06 August 2025

A Trip to Ocean Beach is Here Recounted

Photo by author

Went to Ocean Beach in San Francisco. I’ve been going once or twice a year for — I don’t know, a long time. Left the house at 8:48. Walked to the BART station. Caught the end of the morning commute so was lucky to get a seat, even luckier when I transferred at MacArthur Station. Stuck my nose in Lonesome Dove which I started re-reading a couple of days ago.

After transferring had to put the headphones on. I was sitting near a sniffer. Don’t know how people can sit there and sniff repeatedly in a public place. Annoying as hell. Some people don’t seem to mind. That’s weird to me too.


Got off at first SF station and went to MUNI Metro station which is in the same place as the BART station. Not a long wait for the N Judah that goes all the way to Ocean Beach. Not too crowded. Was enjoying the music so left headphones on.


Nose buried in book all the way to end of the line. Forgot to time how long the ride is. Half an hour or so. When I looked out the window I was seeing different sites than I do in Berkeley. I was seeing San Francisco. Great city. Not like it was in my youth but then what is?


SF in my youth was Herb Caen in an  entertaining San Francisco Chronicle that featured numerous columnists a really good sports section and a good comics page. Willie Mays and Willie McCovey on the Giants playing in wind swept Candlestick Park. KSFO radio was king although for rock there was KYA and KFRC and for soul KDIA. Disc jockeys were celebrities in those days. On your favorite stations you know who was on air when. There was Don Sherwood. Emperor Gene Nelson. Russ The Moose Syracuse, Jim Lange who also hosted The Dating Game. A lot of people walked around with transistor radios. Very few games were on TV so you listened to the Giants on the radio. 


There were traditional night clubs in San Francisco like the Fairmont. Tony Bennet, Count Basie, Ella Fitzgerald and other greats would perform in the city. There were also places like the Fillmore where the great rock bands — Joplin, Jefferson Airplane, The Who — played. There were always top acts in town. Many rock stars lived in SF.


The Haight Ashbury was where it was at. The cultural revolution on full display. Hippies galore. It was a wild scene and upsetting as hell for the straights.


People — hippies aside — dressed well. Men in ties. Women with permanents. Beauty salons were big.


The 49ers played in Kezar Stadium right there in Golden Gate Park not far from the Haight. I’d go to games with my dad and his friend who was a Berkeley cop (a very straight-laced, conservative racist one). We’d walk through the Haight, stopping at a bar in a bowling alley, then be in a whole other world among football fans at the stadium. Culture shocks. Plural.


Anyway, that was San Francisco in the Sixties. The city still has its charms, is still beautiful, but….


Off boarded at the last stop. Short walk from there to the Pacific Ocean. Rarity, I could see blue sky at the ocean in San Francisco. Almost never happens. Wasn’t warm by any stretch but pleasant enough. I’d been depressed but the negative ions of the ocean took a big bite out of that. Stood at water’s edge for a good spell. Was that the skyline of Tokyo I saw in the distance? Probably not, but I could see a ways. Went for a stroll along the tip of the tide careful to stay dry.


Dogs love the beach. So much to smell. So much room to run. Digging always an option. Yeah, a lot of happy dogs and contented dog owners. Some people fishing. Seems an odd place for it what with the waves and the tides and all but they’re there often so much be catching something. It is an ocean after all.


Was confused what I was supposed to be thinking about. Anything? Nothing? Should I just be in a meditative state? Clear the mind? I did notice my depression lifted.


Took photos. It’s de rigueur on such excursions. 


Always people about at Ocean Beach. But never a lot except the one time I went there during a heat wave. That’s the one time I saw people swimming. I did a bit of wading myself that day.


Finally said adieu to the beach and made my way to a place called the Fish Hook Co. Went there last visit to the Ocean. Ordered the fish and chips, haven’t had any since UK trip in May. Also bought an NA beer I’d never tried before. Beer and meal were excellent. The only seating was outdoors and initially the sun was in my face. I’d rather not eat with the sun beating down on me but I was saved by some clouds that rolled in and provided shade.


Crossed the street where there was a combo cafe and bookstore. They were heavy on the knickknacks and light on the books. I have more at home. Browsing took up less than a couple of minutes. As in one.


