NHL has some separate problems though:

1) A talent pool that is 15X diluted compared to what we saw in the Olympics, with the vast majority of players being boring, foreign, and generally unmarketable…

2) Teams that mean nothing due to the expansion and movement. It’s not just an issue of whether or not people in Nashville ever give a crap about hockey… it’s an issue of people in Calgary watching their team play Nashville and thinking “What is this team we are playing?”

3) Markets that are hockey relevant: Winnipeg, Quebec City, Hartford – Well they are about as financially viable as Enron.

4) Terrible TV contracts and coverage… What channel are games on?

But at least we know we like the sport… I think we really had forgotten.

Olympics Babes: Vonn, Mancuso, and Torah Bright… but mainly Cheryl Bernard and Carmen Schaefer.

Given the S.I. Swimsuit Issue exposure (really underwhelming this year if you haven’t seen it) and the way that NBC decided that she was going to be one of the featured athletes for the Olympiad, Vonn was a shoe-in for this award, but her tearful gold medal speech made you have to love her… Her games thereafter were a letdown (let’s be honest), but either way, I’m excited about seeing her marketing Folgers or whatever for years to come. I mean: can you honestly tell me that the Under Armour ad below isn’t “doing a good job”?

Click Clack?

Her slightly more badass counterpart, Julia Mancuso, is actually considerably hotter. Part of it is her Scarface style upbringing with papa Ciro Mancuso, but most of the credit has to go to Mancuso herself, who has aged incredibly well… actually getting substantially hotter since her Torino gold medals. This was her in the wake of that:

Solid... but she kept getting hotter.

It’s crazy, but that picture doesn’t remotely do justice to the 2k10 version of Julia. She seems like she’s down for the sex-appeal attention, so let’s expect her in Maxim in the relative future… with outside shots at Playboy or somebody “leaking a video”…

One girl who likely will not be going that route, the most successful and hottest Mormon in Vancouver – Australian Snowboarder and Half-Pipe Gold Medalist Torah Bright. It seemed almost a foregone conclusion that Americans Teter-Clark-Bleiler would go 1-2-3 in some permutation, but Torah Bright, who is actually considerably better looking than any of the American girls, stole the show. So here’s to the nice “bring home to mom” girl… named Torah after the “five books”… doesn’t smoke cigarettes or drink coffee… likes dancing and partying without drinking. While this isn’t a lifestyle that I’d choose, how can you not respect her? And she’s a really nice looking girl… in that Australian sort of way:

Here's the the Chaz in the background...

You’re still probably wondering who the “tongue bolt” girl was as if it’s the mystery of the “Sailing Stones“. That is, of course, one of Switzerland’s biggest winter sports stars (shes no Simon Ammann), curling prodigy Carmen Schaefer. I haven’t confirmed this with any sort of in-depth research, but can you think of another female athlete with this kind of piercing? She also rocks the nose stud… so you can 100% know that’s the kind of girl we are working with… if you know what I mean. Apparently, she does Maxim-style photo shoots over in Europe:

The Reflective Water Shot... Classic.

But did you notice who else sneakily has a nose stud? The real star of this Olympics – Canadian Womens Curling “Skip” Cheryl Bernard. Bernard, very simply, may be the hottest 44 year old woman alive with no background in Supermodeling/Plastic Surgery/Excessive Cocaine Use/Pop Stardom. She’s Demi Moore Caliber… and that’s a really really good caliber.

This brings me to the next point…

Breakout Event: Women’s Curling

Off the Charts on the MILF Scale...

