Tuesday, October 6, 2009

Chris Johnson should NOT have been penalized, per NFL's VP of Officiating

Chris Johnson is making news for complaining that he was penalized for his religion. He made a "religious display" (kneeling with his hands lifted towards the sky) after an endzone interception (video here). Some are arguing the penalty was anti-religious.

Regardless of your feelings about religion, the penalty was unfair, per the NFL's own rules.

When the penalty happened on Sunday, I thought about this video, where Mike Pereira, the NFL's VP of Officiating, stated that a player should be penalized for a celebration if his knees touch the ground, UNLESS he is doing it to "praise the lord."



Let's save the unsavory religious overtones of Pereira's rule interpretation for another day... if we accept this rule as Pereira explains it, then why was it not applied properly in Chris Johnson's case? (Because the officials have it in for the Raiders!)

Monday, October 5, 2009

Patrick Willis: Xbox is the way to his heart

Cosmo magazine recently did a piece featuring "dating tips" from NFL players. Some of them tried to be cute or funny, some gave a safe, female-friendly answer (NFL players totally dig women for their conversational abilities, really!). But thank you Patrick Willis for just keeping it real:

Cosmo: What's something a woman might say that would turn you off?
Patrick: If she said she doesn't like men who play video games, that would be a problem. I'm a video game fanatic!"

Thank you Maggie for the tip on the article.

Friday, October 2, 2009

Antisocial networking: why I enjoy annoying random people on Twitter

In this edition of Alana G Haters, we honor Twitter users @Zanders and @Elizabeth who have recently blocked me.

My sense of humor can be a little mean-spirited sometimes. I once went on a date with a guy who told me earnestly, "I would never have a laugh at someone else's expense." In response I laughed in his face. Hey, I respect if that's how you want to live your life, but don't expect me to. I don't think I'm ever mean for the sake of being mean -- I'm mean for the sake of humor. If I see a downtrodden homeless person wearing crazy clothes, I won't joke about that. But if some asshole hipster walks by in a needlessly silly outfit... well, that calls for a joke. Not everyone will find my jokes funny, but if you don't like my humor, you don't have to be friends with me.

OH SNAP but there's the rub, because on social networking sites like Twitter, I can still hang out in your social circle even if you don't want me there. And if you're a happy-go-lucky person who naively thinks everyone else is super-friendly, I might try to annoy you with my silly antics. Just for poops and giggles.

The only real way to protect yourself from outsiders on Twitter is to make your tweets private so that only approved people can follow you. But that's no fun -- you're a friendly, popular person and you love the fact that you can get 692 people following you. Most people leave their Twitter feeds open, and frankly those people are asking to be bothered.

So the other day I decided to stir some things up with unsuspecting Twitter users @Zanders and @Elizabeth. I don't know either of them, but I had just started following Zanders and he retweeted this message from Elizabeth:

"Never let great be the enemy of good." A good decision made quickly is far better than a great decision made slowly.

First of all, this is terrible advice. Sure, a quick decision is useful in many cases: should I pee now or later, which flavor donut should I steal from the office next door, what's my best escape route from this burning building, etc. But a well-reasoned great decision is "far better" in many other cases: who should I marry, which car should I buy, should I retweet this piece of garbage advice, etc. The original context-free tweet by Elizabeth was annoying enough, but then I saw that multiple people in addition to Zanders had blindly retweeted it.

So I decided to retweet it and express my disagreement. And then my good Twitter pal @Oopspow retweeted. And then we started a little Twitter meme whereby every important question on Twitter was directed to Zanders and Elizabeth for a "quick decision." Which Eddie Murphy stand-up routine is better, "Delirious" or "Raw"? Better ask Zanders and Elizabeth for a quick decision! What should the Senate do about asbestos? Better get Zanders and Elizabeth on the case asap! A few more of my Twitter pals started getting in on the action. The result was that Zanders' and Elizabeth's @-reply feeds were flooded with dozens of our silly jokes.

That's hilarious to me. As Oopspow remarked, there were probably better things we could spend our time on, but at that moment we couldn't think of any.

Now if Zanders and Elizabeth had interacted with us and laughed at the whole thing, we would have all had a little chuckle and then lost interest. But instead they ignored us. So we kept doing it. And then they both BLOCKED us. Haters get on your job! A silly, passive-aggressive action like blocking me only motivates me to annoy you more.

