While today's blog is described as being live, it was actually written on Sunday. Which, as I'm writing this as we speak, makes for a weird space time continuum status as to my writing capacity. It's Tuesday, but I'm writing on Sunday. (This dialogue continued with myself for about two hours on the Red Line on the way to Irving Park. I may have convinced people that I was crazy, something my plastic bag full of clothing from work might have helped to suggest. What this means is that I'm finally blending in to Chicago culture.)
Anyways, it's the Super Bowl, the biggest unofficial holiday of the year, where people who don't care about football plan for the largest party of the year while complaining about how the game is uninteresting and the commercials aren't funny, while people who do like football inevitably gather to complain about the quality and relative deserving qualities of the two teams involved (i.e. how the game is uninteresting) while ignoring the commercials in the hope of streaming live commentary about the last two minutes of game play that YOU JUST WATCHED HAPPEN. (Too much commentary about whether people should have run right through the big fat guys or left through the big fat guys.)
But I digress.
Our story begins at 4:00 pm CST, when I arrived at my designated location. The participants: The Professor, nursing a strong influx of Jim Beam the night before; the Professor's wife, who is making her first appearance in this blog. For the purpose of this blog, she will henceforth be referred to as "The Stitcher". (Cue ominous music, and/or adorable boxer puppies.)
As with many other live blogs/transcripts of what happens, I will watch the telecast, record the time, thoughts, and observations, and proceed on until the end of the game. At the end, I will draw up whatever Relevant Summary may be drawn from the proceedings, as I have transcribed them.
(Sidenote #1: My associate has scored a sideline pass to the field, and will be reporting to me live from Lucas Oil Stadium. How and where this happened is irrelevant. The important thing, and this is Important, is that it happened; things were done; and he is inside. That has happened. By the very nature of the size and magnitude of the event, and by virtue of my associate's placement and proximity to the happenings, it is impossible to maintain the low profile that all good journalists must exhibit. However, that is besides the point. What matters is that the news will be coming to us in live, unfiltered, and uncensored bursts of pure gibberish, the stuff that careers are made of and destroyed.)
So, let us begin.
5:03 - The Stitcher is asleep, clutching a dog shaped parcel. The Professor has finally put on pants. I've been here for an hour, and am wondering what all of the fuss was about.
5:04 - One of the largest counter programming events of the day is The Animal Planet's The Puppy Bowl, now in its eighth year. On any other day, this event alone would say so much about modern American culture. As it stands, however, if I wanted to watch small creatures in capes run through hoops and gates, I'd hang out with my high school friends who are starting to spawn. Nevertheless, this is the program of choice, as the Super Bowl is still 26 minutes away.
5:08 - Oh god oh god the puppies are cute. It's overwhelming. I've been reduced to a drooling pile of pus. This doesn't reflect well for watching grown 300 pound men trying to reduce each other to piles of kindling.
5:12 - SO. CUTE. SO. CUTE. SOMEONE DO SOMETHING THIS IS SO HORRIBLY CUTE AND PILES OF DOGS ROLLING OVER EACH OTHER TO VAGUE FOOTBALL COMMENTARY CUTE CUTE CUTE CUTE CUTE CUTE CUTE.
(At this point, a nervous breakdown has forced my relocation to a point more easily defensible from the onslaught of the television. Strange vibrations this early on are more than my poor brain can handle.)
5:18 - Singing of the National Anthem by Kelly Clarkson. Over/under for the time length is 2:30. (Legendary for being a diva showcase, I am not sure of the record, but I'm pretty sure it's held by Whitney Huston, who is still holding out the last high note somewhere over Lake Superior back in 1991.
5:19 - Kelly Clarkson went sharp on the last high note, as judged by the Professor. The performance is ruined. (The final time did end up being less than 2 minutes, however. Maybe this bodes well for the game itself.)
(Sidenote #2: Average cost for a 30 second ad in the Super Bowl telecast on NBC: $4 million dollars. Or one tax break for Mitt Romney. Whichever you prefer.)
5:24 - A debate has sprung up over the various jiggly parts of cheerleaders and the ability of tight spandex to contain said body parts. Result: Everybody wins.