Walked back to catch the J. There was a man lying face down on the sidewalk. A passed out drunk? Homeless man sleeping? Dead? Sadly we’re accustomed to seeing unconscious people laying on our streets. It’s always someone else’s department. Guilty.


Uneventful ride home which is what you want on public transportation. On a BART car a man and a boy decided to put on a concert then pass the hat. I do not like this. When I listen to music I want it to be my choice, not inflicted on me. Headphones were a savior.


Walked home satisfied that I’d had nice outing. Because I had.

04 August 2025

Please Rate and Review This Blog Post


Sometimes I stop at the Coffee Hut before work and get a decaf latte. There are two gents who work there one of whom I usually chat with because we support the same British football team. Here’s the amazing part: there is no follow-up. I do not get an email later in the day asking me to review my experience. What a relief.

Go to the dentist for a teeth cleaning, you can expect to ask them for a review.


Buy a dress shirt online. Wait for it, that request for a review is coming. 


Cardiologist.


Sock purchase.


Please rate your experience and write a review.


Enough already.


Worse yet, many businesses will badger you. You don’t rate and review immediately, they follow-up. And follow-up.


Why the desperation? It feels creepy. 


Please tell me what you think of me. Assign me a number between one and five. Recommend us. We love you. Don’t you love us?


And if you do review and/or rate they sometimes get personal. How old are you? What’s your ethnicity? What’s your education level? When did you lose your virginity? Do you smoke pot? Ever been to Saskatoon?


Yeah I know, it’s for the marketing department. Well, they can bugger off.


Here’s when and how and what you can get something out of me. Your product or service was absolutely fantastic, far beyond what I expected. You deserve a pat on the back. Well done, lads. 


Or. Your product or service was terrible. A total rip off wasting my time and money. Others need be warmed and I need to vent.


Or. All you want is a quick rating one through five and that’s it. Happy to oblige. Now go away.


All the humanity has been stripped from customer service. It’s all about getting ratings and recommendations. Building and solidifying the brand. I learned about this working for a language school that was totally corporate. We’d have in-services that couldn’t have been less about teaching people English and were all about getting good ratings so there’d be more customers (i.e. students). I had a natural distrust of corporate culture and easily developed a real hatred for it. It’s a place where the suits who spend their time in offices staring at their computer or in meetings or flying from one big city to another or looking at the raw data or vying for that opening one rung up or going to seminars or hearing motivational speeches or eating expensive meals that are on the corporate dime or glad-handing or sucking up or being sucked up to, those jerks make well into six figures with bonuses, while the people doing the real work need to tutor on the side to make ends meet.


There was one bigwig who regularly popped by. It was nice in one respect because he would “buy” us lunch for which everyone would dutifully thank him, though come on, everyone knew he didn’t personally spend a dime it came out of an account set aside to mollify the peons. He was that super friendly type who learned all our names and something about us that he could refer to next time. Always asked me about my commute. I once suggested him  that teachers who showed their loyalty by staying another year get a token bump in pay, even just one per cent. An incentive for more teachers to stick around. He acted liked I’d just suggested doubling everyone’s salary. Like I was so dumb and naive and I should leave such big decisions to the highly paid brass. Fuck that guy and all those higher-ups who were looking to buy a second home or a yacht or new mistress.


Am I bitter? Not really, there’s no time for that. I’ve got a lot of positivity surrounding me that I need to enjoy in my remaining years. I can’t dwell on the evils of capitalism although I wish I could do something to take it down. If there is a revolution be sure to rate and review.

30 July 2025

Let the Celebrations Begin, Trivia Fun is Back!!!

Claude Monet, noted for his impressions

I'm deeply honored to introduce another edition of Trivia Fun. I know exactly what you're thinking: it's about damn time! Yes, it's been nearly two years (October '23) since this beloved feature last appeared. As you may recall all trivia fun "facts" have been verified by the International Bureau of Trivia headquartered in Digby, Nova Scotia. Enjoy!

In Europe instead of going the extra mile, workers go the extra kilometer.


Reportedly Eva Braun was upset about having to commit suicide because, she claimed, her and Adolph were finally making real progress in couples therapy.