If you were sickened by the figure skating monopoly on NBC primetime, then like myself, you probably retreated to daytime coverage on USA Network or the night owl pre-opening-bell coverage on CNBC to catch some “real sports”. On those channels, more often than not, you’d find women’s curling – a sport that really has “Base-ketball Style” catch-on potential. Sports Guy Simmons has been raving about taking curling, going co-ed with it, having cheerleaders, doing it in a packed arena of wasted fans, and generally WWE-ing it up, and I think he’s spot on. This is the kind of sport that is really easy to understand- making it accessible, but also has so many strategic nuances and angles that it is never boring and a constant learning experience. It has constant unintentional comedy with all of the brooming and screaming; it seems like the kind of sport that “anybody can do”; it has ridiculous team sweatsuits; and most of all, it has hot athlete women who don’t look so “athletic” as to not be feminine, but not still athletic enough that you think they are “cool”. If I’m Donald Trump and I want to launch a ridiculous sports league, I’m looking at Xtreme Curling with Cheryl Bernard as my franchise player… even if her collapse in the last two ends against Sweden in the finals was the biggest heart-breaker of the games.

Most Overrated Event: Half Pipe

Now that we’ve conquered the medal count, we get to hear how we only won because “we invented a bunch of BS events to do so”. When this argument is made, the first sport to be implicated is Half-Pipe. I actually think this is unfair… What makes half pipe any less of a sport than “Ice Dancing” (clearly an “activity” not a “sport”)? Nothing… Does the USA dominate it? Well, Torah Bright is a clear argument to the contrary… though we did win 4/6 of the medals awared, but China decided to go and dominate Women’s Short Track and won every gold in the sport… and nobody is saying we should remove that from the games.

Going to Miss British Columbian Kim Cattrall... Who has looked 35 from the time she did "Police Academy" to the present.

My issue with half-pipe is totally different. It’s that it is boring and anti-climactic. First of all, only like 4-5 people ever have a chance to win based on starting scores and degrees of difficulty, and that number would really be closer to 1-3 if people didn’t make mistakes. When Shaun White won the gold, I couldn’t have been less interested – nothing was at stake. He landed a high degree of difficulty first run without even whipping out his “Double Croissant Bearclaw Stalefish” or whatever it was that was his “new move” (which he did do on his victory lap of a 2nd run). The point is – there was no story. Also, the sport has always depended on the guys “going bigger” each and every time that we see it, but we may have reached the plateau where no more rotations and inversions can be added, and the judging is based on nitpicking and “amplitude”… which is sort of lame. And who can tell a trick with 5 rotations 2 inversions and a method grab from one with 6 rotations 1 inversion and a mute grab? I know Shaun White was supposed to be the story of the games… but I’m sticking with Cheryl Bernard.

Thoughts on Canada: Vancouver was the right kind of venue, but as an American, it just wasn’t that interesting…

With the minor exception of Torch-gate and the major exception of the Georgian luge tragedy, you’d have to say that this was a pretty smooth Olympic Games and that the venues were totally up to par. I can’t knock any of that… or that the Canadians did well as hosts. While we may not consciously seek out the Olympics for such, a major point of enjoyment for me and I believe for many is being able to learn about a foreign place and people.

Who doesn't love Michael J Fox? Seriously... He's the Faith Hill of Canada.

You can call Canada a lot of things: “The 51st State”, “America’s Hat”, “Iced Texas”… they are all partially true, but they all indicate something: Canada isn’t very foreign to us. In fact, most of the Canada coverage either seemed like something we had seen in South Park or elicited the “Oh, I always assumed Ryan Reynolds was American” response. NBC struggled to make Canada interesting… not because it isn’t… simply because we already know so much. I guess Bhutan wouldn’t have proper facilities though right?

Events That Could Go Away: Too Many Events That Seem Like the Same Thing…

So why do we need to give out a gold medal for “Normal Hill” ski jumping and “Large Hill” ski jumping? and then make matters worse by giving out gold medals for 10k Nordic Combined Normal Hill and 10k Nordic Combined Large Hill (Nordic Combined = Ski Jump + XC Skiing)… Why is there a 2 man bobsled and 4 man bobsled? What is the major difference between 1000M short track and 1500M short track races when nobody makes moves until the end anyway? Is the Super-Combined just an excuse to give another medal?