5:26 - At the moment, a stat has popped up regarding that the NFC team has won the opening coin toss for 14 consecutive Super Bowls. This has a 1 in 1,024 chance of happening. Naturally, the NFC loses the coin toss tonight. In the meantime, I've found the Professor's spare bottle of Jim Beam, and have broken into it with zeal.
5:31 - Giants take the field. Much is made of this being the exact same Super Bowl as of 4 years ago (XLII in ancient Roman numerals). Let it be said that only 20 of the 104 players from that Super Bowl are playing here tonight. Let it also be said that the animosity towards the Patriots has negated much of the emotional punch towards this Super Bowl. Revenge Bowl just doesn't have the same ring when the man who caught the most epic catch I've ever had the privilege of putting my foot through a coffee table during (David Tyree) is out of the league completely. That speaks greatly towards the short shelf-life of your average mediocre NFL player.
5:39 - First round of commercials. This is just in: Bud Light commercials haven't been funny since I was in middle school. Much like the actual beer itself hasn't been good or exciting since I was in middle school and vaguely understood what beer was.
5:40 - SAFETY!!!!!!!!!!
5:42 - This just in: Pepsi commercials fall into the same category as Bud Light.
5:43 - My associate reports that Tom Brady is bugging out on the sideline regarding the recent safety call. While he looks placid and cool on the telecast, my associate reports that the stream of profanity gushing from his mouth would, and I quote "make Hemingway blush like a school girl."
5:45 - Giants players are running through the Patriots like New England is made of butter and Puritans. My associate confirms this. On a related note, looking at the angles that players take when they reach the sidelines makes my ankles throb with pain.
5:49 - Strange happenings already. This game has the feel of two teams that are horribly surprised to find themselves in Indianapolis, as though they went to sleep at 3 am last night in Miami and woke up to cornfields and media blitzes. The play looks frightening. the execution is sloppy, and so far two huge penalties have slaughtered the Patriots, resulting in 2 points and counting for the Giants.
5:51 - Make that 9 points.
5:55 - My associate reports that Brady is clubbing baby seals to death behind the Patriots bench. No word yet on if these are California or Harbor seals. I get the feeling that Brady is not approachable on the subject just yet. I've cautioned my associate to keep his distance, and to use orca repellant in droves.
5:59 - The Super Bowl halftime, featuring Madonna. The halftime show of the Super Bowl is where careers go to die. Take Springsteen and the E Street Band. They play it, and soon after, Clarence Clemons dies.
Directly. Related. I expect this to be the last thing Madonna produces to the world. In the meantime, it is refreshing to know some things are always constant. Joe Buck is a douche, and the Patriots cannot run the ball to save their lives. (Or the baby seals behind the bench. Not that rushing the ball will save baby seals, but it is a nice thought to think about for charity.)
6:02 - End of the first quarter, the first movie preview is for "Battleship." You know, based on the game Battleship. Because this seemed like a novel idea. Aliens invading earth in giant metallic forms that destroy and shape shift. Good idear.
6:03 - My associate is once again privy to the Toradol being pumped straight into Rob Gronkowski's high ankle sprain. He's confiscated a bottle from the locker room and now reports that Brady is feeling "groovy." Gronkowski, meanwhile, keeps ranting about high level viscosity for some reason.
6:08 - The professional verdict from the Professor: "The commercials tonight are trying too hard." The opinion: "They're also not funny."
6:08:30 - My associate's verdict: "Good God, the Seals!"
6:13 - Themes of this year's commercials so far include "Beer is good" and "Dogs are cute" in a continuation of the puppy bowl theme. Movies, however, are uninspired. (Although the "John Carter of Mars" preview featured a remix of "Kashmir" by Led Zeppelin, which is added to Arcade Fire's "My Body is a Cage" as strange backing tracks for Edgar Rice Burroughs.)
6:16 - The Patriots scored a field goal at some point in the last series. It got lost in a haze of Jim Beam and seal blood. Who knew?
6:19 - The blend of Tomatillo and Jim Beam is making for some interesting sensations in the back of my esophagus.