Famed French impressionist Claude Monet reportedly did a spot on Johny Wayne.


After the dissolution of the Ask Jeeves search engine, a despondent Jeeves committed suicide.


Not many people know that AA Milne had a smaller brother called AAA Milne


The Dewey Decimal System was named for William F. Decimal of Hershey, Pennsylvania. 


Sacagawea was chosen to help Lewis and Clark explore the Louisiana Territory because she was the only one in her tribe who’d downloaded google maps.


According to military historians, dozens of U.S. soldiers missed the D-Day invasion because they had forgotten their passports.


Most theologians say that in college Jesus was a religious studies major.


In five states it is illegal to talk to a pelican.


There is credible evidence that Italian dictator Benito Mussolini survived World War II and opened a small pizzeria in Yonkers.


In a potential cost-saving measure the Federal Bureau of Mathematics is thinking of eliminating the number 27.


Julius Caesar’s brother Rolf is believed to be the first person to say: “heads I win, tails you lose.”


Actors Jon Hamm and Kevin Bacon are believed to be kosher.


Oddly, famed physicist Albert Einstein found sudokus too difficult but loved to do the daily jumble.


Recently many giraffes have taken to wearing scarves.


Among cannibals expensive purchases can literally cost an arm and a leg.


Under federal law it is a felony to steal someone’s thunder unless you immediately return it.


Dickens’ A Tale of Two Cities was originally set in London, Paris and Schenectady and called A Tale of Three Cities.


While there has been a recent decline in psychic advisors there has been a concurrent rise in the number of psychotic advisors.  

26 July 2025

Golden Bear Football and I, It's Just Not the Same, a Lament

Cal's 1920 team that bestrode college football like a Colossus

Every year on the first weekend of June I start the countdown to Cal’s first home game. For the next ninety or so days I’m aware of exactly how many days it is until my beloved Golden Bears take the field. I’ve been doing this for decades. But this year as we near the end of July not only have I not been counting down, I’ve no idea how many days till kick off. Instead of tingling with excitement for the forthcoming season I'm numb. Some things in your life transition from being hobbies, interests or passions into part of your identity. Golden Bear football has long been part of who I am, how I define myself and how I see the world. Yet as what has always been a magical time of the year approaches I'm indifferent. Clearly this calls for introspection: what’s going on with me and my love of Cal football?

I’ve been a fan of the University of California Golden Bears football team since I was eight-years-old. I fell madly and deeply in love with a team that was — to put it charitably — subpar. Mediocrity would have been an improvement. Clearly I was no glory hunter, no band wagons for me. I was thrilled by the mere sight of the blue and gold uniforms. The gorgeous setting of classic Memorial Stadium nestled in Strawberry Canyon with views of the Golden Gate were awesome to my young eyes. I delighted to the jaunty sounds of the marching band and their pep songs. The mascot Oski became my spirit guide. An afternoon at a Bear game, whether warm and sunny, or shrouded in fog, seemed the best possible way to spend a Saturday. And if the Bears won there was nothing better. On those rare occasions when they actually beat a superior opponent I was in heaven.


My love of Cal football did not diminish one iota in my teen years, if anything it intensified in my twenties and continued apace as I entered middle age and parenthood. Through thin and thinner I’ve stuck with my team. It’s part of my DNA.


I yearn for them to have a great season. I accept it when they don’t. There’s always next year and I’m always optimistic as the new season rolls around. Until now.


This season promises to bring more heartache. The Bears enter the 2025 campaign with a head coach who is in his ninth year at the helm. His overall record is a losing one, he’s never had a winning year in conference play and his last winning season was in 2019. Only at Cal would a coach with such an abysmal record be given the reigns for a ninth time. It’s not that just that there’s little promise for the year ahead its the accumulation of all the misery. It’s been sixteen seasons since the team won more than seven regular season games (there have been but four wining teams in that span, all going an uninspiring 7-5.) More than that it’s the many decades of poor or mediocre play. It’s our brand.


I love the Bears like a child. Unconditionally. But it gets taxing when all they consistently fail at the last hurdle, or more likely, one of the earlier hurdles.