I guess I’d much rather see more distinct events than extra medals given out for people doing the same thing that they just did… Ski Cross was new this Olympics, and I thought that it was a really cool addition. Why not look to add more inventive events like that in the future?

Final Verdicts on Figure Skating: Too Much Primetime… But I’m In Every 4 Years…

Every four years, males are forced with the conundrum: I’m supposed to be watching the Olympics for the sake of “bro-knowledge”, but watching figure skating is pretty emasculating? I really enjoyed the skating when it came in small doses, but the issue was that NBC, in their 17 nights of coverage, managed to put figure skating in primetime on 11 of them (2 for mens, 2 for womens, 2 for pairs, 3 for dancing, 1 for the exhibition, and 1 in the closing ceremonies), and that was a Jim Morrison level overdose.

Johnny Weir was surely a "free spirit"...

Here’s what I got out of it: Kim Yu Na was sick… so sick  that I really am glad that I got to watch her do her thing. The Japanese girl was gnarly too, and the Canadian girl was a classic “good Olympics story”. The Americans, though, just didn’t have it… and weren’t attractive enough for me to be invested given such.

On the men’s side, everybody dresses like they are going to a Halloween party at a gay bar, but they are really impressive too. I don’t know why Lysacek beat the Russian dude with the mullet despite doing tricks that were less impressive, but I guess that’s an indictment of all sports with subjective “judging systems”. I even thought that Johnny Weir got hosed; he clearly deserved a Bronze given that his performance was clean, and the guy who got third fell…

As for the dancing and pairs… who cares? (I suspect these are really “girl things” even more than the individual events), and why do we need 3 nights of ice dancing? If I were the showrunner for NBC, I’d televise the men’s and women’s long programs in primetime in full, show the big guns’ short programs as well as the pairs/dancing medalists’ long programs, and relegate the rest to the CNBC zone…

But every four years, I guess I’m down to halfassedly follow the skating for a couple weeks…

Thoughts on the NBC Coverage: They really brought their A-Squad, but the programming was well… slow.

Love Costas (we can cryogenically freeze him for the next 2 years), love Michaels, love Collinsworth… Mary Carillo grew on me, but how much of the Olympics coverage is totally filler? Lame human interest pieces on Canadian culture? In studio interviews with whichever random American got a Bronze yesterday? Mary Carillo undercover in Mounty Training? Lenghty segments introducing athletes who NBC knows is going to win since it is on tape delay? Really dragged out podium ceremonies to the point that national anthems make your stomach churn after 2 weeks? I just want to see some sports… and not tape-delayed sports that I already know the results of. That’s just not NBC’s angle.

The Opening/Closing Ceremonies: Canadians are a goofy bunch.

While both the opening and closing ceremonies were a little more “relaxed” and “cozy” than the gongshows that we got to see in China, they did feature a lot of “native canadian” Indians dancing like they were in the Village People or Michael Jackson “Black or White” music video, vast quantities of Canadians dressed in whites using snowboards as props, and a constant reminder of why we make fun of Canada: the musical lineups featuring Nickelback, Bryan Adams, Nelly Furtado, Alanis, Avril Lavigne, and Simple Plan. Quick poll: Name a single artist on that list whom you can admit to being “really into” without being snickered at? Avril Lavigne may be your best bet… (even though we ironically listen to all of the above on the radio constantly). I mean… this Nickelback…

(Actually a solid music video…)

Breakout American Stars: Ryan Miller and Patrick Kane…

The Foremost Couple in Canada before RR upgraded to American Scarlett Johansson. Guess it's Avril Lavigne and the Sum-41 Guy now.

You could go with Vonn, but as much as we appreciate her good looks, crying, and gold medal performance despite her bum shin, she didn’t really blow us out of the water with a “Phelps-job”. In fact, nobody did.

Apolo Ohno got medals, but they weren’t the right color… and the cat has been out of the bag on that guy for years. I like Apolo, toolish as he may be, and I really appreciated his positive vibe and “Olympic Spirit”, but he didn’t “kill it” this time around.

