Showing posts with label Pittsburgh. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Pittsburgh. Show all posts

Sunday, December 12, 2021

Tis The Ugly Sweater Season! Advent 2021: Day 12


I hate the number 12. I'm not sure why. I find it's bad luck or maybe just the look of it irritates me. 

In honor of Steelers Quarterback, Terry Bradshaw, the only #12 I love, here's a look at some Pittsburgh Steelers themed ugly sweaters.

Hey- it's football Sunday. (Look at me be relevant!)

Go Steelers!

Such a beautiful tree!


Steely McBeam was introduced to fans in 2007 during the Steelers' 75th anniversary.


The Grinch needs to use the Ravens helmet as the crapper. I hate the stinkin' Ravens.



This one lights up.


The Steel Curtain was comprised of Joe Green, Dwight White, Ernie Holmes & L.C. Greenwood.


An ugly sweater cocktail dress!

As I love all Pittsburgh teams, I must give props to my other sports loves. Here's a look at a Penguins and a Pirates sweater.



I want so badly to visit Pittsburgh. For those of us who can't visit the Steel City, here's a little at what it's like during the holidays. Enjoy!




Saturday, September 4, 2021

Blue Devil #23


En route to The Big Apple, Blue Devil experiences car trouble and ends up taking a detour in the Steel City. His stop in Pittsburgh brings him face-to-face not only with Firestorm, The Nuclear Man but several foes lead by the dastardly Bolt!

The combination of Blue Devil and Firestorm villains is the result of a planned heist at a computer symposium. But things are quickly going off the rails! No- it's not because of the sudden (but expected) appearance of the heroes. It's because this motley crew is turning on each other and making alliances! With Felicity Smoak and Ronnie Raymond's dad as hostages, the stakes have never been higher for The Nuclear Man!

It's been hinted at for several issues now. Finally Blue Devil and Firestorm meet- and at each other's throat too! It was great and I loved it!

Worth Consuming!

Rating: 10 out of 10 stars.

Monday, January 20, 2020

A Beautiful Day in the Neighborhood

For almost 110 minutes, those who grew up as neighbors of the legendary Mr. Rogers, get a chance to experience another visit with the childhood icon. 

Tom Hanks plays Fred Rogers, who from 1968-2001, appeared almost daily on the TV screen of millions of children and their parents and their parents parents. While Tom Hanks doesn't become Mr. Rogers, there are moments when you can see good ole Fred popping up in the Forrest Gump star's demeanor or accent. 

A Beautiful Day in the Neighborhood was inspired by Tom Junod's 1998 Esquire article titled 'Can You Say...Hero?' In the film, Junod's character, now referred to as journalist Lloyd Vogel, is self-destructing. A new father, his own troubled relationship with his father has left the writer scarred and angry. Hoping to give him a new perspective, his editor assigns Vogel (Matthew Rhys) to interview Fred Rogers. But when Vogel meets Rogers and finds him almost exactly like his on screen persona, the writer becomes suspicious.

As Lloyd Vogel digs deeper into just who Mister Rogers really is, the journalist must learn just who he is. And that will mean facing a childhood of hurt and pain. Hopefully, in the end, maybe a little bit of Fred Rogers will rub off on Lloyd Vogel, making him into the husband and father he longs to be.

This 2019 film is framed like an episode of Mister Rogers Neighborhood. From the iconic miniatures opening of the show to the 'Won't You Be My Neighbor? theme'. We get appearances by Mr. McFeely, learn how a magazine is made thanks to Picture-Picture and take a trolley ride to Make Believe Land. Throughout this missing episode, Mister Rogers talks to his neighbors about anger and how it is affecting Lloyd Vogel's life!

 Oh NO! Mister Rogers didn't feed his fish!

The film really did feel like a lost episode. The original cameras and some parts of the set, including King Friday and Daniel are re-used to give Tom Hanks' version of Mister Rogers Neighborhood an as near as possible authentic feel. Yes, trying to keep things as much as things would be on the series made for some oddly trippy scenes. But by the end of this film, I was okay if Tom Hanks and PBS decided to reboot Mister Rogers Neighborhood with some new episodes. Just leave Lloyd Vogel out of it. I felt like this movie was focused too much on him and his family problems and not enough of showing us Fred Rogers. 

Mister Rogers is a lot like painter Bob Ross. He's just so innocent and pure and super chill. It's a complete 180 turn from the chaos of modern day. A Beautiful Day in the Neighborhood does a wonderful job bringing back such more innocent times. I just hate that it's marred by trying to show how people find solace or even themselves in Mister Rogers. My wife thought that made for a better movie. I felt that that part in which people found answers in Mister Rogers, that part is a given. I wanted to see the unknown Fred Rogers. We get some glimpses. But what I really wanted to know was if Mister Rogers started out in the Army as a sniper and or a Navy SEAL! 

That's been part of Mister Rogers' mystique and a long-time urban legend. Ultimately, considering how bizarre things get in the movie, it was a part of neighborhood lore that could've been explored in the movie. Having Tom Hanks as Mister Rogers, killing Nazis on screen. That could've been filmed for this movie. 

Ultimately, I think we all wanted to see that! 

Worth Consuming!

Rating: 7
 out of 10 stars.




Tuesday, August 4, 2009

"Dan Rooney: My 75 Years With the Pittsburgh Steelers and the NFL"



WORTH CONSUMING!

I’ve been a Steelers fan since I don’t know when. I’ve got family from Pittsburgh, I’ve always loved that the helmet only has a logo on one side, and one of the first sentences I remember ever reading was “One for the Thumb.” Well, it took a while to get the thumb, but I’ve been a member of Steelers Nation my whole life, and I don’t expect to change!

 If you are a fan of the Steelers, this book is required reading! If you are a football historian, this book needs to be on your reading list, as the Steelers are one of the original NFL founding teams. If you are from Dallas, I pity you.

 A great, fun, and fast read. (I wish it was longer!)