I Want You Back In My Life
Talking about HELLO
I’m only blogging this for two reasons. The first is that Paul said I was magnificent. You hear that ? Good. Remember it. Especially my German friend. You know who you are !!
Secondly. I’m hoping this will encourage Paul to add something to his freakin’ blog. C’mon Paul ! The world is waiting !!
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Hi folks, it’s early days yet. Haven’t had time to even scratch me knackers, let alone lay a log in this blog. But Peter Fitz (the magnificent) got ahead of me and created a link from his blog to here. For now, I recommend you concentrate on Peter’s stuff (I love it). Sooner or later, I will present some stuff for you that will rot your sox.Stay tuned, and thanks, whoever you may be, if you’ve “surfed” into my patch.“Stephanie, oh Stephanie, you shall be the death o’ me” (that’s a taster for the kinda crap you’ll witness here).Current play: Devo – “Pioneers Who Got Scalped” and Aimee Mann – “I’m With Stupid” and “The La’s” and Elbow – “Asleep In The Back”It goes without saying that Peter Fitzpatrick is one of nature’s true gentlemen. He’s been inside Abbey Road Studios, you know.“Experience is what enables you to recognise a mistake when you make it again”.Love, hugs & kissesPAUL
Lazin’ on a sunny afternoon
When you walk through a storm hold your head up high
I read this on my favourite LiverpoolFC forum today.
What a manager…
BENITEZ UNCOVERED: INSIDE THE DRESSING ROOM ON THAT AMAZING NIGHT IN ISTANBUL ‘YOU ARE LIVERPOOL ..GET YOUR HEADS UP, GET OUT THERE AND DO IT FOR THE FANS’ Martin Lipton
RAFAEL BENITEZ has finally revealed the chaos and confusion from which he conjured Liverpool’s greatest triumph out of impending disaster. Giving the first in-depth account of what really happened in the dressing room as his side faced up to the mountain they had to climb from a 3-0 half-time Champions League Final deficit against AC Milan, Benitez admitted he did not know if he could find the words to bring his team back from the dead. The Liverpool manager also confessed that at one stage he was sending out a 10-man team for the second half in Istanbul as his plans verged on bedlam.
While his players were reeling, Benitez strode from the dug-out and down the tunnel at Attaturk Stadium to find a Liverpool dressing room in a state of shock and knowing he had a brief window of opportunity to get across the most important message of his career. “I walked into the dressing room rehearsing what I was going to say to them but also how I was going to say it,” he said. “It’s really difficult to come up with all the things you want to say in a foreign language. I was trying to find the right English words. “We talked about what we were going to change. It’s tough enough motivating a team which is losing 3-0 in Spanish. In English, it is much, much tougher. “But the words came more easily than I could ever have hoped. The important aspect was to lift their spirits.
“I started with a motivational speech to get them fired up. I demanded they start working again and emphasised there were 45 minutes left and we had to come off the pitch proud of ourselves because we’d done everything in our power.
“So I reminded them it had been a hard battle to reach such a massive game and that we owed something important to all the Liverpool people. I said if we scored we would totally change the course of the game. I emphasised it was the most important challenge. “I said: ‘Don’t let your heads drop. We’re Liverpool. You’re playing for Liverpool. Don’t forget that. You have to hold your heads high for the supporters. You have to do it for them. ‘You can’t call yourselves Liverpool players if you have your heads down. If we create a few chances we have the possibility of getting back into this. Believe you can do it and you will. Give yourself the chance to be heroes’.”
It was a chance that was gloriously, unforgettably taken and Benitez broke open the secrets of his finest moment in A Season On The Brink, a new authorised account of his first term at Anfield, by distinguished Spanish journalist Guillem Balague. But the Liverpool chief told how even after he had given the exhortation that changed everything, his plans were enmeshed in a few minutes of sheer chaos. Benitez wanted to introduce Didi Hamann and told Djimi Traore he was coming off – but then learned Steve Finnan’s injury was too bad for him to continue. Benitez added: “I started to write the new formation on the board. I told Traore to get changed and that Hamann was coming on for him. The idea was for Hamann to make Kaka’s life much tougher. “I took Didi up to the whiteboard so he understood what I wanted and explained the tactical changes to the rest of the side.