Bode Miller was a pretty good story, but he only got one gold… and he started off so far in the red with the fans that even that performance won’t really make him a star in America.

Who am I most excited about in 2014? Without a doubt, Ryan Miller and Patrick Kane. American hockey seemed to have been in a minor lull this decade as Russians, Swedes, and Canadians even more than usual came to be the NHL’s biggest stars (another major reason for the lack of excitement about the game), but the performances by these two went a long way to dispel that notion. These guys aren’t just good; they are as good as anybody in the world – so much that we should be really excited about their development as players.

America had sort of lacked an alpha dog in the post Brett Hull / Mike Modano era, and now we don’t. Kane is the guy. Forget Crosby and Ovechkin – they’re really really sick, but the NHL needs to start marketing Kane as the guy if they want to get the ship on track. He plays in a perfect market to do so with the Blackhawks, and they are a team that really could win the Stanley Cup this year. If Kane can continue to become a superstar, it would do a whole lot of good for the sport.

Miller, simply put, has probably announced himself as the best goalie in the world in the post Hasek/Roy/Brodeur era… or at the very least put himself in the center of the conversation. He was amazing for the entire tournament. He didn’t let in bad goals; he made amazing saves; he couldn’t have done more. In 2014, he will give us a chance to win gold… just like he did this time around.

Best American Performances: The 4 Man Bobsled Team and The Bros of Nordic Combined…

As cool as it was to see Shaun White win half-pipe and have our squad pick up medals in skiing and skating and all of the things that we are normally half-decent at, wasn’t it way more exciting to see USA beat the German juggernaut squad in bobsled to get our first gold since the Truman Era? or see Bill Demong and Johnny Spilane pick up a gold, two silvers, and a team silver in an event that we NEVER are remotely competitive in? Those were the performances that made me the most proud – America dominating by… actually dominating.

How to Make it Better: Well, lots of ways…

1. Get rid of the BS filler pieces and show us actual sports the entire time…

2. Figure Skaters dress in country-specific athlete uniforms like everybody else… not like it’s a costume ball.

3. More Women’s Curling.

4. Put the Olympics somewhere crazy. I’d never heard of Sochi before this year- maybe it’s gnarly. Have the good people in Dubai not considered building mile high complexes to house every single winter event indoors, including the alpine skiing?

5. More new events like Ski-Cross. Actual races are way more fun to watch than the “clock races” that dominate the games. Why is short track more fun to watch than long track is? It’s pretty obvious.

6. NBC/The IOC should let people on ESPN/Youtube/elsewhere have access to the footage and not be total d-bags about it. I recognize it is a money thing, but come on…

7. Help develop teams around the world to make this thing global. India had like 3 athletes in the entire games despite having over a billion people. Brazil? Barely involved… Nigeria? Indonesia? Don’t even think about it… Look at the medal count here:

Notice What's Missing?

Thanks Kazakhstan for getting a silver in Women’s Biathlon to get yourself on the list, but you’re the only country that one wouldn’t call Soviet/Developed/Monied/Nordic… I want to see Jamaicans winning in the bobsled, not because Cool Runnings was that good of a movie, but because the Olympics are supposed to be bigger than what they are now…

I brought it up already, so I’ll rest my case on this music video:

The Vancouver Games hardly missed the point as badly as Michael Jackson did here in trying to get what “the world coming together” means, but we can always do better…

We should start with more Women’s Curling…

Word,

Nick

At just five people per square mile, Mongolia is far and away the least densely populated nation on the planet… but that doesn’t mean it’s not home to some of the strangest phenomena out there…

Let’s just start with this:

Now we all know that Golden Eagles are “birds of prey” and falconry is ridiculous but it’s not really new news, but did you know that these birds could pull off this kind of thing:

Mongolia or Naboo?