6:22 - Jason Pierre-Paul has just batted down his second pass in a row. A massive defensive end who some believe should have been the Defensive Player of the Year, his wingspan is roughly the size of a humpback whale, with the grip of a ravenous hyena on mescaline. Two last names were more than enough for this monster of a man.
(Sidenote #3: It was at this point that we lost The Stitcher to slumber. Football is not her forte. Sharp instruments of construction are. And the only thing we have representing that on the field is in use behind the Patriots bench to repair the broken baby seals. Her loss.)
6:24 - My associate reports that Giants tight end Travis Beckham is out with a torn ACL for the game. Also, he reports that the Giants practice squad members are engaged in a ferocious game of Mancala, and the bidding starts at $50 a stone. I'm not sure which is more valid until I hear the live report that the bidding is up to $75. Ah, football.
6:25 - It is my professional opinion that the second quarter is boring. The Professor seconds, and the dog shaped parcel has begun to move from chair to chair within the room.
6:30 - To evidence the previous claim, my current game MVP is Steve Weatherford. The Giants punter. To be fair, my associate is reporting that Steve Weatherford is actively gnawing on uncarved ashwood on the sideline in order to control his undying rage against the light/Patriots machine/starving African children. As with Brady, my associate is hesitant to approach his target. Never approach a man in full fledged beaver mode.
6:45 - Holy shit, did the last fifteen minutes just happen? Or did I just stroke off for a bit?
6:46 - Ah, yes, the Avengers preview, with our first good look at the six heroes in action happened. Other than that, I remember NONE of the commercials from the last hour and a half.
6:47 - Jason Pierre Paul was unblocked on 1st and Goal. The result - tackle for loss by a Beast of a Man. Good God someone bring that man a sandwich.
6:47:30 - I just found out that Jason Pierre Paul is younger than I am. I hate my life.
6:49 - Patriots just scored to take the lead 10-9. With :24 left in the 1st half, the prediction has sprung up for the Super Bowl Halftime show. Song guesses are "Like a Prayer", "Material Girl", "Music", and something from Madonna's new album. This is our debate here. That and taxes.
6:58 - The obligatory half time analysis is saying that the last team to score will win. In other news, the Middle East is turbulent once again. Waiting for Madonna to arrive.
6:59 - My associate is reporting from the locker room of the _______, amidst a shower of painkillers, cocaine, and assorted amphetamines. Caffeine is being injected into somebody's arms straight from an IV. It may in fact be my associate.
(At this point, the transcript loses its focus, dissolving into a series of quotes and gibberish. Collecting myself later, I examined the details, and have transcribed what I can recover. It wasn’t pretty.)
Somewhere around the 7:00 hour - Madonna is performing. I'm flashing back to the worst trip I haven't had yet. The time continuum is blown to pieces by Spartacus.
God help us all. I'm currently hiding behind a couch, shielded from the dangers of this small Roman armada.
NO! Stop him! Art Garfunkel, why are you jumping on your nuts on a tightrope? Where is Paul Simon?! He'd never let this happen!
Weird Al? What are you doing outside of the Shire?
This is some strange combination of high school pageantry and $10 million that was just lying around and had to be burned in some way by midnight, or else Brewster wouldn't receive his millions.
Cee-Lo Green has no eyes. Cee-Lo Green is the Space Emperor of Space. (Sorry Zoltan Mesko.)
CEE-LO GREEN IS THE WIZARD! RUN! MIA, YOU HAD THE RIGHT IDEA ALL ALONG.
Summary: Football is space. Beware the wrath of Universal Caesar.
My associate cannot be found, for the Fear has set upon him.
7:20 - The Space-Time Continuum has returned to functional parameters, and my trip is slowly dying down to a reasonable level of intrigue. Things have shifted around to fit this brave new world. Coincidentally, Clint Eastwood is now from Detroit.
7:23 - OCHOCINCO *YOWLSCREECHOFDEATH*
7:25 - Wisdom from the Professor "Do not accept drinks unbidden from the strong man, for it will end poorly." Too late for you, you poor bastard. Wait til Madonna comes back dressed like a Roman gladiator, craving human flesh.