Then I was told Finnan was injured. “Finnan was unhappy. He believed he could keep going. But I reckoned if he told me midway through the second half I’d have to make a change beyond my control. “It was a total mess for a while. I was reckoning on Djibril Cisse on the right but someone pointed out I’d have no more substitutions. “So I took Cisse out but also deleted Luis Garcia from the board because I wanted to move him. Now I only had 10 players in the team. The system was changed several times on the board and it created havoc. “The idea was to play 3-4-2-1 with John Arne Riise tucked in. But with the realisation Finnan wasn’t fit to stay on, the logical thing was to tell Traore he wasn’t being taken off. By this time he had his boots off and was on his way to the shower.”
Somehow, despite the flurry of thoughts and the situation, the seeds of glory were being sown. Benitez added: “In the first half we weren’t threatening around their box. We wanted to change the pattern by using two players in the hole between midfield and Milan Baros. “The task was to produce terrific movement and also put massive pressure on Milan building out of defence through Pirlo. We felt we could slam the brakes on the damaging work which Gatuso, Seedorf and most of all Kaka were doing. “Using three centre-halves would make us more secure by staying tight on the runs of their strikers. You can try anything tactically if you’ve worked hard on such ideas in training. We had.” In that instant, a voice cried out, reminding the players of the second half comeback against Greek side Olympiakos that had brought the Reds back from the brink in their final group game.
Outside, the stunned Liverpool fans were singing the roof off the stadium, not even dreaming of what would follow in front of their disbelieving eyes. Benitez said: “Normally it’s Xabi or Carra or Gerrard who shouts ‘Come on boys’ when it’s needed. In the first few minutes there wasn’t any of that. “But in the last couple of minutes before going back out, the animation and noise hit a normal level. “We needed to attack and they let us. We scored and started to look confident all over the pitch. When a team loses control of a match, it can take 15 minutes to get it back. While they are recharging their batteries, anything can happen. “I didn’t hear the fans singing You’ll Never Walk Alone from the dressing room. On the way out I did hear it but I was lost in my thoughts.”
Dr. Robert
twiddly twiddly dee <whistle> twiddly diddly dee
Talking about Radio Radio
Heather & Ben woke me Sunday morning to remind me that in a moment of madness I had agreed to make a video with them. Waving a storyboard around my face I stumbled out of bed and with the help of copious amounts of coffee got my act together. I don’t know which part was the most fun: Ben’s non-existent lip-syncing or Heather’s delight at the smorgasbord of video effects available to her in iMovie.
Shot on DV and edited on my ‘ickle Mac laptop we had a blast. As you can see…
You can see the results at Ben’s site (follow the link to the videos in both Quicktime and Windows Media formats) or if you’re not bothered following the link to the site here’s a link to the video (Windows Media Video file about 11mb)
[2009 update: Ben moved to myspace you can see and hear him at http://www.myspace.com/benrockandroll the links above don’t work any longer ]
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Look, I don’t know how this happened. Well, actually I do.Ben was played on the BBC today. Some weeks ago I sent a copy of his CD to the Vic McGlynn show on BBC 6Music.So, now that Ben and the girls have heard him broadcast on the Beeb they’ve done a story board for his video. Apparently I’m going to be making it with them this weekend. Go figure. While Heather concentrates on the whole video production thing… big sister Ali is figuring out the album artwork.I’ll grab the broadcast of our kid and put a link to an mp3 here in the next day or two.What does this prove ? It proves that if you have a neck like a jockey’s bollix you can get played on the radio.
Radio Radio
[2009 update: Ben moved to myspace you can see and hear him at http://www.myspace.com/benrockandroll ]
I wish they all could be….
Sept 7th I flew to LA and then onward to San Diego. Had meetings with a game developer in San Diego on the 8th and 9th.