I watched that one five times before I finally decided that it wasn’t CGI, but what else is there to say except that these birds are the real deal? They don’t just take out rabbits or little things, but they are swooping large sheep into the air, mauling wolves on command, and there is even some footage out there of them attacking grizzly bears. The crazy part: how well Mongolian nomads have trained them to hunt. Apparently in a laughably sparsely populated spot like the Mongolian Steppe, the best way to hunt is to cover as much ground as possible by driving a car/horse and having your Eagle survey the land. Check this out…

(But first, how identical is this Mongolian Royalty outfit to the clothing that Queen Amidala rocked in Star Wars Episode One. I guess we can add her to the list of ridiculous token racial figures in the movie that includes Jamaican Jar Jar Binks, Japanese “Viceroys”, and Jewish/Arab (you choose) slave dealer “Watto”. That could be a black and white promotional photo of Natalie Portman for all I know.)

At this point, we “get it” that these creatures can take down large predators, but isn’t it kinda crazy to see birds hunting in packs? Multiple eagles, of course, implies that multiple eagle master nomads have to be present. In fact, the semi-nomadic people of the steppe celebrate by coming together to watch their eagles collectively maul stuff in what is apparently one of the biggest festivals of the year…

Which vaguely reminds me of this…

But how do the Mongolians train their Eagles to be such efficient hunters? They maintain a relationship with the birds from birth and teach them to hunt with skins and small prey until they can cut it in the big leagues: wolves… and how do they get them to come back? It’s simple: they need their masters for water.  Eventually though, all of these birds are released into the wild. Only females are used as hunters, and by age 10, the birds are too ornary to handle because they want to make a nest of their own… Check out this Eagle Hunter talking about his birds… (Interview starts at 2 min – note how they wear GAP clothing in Mongolia).

Who are these people? Of Mongolia’s 2.7 million people, 1.2 or so live in the capital Ulanbatur, a city that has been growing at a pretty crazy rate. Check out these pictures of the world’s northernmost Capital from 2005 and 2009 respectively:

Four Years Earlier...

Four Years later...

You’d barely be able to tell, but those two pictures really were taken from the same physical spot (try matching up objects in each scene… I promise you can). Mongolia is modernizing at a crazy rate. Last decade, they went from having 30,000 internet users to having 300,000, but given that 40% of the population lives in one place, that means the other 1.5 million are spread out over 600,000 square miles… and there are only 1500 miles of paved road in the entire country. So what do they do? 30% of Mongolians (800,000) are semi-nomadic, living in portable yurts where their herds of animals can graze and moving ten times a year to find viable meadows. While such may seem primitive and many Mongolians live on under 2 dollars/ day, the nation boasts a respectable life expectancy of 67 years, and the way of life has been incredibly sustainable for centuries. Under communist rule (you see the occasional token commie smokestacks still here and there throughout the Mongolia footage), the semi-nomadic lifestyle was oppressed: herds were confiscated, and these people were forced onto collectives. The return to capitalism, though, has seen a return to relative prosperity for these people, who even occasionally make it into Ulanbatur to rage at the hot new clubs before heading back out to the steppes. Check out this great mini-documentary on the Mongolian Steppe Peoples…

And how do you take a yurt (funny word) up and down? Like So:

Step 1)

You could grow some killer Ivy on that...

Step 2)

Put the tarp on it...

Step 3)

Tie It Tight...

When you ask “people on the street” what they know about Mongolia? The first answer you get is probably “Mongolian Beef” (which isn’t Mongolian at all) or “Mongolian Barbeque” (which is Japanese). In a great irony, the first American franchise to open in Ulanbatur (and it’s become very popular): B.D.’s Mongolian Barbeque of course:

This one is in the Chicago suburbs... but I'm glad the namesakes approve.

Mongolia is clearly a world very alien to the west, one whose geographic realities have lead to a lifestyle and culture that seem nearly unfathomable. The country is surely barren and surely poor, but how beautiful do these landscapes look? and could you call the fortitude and industry of the semi-nomadic people anything but incredible? Also, you can’t ever quite forget this:

The Biggest Empire Ever...

Real,

Nick

 
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