7:28 - Speaking of craving human flesh, the Patriots just scored a remarkably easy touchdown to go up 17-9. My associate reports that Eli Manning is "putting out tentative whines as to why he doesn't have any baby seals that he can bludgeon, and why Brady has all the seals." Then he is reminded that he doesn't have anything, only the broken limbs of Michael Strahan. Defeated, he slumps back on the bench, looking over notebook pictures of Brady's seal braining art. He sighs, and my associate cannot be sure but reports a single tear running down his face.
7:31 - On a long take of Tom Brady, right before the kickoff to the Giants, he hangs his head, deep in thought, before slowly, deliberately letting a drop of spit hang all the way down to the ground before lightly severing it with his tongue. Wiping his mouth, he prepares for combat.
7:31:30 - My associate preserves the saliva for future biological studies.
7:33 - Vince Wilfork is FAT. The man is a beast, and the one giant holdover from their former defensive glory, but the man must weigh as much as a young bull elephant in heat. He breathes like a steam engine, his breath ringing clear across the nation to Utah. That man is not on steroids. That man is on tyrannosaurus tears and liquid molten sun.
7:38 - The Patriots defense smells blood. Like sharks in the water, they are circling, picking off the weak on the edges of the Giants vertical attack. Hakeem Nicks is no longer able to distinguish directions from colors, and the resulting blur has taken away the most potent weapon of their passing attack. If the Patriots score on their next drive, and I mean a touchdown, then the game is all but sealed.
7:40 - This just in: Pepsi Max commercials are not funny either.
7:47 - The Giants have (finally) sacked Tom Brady, creating a 4th and 12. The game is still alive, 17-12. Someone is bringing in a fresh crate for Brady marked as delivery from Northern Canada. A slight, pathetic whimper is heard.
7:49 - The word going around the Interwebs is that Madonna fell during her halftime performance. Yes, she did fall. From the pop charts. Like a stone.
7:55 - Tom Coughlin, Giants coach extraordinaire, is turning into Marty Schottenheimer, with the stale old brand of "run, run, pass, punt/kick". This bodes poorly for the rest of the game. 17-15.
8:02 - I've yet to see anything besides the Avengers preview that actively excites me.
8:04 - Brady is intercepted on a play that up until the conclusion is eerily similar to "the Catch" from Super Bowl 42.
(Fuck Roman numerals. There's nothing Roman about football besides the desire to maul one another like lions and tigers. Until I say otherwise, football is undeserving.)
8:08 - The game is getting tense. Like camping.
8:11 - My associate reports that sabotage is afoot. Jake Ballard has been stabbed by a Patriots defender. This shifts the balance horribly, and could mean the ultimate outcome is horribly in doubt. I have no idea as to what actually happened, because one of The Professor and The Stitcher's friends (let's call her The Boxer) decided to jump onto my lap and attempt to seduce me through her massive massive tongue. Needless to say, I resisted her charms and whiles, but not after a thorough drenching. I also have no idea as to what happened to Jake Ballard, but I'm sure that my associate would never lie to me.
8:13 - The scene behind the Patriots bench is bedlam. Brady is humping a blow-up doll like a madman, holding it by the neck with one hand while braining seal cubs with the other hand, clutching a shalalie like a mad Irish drunk out of some O'Neill play. He is uncontrollable.
8:15 - STAY IN BOUNDS YOU CRETIN!
8:23 - It is determined that The Stitcher doesn't give a shit about the Browns. Bulls and Cavs all the way. End quote.
8:25 - The Darkness jam session is at the worst, entertaining to listen to a bunch of people do what we did in bars during my freshman year of college; i.e. Screech like Robert Plant having a period.
8:27 - TONGUE IN FACE! TONGUE IN FACE!
8:27:30 - Wes Welker is a human vacuum cleaner, the football equivalent of Brooks Robinson at third base. He is the cog in the Patriots well-oiled machine that makes it run. So how in the name of gravy does Welker drop that pass? I could catch that pass. How in the hell does he miss it? Good god, good gravy, my goodness my Guinness.
