Wednesday, December 30, 2020

2020: The Year in Review

My summary of 2020:  Kill it with fire.




I've had years that were for me personally- one of my closest friends dying suddenly in her 40's.  The next year, one of my oldest childhood friends passed away.  

The world has had recent years that we were in war and facing terrorism and economic collapse that seemed insurountable.  I can't say that 2020 has been the worst year since I've been alive.  But 2020 has certainly felt like the most depressing year since I've been alive.

COVID struck, killing over 300,000 Americans and over 1.8 million people so far.  My wife and I both caught COVID in October, but fortunately recovered.  

The world is making process on vaccines, and with some luck and skill, the world might be vaccinated from COVID to start getting back to 'normal'.  I put that in quotes because even when COVID abates, so much of our lives will be different from it was from 2019.  Businesses- and entire industries- that died because they couldn't get customers won't be coming back.  Many people (myself included) worked from home, and many of those people will continue to do so.  Epidemics like the 1918 flu and the Black Death changes the world and society, and COVID will also do so- permanently.

We'll adapt to the changes- we always do.  COVID is why 2020 was tragic.  But it wasn't why 2020 was depressing.

In the past, when disaster struck, we as a people bonded together.  The attacks on 9/11 were awful, but we as a country bonded together.  This year, we came across a new challenge- and broke apart.

The country is split between two teams and their defining characteristic is how much they despise the other team.

I always thought politics was like the Yankees-Red Sox rivalry... yeah, you 'hated' the other team.  But when there was a real problem, you ignored your rivalry.  That didn't happen this time.  

And I fear it will continue.  We've elected a new President, and part of me hopes that as Trump recedes in the eyes of everyone, this Culture War will lessen.  But I fear it won't- and I don't know what direction it will go in now.

And it just is exhausting.

Be well, everyone.  I'll try to be more optimistic next time.

Saturday, December 26, 2020

Star Wars Thought: The wrong alliance

Finished season 2 of The Mandalorian (Short review-  it's awesome.  Longer review- it expanded the Star Wars Universe and managed to show characters who were shades of grey without going away from the themes of the Universe.  And the characters and stories were inrcredible.  Jon Favreau and Dave Filono are on the short list of creators I will trust with just about any franchise).

One thing I kept noticing- the Empire kept advocating 'Order'.  "Bringing Order to the Galaxy"- that was their justification for waging war on the Republic.  That's what the Empire believed- order over chaos.  Which makes sense.  


But that's not what the Sith believe.  The Sith believe that passion creates strength creates power creates victory (courtesy of Knights of the Old Republic 2).  The Sith don't care about Order, or Discipline... if anything, they advocate the exact opposite of it.

So why are they always allies?

For the original trilogy, and the prequels, the answer is- Emporer Palpatine.  Palpatine viewed the Empire and the Sith as tools to use for his cult of personality.  He told the Empire that he wanted to bring Order to the Universe, and he told Vader to embrace his feelings.  Vader thought he was using the Empire, the Empire thought they were using Vader- and both were being used by the Emporer.

But now that the Emperor is dead?  There's no reason for them to be working together.  The Mandalorian gets around this by not having any Sith.  Their opponents are only the Empire.

But the Sequels (cue my rant about the failure that was the sequels)... they just put the First Order and Kylo Ren together.  And since Ren was the far more interesting character... really, the First Order was nothing more than scrubs for the heroes to level up on until they were ready to face Ren.

And that's a missed opportunity, in my mind.

What if the overall arc of the sequels had been a War between the First Order and the Sith?  Between Order and Chaos?  

It would have taken the sequels in a new direction instead of a rehash.

But wouldn't that have put the Republic- the heroes- on the sidelines?

Not necessarily.  The first movie could have had them acting as heroes trying to save the worlds caught in the crossfire of the Empire-Sith war.  The second movie shows Rey's training (the rebirth of the Jedi), as the Sith (Kylo Ren and his Knights) decimate the Empire...