Although I lived in NY for a few years, I appreciate that every part of the US is different. I hadn’t really experienced California and this was my chance. The meetings on the 8th & 9th were long but worthwhile and setup our projects quite well. Though we did have to endure a working-dinner. Our colleagues from Seattle are good company. One person (in the developer company) is well travelled , multilingual, a wine snob and a pain in the arse.
La Jolla (once I found out how to pronounce it…… la hoya….) was nice but a little quiet. Not a lot of action there – some restaurants but that’s it. My colleague (in his early-mid 30s was “carded” in the bar of one of the restaurants by a guy who was barely 25 if he was a day….).
Celebrity non-encounter story:
So, my colleague & I are walking along the main drag in La Jolla looking for a sushi place. I notice that approaching us is the guy who played Cliff in Cheers (actor John Ratzenberger) with a very attractive lady by his side. To our right were 4 frat-guys who had obviously had 3 whole beers that evening and were being wild-and-crazy-guys. Eventually one of them realised there was a celeb in our midst. It took a couple of minutes (by which time John had passed by… I can call him John… I feel I can do that) before one of them could say “Cheers” to his friends. After another minute or two they all realised this was some famous guy from TV. Before you could say celebrity-stalker they start to shout “Norm !!” down the street at (my new friend) John.
How bad does it get when you have to listen to drunks shout at you in the street… and even then… they can’t even get your character name right.
At least they didn’t call him Buzz.
At some point on Thursday or Friday I spoke with my friend Paul in Australia. My timing was , as usual, awful and I called just as he and his family were about to go to the funeral parlour with his father (yes, I knew he had just died… that’s the reason I was callling). I managed to top this just over a week later when I phoned from Dublin and woke Paul at some ungodly hour of the morning. Sorry about that mate !
Saturday was quite the tourist day. Free from meetings and business we went to Seaworld. Good to see all that life in a big glass bowl. At the end of the day we wandered over toward Shamu the killer whale. Before the show began we saw a video tribute to the American armed forces which involved asking the members of the army in the audience to stand up and be applauded. I felt incredibly uncomfortable as I sat with my arms folded. They “defending our country” apparently. My colleague wasn’t particularly impressed either and was a little more vocal than I. I couldn’t wait to get out of the place.
To make up for all that, we went to Fry’s Electronics. For my European brothers… this is a huge warehouse full of electronics, gadgets, software, consumer goods. You would have been proud of me : I didn’t buy anything. My colleague did – an in-flight power supply for our laptops. More on this later.
Sunday we went to Mission Beach (see the previous blog) and just hung out in the sunshine watching the surfers and the oh-so-pretty West Coast Girls. I wish they all could be. It was Sept. 11th and I made an extra special effort to keep the TV turned off.
Monday we flew north to Seattle. For a change I was staying in a Marriott hotel near the offices. For the last 10 years or so I’ve stayed in the Hyatt hotel in Bellevue. The change was worth it. Nicer hotel, better value and more to do locally because the hotel is located in a small town-centre with some stores & restaurants.
Work all day Tuesday & Wednesday with back-to-back meetings. Some folk from a game developer in Edmonton came down for meetings. We’ll be working on some interesting projects over the next couple of years.
Wednesday we went to the Redhook brewery in Woodinville. This was interesting – sampling beers with dinner. Can’t say I liked the porter – I’m not a porter-drinking type of guy. Because it was all-work-related I couldn’t get stuck in to the beers and had to behave myself. This is part of the problem with business travel : your time is not your own. I didn’t get to hook up with my friend Anita (see: I have mentioned you in my blog! how boring is it now ?).
By the time Thursday morning came along I couldn’t wait to get on the flight home. Even though we have to fly economy and even though there was a connection to be made in Chicago I was actually looking forward to it.
At SeaTac airport we investigated the in-flight power supply adapter that had been purchased in Fry’s. Bastard thing didn’t have the right connection for our Dell laptops.
Fortunately the flights home and the connection in Chicago were all uneventful and smooth. Apart from my stomach cramps courtesy of a dodgy breakfast in SeaTac (avoid the African Lounge !).
Bits of this journey will come back to me in the next couple of days and I’ll update the blog. Right now there’s a glass of red wine with my name on it and it’s calling my name.