You see, if they had done their homework, they would have realized that blocking really accomplishes very little on Twitter. Sure, I can no longer conveniently follow Zanders and Elizabeth from my blocked account. But I'm still following them in my TweetDeck from one of my benign alter-ego accounts. Even if they block my other account, I can still view their Tweets on their profile page, or subscribe to them by RSS. More importantly, I can still jam them with silly @-replies all day long! And now that I realize they've blocked me, I'm even more motivated to do so. Why? Maybe to prove a point (my Twitter c*ck is bigger than yours). But mostly just because it's even funnier than before. When it stops being funny, I'll stop doing it.

Writing this whole post does make me wonder if I'm being mean to Zanders and Elizabeth, who don't seem to be enjoying the attention. But maybe they don't care at all about my silliness. Perhaps some of you can send them @-replies asking for their thoughts on the subject. Don't forget to CC me: @alana_g.

P.S. I got a most unexpected message while writing this post:

Those of you who have followed the Alana G Haters series will get a kick out of that one -- @nikidandrea appears to be our old friend the "reporter" from the Phoenix New Times. If you don't know who she is, you can read my February 2009 dismantling of Niki D'Andrea. Zanders and Elizabeth, you may be in luck -- something shiny and new has caught my eye in Twittertown!

Tuesday, September 29, 2009

Junior Seau run over by a bull for Versus reality TV show

The story has gotten out that Junior Seau got banged up by a bull while guest starring as a rodeo clown. In case you were wondering why an NFL Pro-Bowler would put himself in such a position, our good friends at Versus now have the answer: reality TV. Here's the clip from the new show "Sports Jobs."

Monday, September 28, 2009

Chad Pennington: next year's Comeback Player of the Year

Don't feel too sorry for Chad Pennington, who's out for the rest of the season with a shoulder injury. This is all part of his master plan. We talked to Chad during last year's Super Bowl and he explicitly outlined his plan to get injured this year so that he can win his third Comeback Player of the Year award in 2010. At 0:40 in the video he says:

"That's kind of the secret to being a comeback player -- you have a good year, you get the award, then you get hurt... and then come back the following year and get the award again."



We honestly wish Chad well in his recovery and subsequent comeback campaign. He seems like a genuinely nice guy, and I can only hope he's able to get back in the game after this.

Monday, September 21, 2009

Jersey Joker tackles the Lingerie Football League

If you watched the show Fanarchy on Versus, then you're familiar with Jersey Joker, everyone's favorite loud-mouthed Yankees fan. Well apparently he was somehow able to parlay his television fame into a trip to L.A. to hang out with some babes from the Los Angeles Temptation, one of the teams of the Lingerie Football League. This segment was apparently too hot for TV and ended up on the cutting room floor, but now you can watch it online as many times as you'd like.



Is it just me, or is this the happiest we've ever seen the Joker? Thanks to the lovely ladies of the Temptation and to the folks at Fanarchy for sharing this video.

Friday, September 18, 2009

Jorge Posada's wife Laura Posada is my new favorite MLB WAG

Laura Posada appeared on The Wendy Williams Show the other day. Not only is she an attorney (who knew!) but she mentioned she would put Jorge in check for his scuffle the other night. And she's got big boobs. What's not to love!

Tuesday, September 15, 2009

Louis Murphy's first touchdown for the Raiders

Just because the refs say it's not a touchdown doesn't mean it didn't happen. Last night I stayed in my Oakland apartment with the door locked for fear of riots.



Hat tip to With Leather for the video.

Friday, September 4, 2009

Andre Berto questions Chad Ochocinco's black Mexicanship

Unless you've been living under a Twitter rock, you know that Andre Berto and Chad Ochocinco have been feuding and are planning to box each other after the NFL season. Berto talked about it in this week's Yardbarker segment on Fanarchy.



Stay tuned to Andre Berto's Yardbarker blog for more insight and insults.

Tuesday, September 1, 2009

Brendan Haywood's workout plan

I'm hitting the gym tonight, Brendan. Gotta work on my six-pack-shakur and stuff.



Haywood also filmed a video of basketball drills that you can see on his Yardbarker blog. I don't want to embed it here and get Jay-Z's awful "D.O.A." song in your head.