... which forces the Empire to turn to the Republic for an alliance.

Because the Empire is about Order.  The Sith is about Passion.  The Republic is about Balance and Compassion.  

Which takes the Star Wars Universe to a different path and many more interesting stories.



Saturday, December 19, 2020

NBA 2020-2021 Predictions


I took the year off last year because of NBA's stance supporting China.  I'm back this year.


Eastern Conference:
1.       Milwaukee
2.       Miami
3.       Toronto
4.       Boston
5.       Philadelphia
6.       Washington
7.       Brooklyn
8.       Atlanta


9.       Indiana
10.     Orlando
11.     Chicago
12.     Cleveland
13.     Detroit
14.     Charlotte
15.     New York





Playoffs:
·         Milwaukee over Atlanta, Miami over Brooklyn, Toronto over Washington, Philadelphia over Boston
·         Milwaukee over Philadelphia, Miami over Toronto
·         Milwaukee over Miami


Western Conference:


1.       LA Lakers
2.       LA Clippers
3.       Denver
4.       Dallas
5.       Utah
6.       Portland
7.       Phoenix
8.       Sacramento


9.       New Orleans
10.     Memphis
11.     Minnesota
12.     San Antonio
13.     Houston
14.     Golden State
15.     Oklahoma City








Playoffs:
·         Lakers over Sacramento, Phoenix over Clippers, Denver over Portland, Utah over Dallas
·         Lakers over Utah, Denver over Phoenix
·         Denver over Lakers




More notes:
·         The East is more dangerous than people realize.  Miami is dangerous, and Toronto is deep.  But I think this is Giannis' year.  No one in the East has an answer for him
·         The Lakers are the best team in the West... but they are still dependent on two superstars, and now on very short rest.  The Clippers are the deepest team, which is why I'm high on them in the regular season... but I think they are the team most likely to stumble in the playoffs.  I think Denver is sick of being ignored and may go on a rampage.
·         MVP?  The general preseason consensus is Luka Doncic.  If Dallas plays well, he will win
·         ROY?  Would love it to be Isaac Okoro.  But I think Tyrese Haliburton might have the easiest path.
·         Finals?  Two teams desperate to overcome their past.  Denver is deep... but Milwaukee has Giannis.  The Greek Freak wins his first title, 4 games to 2
·         James Harden is traded, but not until he's sunk Houston's season.  Don't know where he's going to
·       I'm very high on Washington (Westbrook and Beal are a great combination, and they have depth), and very low on Brooklyn (Durant is awesome- but if there ever was a team that looked great on paper that lacked the teamwork, it's them)







Saturday, December 12, 2020

Cleveland Cavaliers- 2020-21 NBA Season preview

Tonight, the Cleveland Cavaliers play their first preseason game since March 10, 2020.  It's good to see them back.



They weren't a great team last year, and they most likely won't be a great team this year.  They are too young in the backcourt, they still need to learn to defend, their best player is injury-prone... there's a reason they only won 19 games last year.  

It's frustrating being a fan of a small market team in the NBA.  The best players only want to play for major markets, leading to a NBA that has 10 great teams and 20 versions of the Washington Generals.  And when a small market team does develope a great player, there's a countdown until that player leaves via free agency.  It's frustrating.

But at this point in the team's progress, that's not an issue.  Instead, we're seeing the journey and hoping this team can come together and improve.

They have players that can step forward- Sexton, Garland, Okoro, Windler, KPJ.  Drummond is an excellent player who is, unfortuantely, playing in an era that works against his skillset.  Love, when healthy, can still play well.

But I think the single most important person for the Cavaliers next year is J.B. Bickerstaff.  If Sexton or Garland step up, the team will do well.  But if Bickerstaff coaches these players well- defines their roles and puts them in a place where they can succeed- then all of the young players can improve.  It may not show in the standings this year, but it will show eventually.

The win total this year will not be fun.  But the journey might be.