In my lifetime there have even been a few brief periods when the Bears fielded good teams. The seventies saw some success including a co-conference champion, there were three very good teams in the early nineties and there was an eight year run of winning seasons at the beginning of this century (2002-2009). 


Yes, California has fielded some good teams, had some remarkable players who have gone on to storied professional careers and there have been memorable victories. Chief among those the incredible finish to the 1982 Big Game versus arch rival, Stanfurd which, of course, I witnessed and is a seminal moment in my life. 


Over the years I’ve become steeped in Cal football history reading and studying everything about it. For every season from the permanent switch to football in 1915 onwards I can tell you off the top of my head whether the Bears had a winning season, if they won the Big Game and who the head coach was. From 1960 on I can tell you who the starting quarterback was. 

 

California was a football powerhouse in the early 1920s. Those Wonder Teams had five consecutive unbeaten season. There was more glory to come highlighted by the Thunder Teams of the late 1930s which included a 1937 squad that went undefeated and earned a number two ranking (though they deserved to be national champs). From 1947 through 1952 the Golden Bears had another great run which featured three teams that went undefeated in the regular season before losing in the Rose Bowl (1948-1950). 


Since then it’s been bleak.


The Bears' last Rose Bowl victory in 1938
I can sum it up thusly: from 1915-1952 California had 26 winning seasons, eight losing seasons and three seasons in which they finished at .500. In the subsequent 72 years the Bears have had 24 winning seasons, 39 losing seasons and nine in which they were .500. You may have noticed that Cal had two more winning seasons in their first 38 years than they did in the following 72. That’s Cal football.

Still I show up. I cheer. I believe. This season will be different. Everything will come together. That 3-0 start against weaker opponents was not illusory, we’re on our way…..Then reality hits. A heartbreaking loss, an injury to a key player, victims of a stunning upset, another injury to a key player, a game effort in a tough loss to a good team, another couple of injuries to key players. The team is 3-3 and you hope the slide doesn’t continue. 


As a fan I am undaunted, resilient after decades of suffering. Nothing has deterred me from renewing my season tickets and showing up for every home game. (I’ve only missed one since 1989 and two since 1982). I’m not only always there I’m always enthusiastic. But that enthusiasm is waning. And while it may have a little to do with the Bears’ history of desultory performances one must also factor in the fact that college football is badly broken and may have to implode before things get better.


The game day experience has been ruined by endless and exhaustingly long commercial breaks. In my youth games weren’t televised and moved right along ending in under two and half hours. Later most games were on TV but games were not stopped for commercials every time someone stubbed a toe. Today games can near the four-hour mark. Adding to this many games are at night, stretching past 11:00. (Money, money, money, the true kings of college football.) Ads and promotions are prominent on the scoreboard and the announcements during breaks in the action. Our senses are bombarded by loud music irrelevant to the traditional game day experience. The band plays less. A hype man is hired (for college football? Are they nuts?). The band, the rally committee and even Oski are alienated. Oh yes, and the fans too.


Many of college football’s traditional rivalries are gone, vanished. Geographically sane conferences are no more. The Bears spent years in the Pacific 8 conference with eight teams located in states on the Pacific Coast. Later the conference expanded to ten teams as two schools from Arizona were added. Then twenty years later two more teams joined (Utah and Colorado) and a conference title game was added. The two expansions were not ideal but tolerable but now the conference has been torn asunder and last year Cal and Stanfurd were forced to join the Atlantic Coast Conference. That’s right, Memorial Stadium which literally boasts a view of the Pacific Ocean is in conference with teams from up and down the eastern seaboard (and one from Texas). Instead of a tidy eight, ten or twelve team conference the ACC, like the other major conferences, fields 17 teams for football. Insanity.


While the Bears still play Stanfurd, their other rivals USC and UCLA are off the schedule. 


As a consequence of all this madness this season the Bears’ six-team home schedule features zero teams that have been to Berkeley more than twice. It’s an abomination.


And who are these Bears that will be taking the field? It’s a given that at the end of every season you bid farewell to the team’s seniors, roughly a quarter of the squad. A few other players leave too for various reasons but many of the names you’ve become familiar with are back. You get to “know” players over the course of three or four years on the team. No more.


