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MISCmedia for 4/19/00
Right Field

IT'S MID-APRIL, and that means two topics are filling the op-ed sections across America's newspapers:

(1) Calls for income tax "reform" (i.e., commentators wishing lower taxes for members of their particular favorite subcultures, and higher taxes for members of other subcultures); and

(2) Conservatives (plus a few highbrow-academic liberals) pontificating prosaically about baseball as The Most Perfect Thing On Earth.

I happen to like baseball. I just don't like most of the people who write about it as some secular/sacred rite.

Herewith, some of the real resons folks such as George Will love the sport:

  • It's got lots of numbers and stats. Those academic types love such abstract-logic building blocks. So much more fun to keep track of numbers and stats than to follow a sport where raw athletic prowess makes more of the show.

  • It can be long and boring, and hence reward its diehard adherents with the sanctimonious feeling of being able to appreciate something that puts ordinary people dozin'.

  • It's not based around a male sexual metaphor. Instead of relishing in something as crudely pagan and life-affirming as symbolic insemination moments (like football, soccer, hockey, et al.), it symbolizes an obsession Republicans can more easily identify with--

  • It's all about control vs. chaos. That PBS miniseries five years ago noted that baseball's "the only game where the defense controls the ball."

  • The defensive star is at the literal center of the action. A soccer or hockey goalie merely stops offensive attacks. A baseball pitcher, by contrast, is the start of every play, the instigator of all action, the man who's personally credited with winning or losing the game for the whole team.

  • The game ends with the regaining of control (i.e., an out). The only exception is a bottom-of-the-last-inning play that scores a go-ahead run. The offensive side can only cause enough moments of chaos that cause enough damage before order is regained.

  • It has a historic hierarchy. Major League Baseball as we know it was formed in 1903. The same 16 teams were in the same 11 Northeastern cities for 50 years. And in most of those years, the three New York teams regularly stood atop the standings; the old St. Louis Browns and Washington Senators regularly occupied the cellar. Everywhere else, baseball was "The Minors," teams graded AAA to D and usually controlled by a major-league team's farm system.

  • A "Perfect Game" is one in which nothing happens. In bowling, the only other major sport to have the concept of a perfect game, such a game is one in which everything happens.

But you don't have to dislike baseball just because certain tweedy butt-kissers like it. There's plenty to enjoy about the game. If the Repubs can root for the defensive players who maintain order, you can root for the hitters and runners who, every so often, succeed in breaking through for glorious moments of triumphant chaos.

TOMORROW: James Twitchell, an academic author who (hearts) the culture of marketing.

ELSEWHERE:

  • If you liked the They Might Be Giants cover of "Why Does the Sun Shine?", here's the original, along with the rest of the Science Songs LP series! (found by Memepool)...

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CLARK'S CULTURE CORRAL

CURRENTLY FEATURED:
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ELECTION

The first MTV Productions movie that's neither about, nor for, idiots. Reese Witherspoon's the most "popular" (unloved but ruthlessly ambitious) student in school. Matthew Broderick's the teacher who's got a grudge against her (she'd seduced and destroyed his best-friend fellow teacher), and who schemes to stop her from becoming student-body president. It gets a lot more complicated from there. A dark satire of social mores that will be dissected by critics for years to come; but don't let that stop you from enjoying it.

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