Robert:
Below is a fine column by Salon's Andrew Leonard about the USA's sudden appreciation of, and interest in, the World Cup.
Here's the direct link to the Salon article, also pasted below:
http://www.salon.com/2014/06/29/the_rights_absurd_world_cup_paranoia_explained/
"With her recent column
explaining how the rise of American interest in the World Cup is “a
sign of the nation’s moral decay,” Ann Coulter successfully sent readers
around the world into gales of horrified laughter and generated god
only knows how many hate-clicks.
Whether she actually believed what she was writing is moot. Coulter’s provocations are best treated as performance art.
But there’s also no doubt that she was playing on conservative
insecurities about change and globalization and multiculturalism that
are quite real. A generation of Americans feels its cultural-superpower
primacy slipping away, replaced by something it would rather mock than
understand or celebrate.
It’s scary stuff! We’ve got a black
president and our neighbors are hooting and hollering about the World
Cup. You can practically hear the pearl-clutching: What’s happened
to our once great nation!? And why the hell won’t all these obnoxious
people on Twitter just stop going on and on and on about it?
Reuters columnist and confirmed curmudgeon Jack Shafer got so fed up
with all the World Cup chatter that he devoted an entire column on
Friday to explaining why he was unfollowing everyone who committed the sin of so much as retweeting a single Cup-obsessed comment.
It’s
mean and unfair to lump Shafer and Coulter in the same paragraph, but
there is a connecting thread linking their disdain. Once every four
years, the entire world explodes into an obsessive conversation about
sports that incorporates and is inseparable from historical narratives
of race and culture and nationalism. In many countries, soccer is politics. When the World Cup crests, it’s the biggest thing happening on the planet.
Shafer
doesn’t want to hear that conversation. Coulter and her ilk are
actively terrified of it. Because the fact that the U.S. is finally
joining in is a sign that we are gradually becoming part of this world
rather than lording over it or building walls to keep it out. On the
pitch, Mexico is our equal, instead of a source of cheap labor and
cheaper thrills. Our stars are neither the biggest nor the brightest. We
can’t samba like the Brazilians or pass with the crisp efficiency of
the Germans.
Monday, June 30, 2014
Friday, June 27, 2014
Multi-screen Cinemas, But Just One Show In Town
Robert
The mania that grips Mexico during the World Cup is pervasive. This year, the big multi-screen cinema chains have started showing the partidos (games) live on their big screens. It's a hit.
I watched the Germany and Ghana game last week in the Lago Real Cinema near Walmart in
Mezcales. Just 29 pesos for a seat.
I was pleasantly surprised. The image clarity was fabulous, and it did feel much more dramatic to see it on the huge screen. The only complaint (gringos always have a complaint doncha know) is that the volume was turned up past the pain threshold. Mexicans love deafening volume, whether watching TV, or listening to banda music, whatever. And I mean Mexicans of all ages.
But, this was an extreme case, even for Mexico.. It was just bearable during the narration of the game, but during the commercial breaks at halftime, and before and after the game, the beer commercials were even louder and were really at a damaging and truly painful decibel levels. I had to plug my ears with my fingertips.
Regardless, I was impressed overall with the excitement of the experience, so went back last Sunday morning to watch Belgium and Russia.
Matches that don't involve Mexico have been shown, so far, on just one of the 8 screens in this particular cinema.
But last Monday, the Mexico vs Croatia match was shown on three screens. I showed up half an hour before game time, but was disappointed to find that all tickets were long gone.
So, for this Sunday morning's upcoming second round match between Mexico and Holland, I wised up and dropped by the cinema last Tuesday night. They told me they had just put the tickets for Sunday on sale, so I snapped up two excellent seats. Still at only 29 pesos.
I asked them how many screens they would dedicate to Sunday's match. The answer? All screens. So for midday next Sunday, it will be a multi-screen cinema, but with just one show. And I have no doubt it will be sold out.
The mania that grips Mexico during the World Cup is pervasive. This year, the big multi-screen cinema chains have started showing the partidos (games) live on their big screens. It's a hit.
I watched the Germany and Ghana game last week in the Lago Real Cinema near Walmart in
Mezcales. Just 29 pesos for a seat.
I was pleasantly surprised. The image clarity was fabulous, and it did feel much more dramatic to see it on the huge screen. The only complaint (gringos always have a complaint doncha know) is that the volume was turned up past the pain threshold. Mexicans love deafening volume, whether watching TV, or listening to banda music, whatever. And I mean Mexicans of all ages.
But, this was an extreme case, even for Mexico.. It was just bearable during the narration of the game, but during the commercial breaks at halftime, and before and after the game, the beer commercials were even louder and were really at a damaging and truly painful decibel levels. I had to plug my ears with my fingertips.
Regardless, I was impressed overall with the excitement of the experience, so went back last Sunday morning to watch Belgium and Russia.
Matches that don't involve Mexico have been shown, so far, on just one of the 8 screens in this particular cinema.
But last Monday, the Mexico vs Croatia match was shown on three screens. I showed up half an hour before game time, but was disappointed to find that all tickets were long gone.
So, for this Sunday morning's upcoming second round match between Mexico and Holland, I wised up and dropped by the cinema last Tuesday night. They told me they had just put the tickets for Sunday on sale, so I snapped up two excellent seats. Still at only 29 pesos.
I asked them how many screens they would dedicate to Sunday's match. The answer? All screens. So for midday next Sunday, it will be a multi-screen cinema, but with just one show. And I have no doubt it will be sold out.
Tuesday, June 24, 2014
Everyone In Mexico Watches the "Partido" (Game).
This photo was making the rounds on the internet yesterday. I hope it is photo shopped and not real. Made me laugh in any case.
But if it were real, I have to admit I wouldn't be too surprised. Healthcare here is surprisingly good, caring, and affordable. But, when Mexico is playing in the World Cup, all bets are off.
But if it were real, I have to admit I wouldn't be too surprised. Healthcare here is surprisingly good, caring, and affordable. But, when Mexico is playing in the World Cup, all bets are off.
Monday, June 9, 2014
Tlaloc Swaggers In Early
The rainy season usually begins with a thunderstorm on or very near June 15. This year Tlaloc, the Aztec rain god, tossed out Mother Nature's manual and swaggered into town early.
We had a storm in mid-May, another in late May, and two heavy thunderstorms in the last two days. and I mean heavy, drenching downpours that went on for two or three hours.
Last night was a meteorological extravaganza, with countless nearby lightning strikes and almost continuous crashing thunder.
Some reports say we received around seven inches in that three hour storm.
We had a storm in mid-May, another in late May, and two heavy thunderstorms in the last two days. and I mean heavy, drenching downpours that went on for two or three hours.
Last night was a meteorological extravaganza, with countless nearby lightning strikes and almost continuous crashing thunder.
Some reports say we received around seven inches in that three hour storm.
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