With the transfer portal players come and go at an astonishing rate. The hero of last year’s Big Game, quarterback Fernando Mendoza who famously said, “Go Bears forever!” transferred. Wide receiver Jonathan Brady who caught the winning touchdown pass in that contest is also gone. Cal’s one-two punch at running back, Jaydn Ott and Javian Thomas have departed. The other stellar offensive star, tight end Jack Endries, gone.


They’ve all been replaced but whether the new Bears are equal to the task or not is unknown. 


College football has further eviscerated its traditions by implementing a post-season season playoff to determine the national championship. Up until the late 1990s college football’s season-ending number one ranking was determined by two sets of voters: sportswriters and coaches. The problem was that with two polls you often had two champions. Sometimes there was a third team that many people thought deserved the mythical crown. A lot of fans demanded the champ be determined on the field. For others of us it was fun to enter the off season with the ongoing debate of who the best team had been. Arguments, discussions and speculation would often dominate the coming months. It was fun.


But enough was enough, it was finally determined that the top two teams should meet on the gridiron to determine a true champion. (Of course this extra contest would make a lot of money.) Fair enough, I thought, it was inevitable. So for about fifteen years years the two top ranked team would meet in a championship after all the other bowl games were played. Neat and tidy.


The culmination of Cals' greatest football moment
But a new clamor was soon heard. What about that number three team and for that matter number four? There’s often a strong argument to be made for one if not both of them to be included in the mix. (Plus think of the additional money to be made by TWO extra games, the national semi-finals.) So in 2015 the college football season culminated with two semi-finals along with the title tilt. It seemed excessive to me but in sports we’d seen sillier things. The flaw in the system was evidenced a few years ago when the season ended with two powerhouse unbeaten teams (Georgia and Michigan). One lost its semi-final and the other came within a missed field goal of losing. We very nearly had two teams that hadn’t even won their conference playing for the championship.


But last year college football added the number five team to the post season mix. And the number six. And seven. And eight, nine, ten, eleven and twelve. The curious thing is that I have no recollection of anyone claiming that number seven ranked team deserved a title shot let alone the numbers eight, nine, ten, eleven or twelve. It is inevitable that the playoff will be expanded to sixteen teams because of course why exclude the thirteenth best team in the country from a shot at glory? Or the fourteenth, fifteenth, or sixteenth. The idea of finding out who is truly number one in college football is gone.  No, all those extra games, area all about that extra money.


College football = big bucks.


One of the consequences of the playoff system — and this started when there was just two teams involved — is the destruction of college football bowl games. More tradition by the wayside. The excitement of those New Year’s Day bowl games is gone with the wind — I mean, money.


It can be argued that bowl games had started becoming meaningless when teams that finished with as many losses as wins were deemed eligible to play. The last two years California has finished at 6-6 and still gone bowling (in both cases adding a seventh loss to the ledger). Today there are more bowls than ever and they have less meaning and less tradition. More and more players opt out of the bowl games and a lot have already left their teams to enter the transfer portal. Ho hum. But the games make money, so there’s that.


College football used to be my favorite sport. I loved the pomp and pageantry and the sense of connection one got to the past. Being in an old stadium, watching two teams meet on the field as they had been doing since the late 1800s, hearing the band play the same songs they had for decades, there was a warm, happy nostalgia to it all. A feeling that while the world was dangerous and unknowable some things stayed the same and could be experienced in new forms again and again. Because within all the tradition there was also the unpredictable. Maybe a100 yard interception return, or a goal line stand, perhaps an unlikely hero, a miracle comeback, a crushing tackle, or even a five lateral kick off return. While those elements remain on the field so much surrounding it has been sullied. Greed has won the day. 


I’m glad that players are being remunerated for their efforts. I’m happy that they have the freedom to move. I suppose it’s crazy of me to expect that college football could ever go back to the way it was. In a capitalist society the lure of still more money will continue to be the tail that wags the dog. TV is king and the rest of us are pawns.


On September 6 California opens its home slate by hosting Texas Southern. I’ll be there. I’ll be excited to see the Bears in action. I’ll be making noise. I’ll be cheering and cursing and joining in yells. I know this. What I don’t know is why — I just looked it up — 42 days out, I’m not excited about it.


Perhaps there’s a clue in what I just wrote.