8:29 - My associate is reporting that Bill Belicheck is being re-booted. The last few drives have stalled out, unfortunately so, and as a result Josh McDaniels has had to insert a new chip into the Belicheck androids skull to keep it functioning.
8:31 - The howling at the moon on this chilly Indiana night begins anew, as Eli comes on with 3:46 left and 2 points down. The broadcasters sound as though this is a pre-scripted broadcast. I'm still not fully recovered from the halftime performance. Eli, overcome from his seal depression, looks like he's preparing for a high-power merger at a corporate law firm. One senses the winds shifting.
8:34 - The Manningham catch will go down not as highly as the Tyree catch, because that was the ultimate in game saving performances. However, when receivers in the future are shown video of how to perform the sideline catch and to keep both of their feet down inbounds to preserve the catch, they will be shown Mario Manningham's sideline catch from Super Bowl XLVI, as he toed his left foot, planted his right, and maintained full possession of the ball on his descent out of bounds. Belicheck makes the call to challenge the play because he has no other options; allowing the catch to stand would cripple his team for the rest of the drive. As it is, they are now on the 50 yard line, with hope rekindled in their hearts. A cheer erupts from the stadium as the catch is confirmed through the jumbotron screen. The game continues, although the outcome seems to be written in blood. Patriot blood.
8:37 - The Giants need to milk the clock as they move into field goal range. The Pats have far too much time left to let Brady have a chance to move down the field again.
8:38 - Manningham has been targeted four times in a row, making three receptions. He is a beast, and blood rages in his head. Patriot receivers are fearful for their lives, shrinking from this possessed ex-Wolverine. He howls at the snap count for blood, and throws anything in his way to the ground, a Samson among Davids, to properly mix the metaphors and convey the emotion it is to see a football player take over a game for several drives.
8:39 - GoDaddy.co can go suck my left nut. Not the right. They're not good enough for that.
8:41 - 2nd and 3, the Giants call for East Falco. I like to call this the luck dragon play.
8:43 - All of a sudden, this game has come alive, and every missed play/made play/mistake is magnified here for the Patriots. Neither team has performed spectacularly except for a couple drives. Unfortunately for the Patriots, Eli Manning has taken over this drive, fueled by the Manningham Impossibility.
8:44 - Touchdown Giants! Belicheck has gambled to let the Giants score now, instructing the Patriots defense to part like the Red Sea on First and 10. Ahmad Bradshaw was allowed to rush for a touchdown, and because the opening for the Giants was so huge, Bradshaw was unable to stop his forward momentum before he could cross the goal line. He has literally fallen ass-backwards into the endzone in the most futile attempt to cease forward motion that has been broadcast on live television. While the Giants have a 4 point lead (2 point conversion unsuccessful), the Patriots have :57 seconds for Tom Brady to rally for a touchdown. (My associate reports that Bradshaw literally pissed himself with terror upon seeing an open endzone, the first time anyone on either sideline can report feeling such terror.")
8:45 - "The suspense is terrible! I hope it lasts." - Oscar Wilde.
8:47 - Good Jesus, Rob Gronkowski is not in the game. I will return after this drive concludes. Too tense to write.
8:53 - The final Hail Mary goes up. If Chad OchoCinco catches the fucking Hail Mary to win the Super Bowl, I will stab somebody.
8:54 - The Hail Mary falls incomplete, just beyond the reach of a diving Rob Gronkowski. The Giants are Super Bowl Champions once again, ending the SAME WAY IT ENDED FOUR YEARS AGO. Eli Manning has now warranted serious discussion for the Hall of Fame, and the missed passes across the field to the Patriots will be second guessed all year. God I am glad that I'm not a Patriots fan. To go through this agonizing heartbreak defeats anything known by a Bengals fan, where we're simply used to chronic disappointment year in, and year out.
8:56 - Hall of Fame boosts from this game for Eli Manning and Tom Coughlin. Eli has passed his brother for football success, and the alcohol flows like mad in the streets of New York.
8:58 - My associate reports from the frenetic joy of the Giants sideline that "Tom Coughlin has entered full-Beast mode, and is screaming phenomenal nonsense words from the bowels of the sideline pit. Manningham must be corralled and muzzled so as to simply receive congratulatory handshakes. Belicheck has stabbed some anonymous assistant coach before going into auto-self-destruct mode. He is being shepherded towards the locker room by an assortment of tight ends and a rapidly deflating Vince Wilfork.
Brady sits amid a pile of blood and seal skulls, clutching his shalalie in a white-knuckled grip, yet unable to come to terms with once again having come so close, yet so far from his ultimate goal. A few drops to Wes Welker and the outcome is decidedly different. The unfortunate truth is that Tom Brady has already peaked in terms of what he can accomplish, and where he can go. He has overcome being a 6th round draft pick, passed on by every team in the league multiple times. He has won three Super Bowls. He has broken records, proven his worth as a quarterback time and time again. There is no question that he is one of the all time greats. Now however, that works against him. He is the Establishment now, his underdog card revoked under threat of blood. The other team will always be the underdog. Over 70% of America was rooting for the Giants, although it might be more accurately described as against Brady. He is the Villain with the Golden Arm, and no matter his past, he will never again be the Underdog, short of a sudden and terrible decline in power.
The ultimate pain this time around is that the Patriots handed this away, almost gift wrapped. Now Brady looks forward to an off-season of misery, flanked by Giselle, the rapidly aging supermodel who no longer carries the same luster as his career winds one year closer to its ultimate end. The banshees are screaming and howling in the Indiana nights, and death reeks over the New England sideline. A great thing is passing before our eyes, and it is our responsibility to record its construct and ultimate demise. Before it even happened, the New England dynasty choked and flailed as 87 could not wrap up the small, bouncing pigskin. Night has fallen in Foxborough.
9:04 - The weirdest trophy celebration ritual is the touching of the Lombardi trophy by the entire Giants football team. While an old old man carries it forward, the players fondle, kiss, and molest the silver trophy. It offends the senses with the indignity.
9:07 - And the Super Bowl MVP is (as it should be Mario Manningham, who saved the season with his spectacular catch and performance on the last drive) Eli Manning, once again. History is repeating itself once more, and the Giants are 3-0 against the Patriots since 2008. Go figure.
9:10 - I don't know why they break down the game on the damn trophy stand. Just give them their trophies and let them shower each other in man love and champagne. Jesus, you wordy bastards. You're prolonging all of the joy sex and hate sex shared by Giants and Patriots fans! Get on with it!
(Here, the telecast has concluded, due to my sudden lack of interest in the game, and my prolonged interest in Jim Beam.)
CONCLUSION: If anyone wanted to make a notion that these games are fixed, this game makes a strong case. Either that, or the two teams are so evenly matched during the match-up that the team that scores last and that scores the best under pressure is the team that will win. Both years, that has been the Giants, and no amount of baby seals can disguise the fact that the Patriots have spent several years beating up on mediocre teams so as to create a stronger impression of themselves against the better teams.
Halftime, as far as my poor brain is concerned, is a vague collection of shadows and mystical Kabballah images. Best argument for chemical enhancement (AGAINST chemical enhancement, my associate pines from Indianapolis, AGAINST. ONE CANNOT HANDLE THE TORTURE.) ever? I think not.
Commercials are lame. But we knew this.
Therefore, I am bidding adieu for another night. The Professor and The Stitcher have retreated to slumber, and the dog shaped parcel has returned to its inanimate state of being. All is right on Irving Park, for one more year.
OK here,
JTC
(Postscript #1: My book is twelve chapters from completion. The Erstwhile Chronicles has taken a back seat, although I have churned out one chapter from that, and am putting a rough guide for the pages together. Expect more on that over time. Come March, the play's the thing.)
(Postscript #2: Tuesday morning. No word yet on my associate, or where he lies. My last contact with him was when he was in the Giants locker room, hammering down bottles of Moet and Chandon. Until I hear further, I assume he is on the beat, doing his necessary research.)
(Postscript #3: We have absolutely NO idea who won the Puppy Bowl, although The Stitcher has informed me that a record for Most Puppy Bowl Touchdowns was set tonight. The MVP was Fumble, who was a terror on offense AND defense. Rare that you see a good two-way player anymore.)
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