How to Write about Baseball Cards
Step One: Select a card. This step may be done intentionally or at random. If you have sorted your cards into rubber-band-bound teams, this may somewhat inhibit your attempt to be random, especially if you have sorted each team by year and also have a general sense of which teams are thick bundles and which are thin. Still, it may be possible to select a card that you did not anticipate selecting, such as the Gene Pentz card shown at left. How could you ever have anticipated selecting Gene Pentz?
Step Two: Try and fail to produce brilliant witticisms at the expense of the fellow pictured on the card. This was done time and again by the authors of The Great American Baseball Card Flipping, Trading, and Bubble Gum Book, the equivalent of the Collected Works of Shakespeare for the baseball card writing genre. Those gentlemen could come up with something hilarious to say about Gene Pentz. You are not them. Almost all your sentences veer toward pretension, and by you I mean me, not you, so feel free to disregard this step, or more specifically to disregard the "and fail" part.
Step Three: Google Gene Pentz. Find out things like that he threw a lot of wild pitches and walked a lot of guys and once even threw a strike while attempting to intentionally walk a guy.
Step Four: Carry around the card in your wallet, go to work, come home, go to work, come home, etc., go out to a nearby bar on Friday, have a few beers, order a cheeseburger, while waiting for a cheeseburger start to go on a rant about this editor guy who showed some interest in a book idea but then stopped returning your politely seldom and unobtrusive email inquiries, build the rant into an unhinged self-pitying screed about the bloodsucking nature of every single editor and agent in the universe and beyond that, fuck it, everyone in the universe, the whole globe one giant vicious knife fight and all you’ve got is a plastic spork, then when the food comes become enraged about how slow the ketchup comes out of the glass bottle and about glass ketchup bottles in general—“the plastic squeeze bottle solved this fucking problem!”—until you are so worked up you feel you are moments away from smashing the ketchup bottle against the wall, then willfully ignore the attempts by your wife to calm you down, instead picking a fight with her, you complete asshole, then eat your stupid cheeseburger and fries in frosty post-fight silence.
Step Five: Consider attempting a whole “He looks like Thurman Munson” thing. Abandon it.
Step Six: Consider attempting a whole “He kind of looks like my brother’s JV basketball coach, who my brother saw years after high school, both of them driving delivery trucks, neither in the mood for conversation, nothing more passing between them than a couple grunts of delivery truck guy recognition” thing. Abandon it.
Step Seven: Go to work, come home, go to work, etc.
Step Eight: Go off on a whole pretentious tangent about how great it is to discover the card of a player that, even though these are your cards, you did not know existed. How wide is the world if it includes Gene Pentz! The fact that not only was there a Gene Pentz, but also that he played major league baseball, seems at such a far edge of the spectrum of the possible as to be impossible, so in a way his grizzled mug staring back at you from somewhere inside the chain link cage they put him in to guard the rest of the team from his complete inability to control the path of his pitches is evidence that the impossible, or near impossible, is possible. That kind of thing. Abandon it.
Step Nine: Look for some other card to write about. Become discouraged.
Step Ten: Why on earth would you want to write about baseball cards?
By the way, there are still some comments trickling in on the Reggie Smith post, the underrated question left behind in favor of the quest to recall guys who were released then went on to have good or even great careers.
Still, on the days it clicks, it's worthwhile. I mean, I turned a Brian Burres card into a story about my track coach trying to leave me behind in a hotel in New York.
That is very funny about pitching a strike while trying to walk a batter. I'm trying to imagine what the play by play on the radio would have sounded like.
4 : Among the countless treasures in that book is a description of a game they made up as kids called "Charlie Lau" in which they tried to outdo each other by coming up with the names of anonymous journeymen (keep in mind this was long before Charlie Lau's name became synonymous with "Weird-Swing-Preaching Hitting Guru") with names that somehow were redolent of obscurity and failure. The dolorous name "Charlie Lau" was the topper, so he was who the game was named after, but "Gene Petz" would have been a pretty decent play.
6 : Hi Tom! Abby's cousin gave me that very same advice a few months ago, and it didn't really speed things along enough, at least not for my impatient self, but I will try again, maybe preceding the effort with a prayer for patience. But really, why can't there be a mandate that all ketchup bottles be plastic!?! (Getting angry again...)
http://tinyurl.com/3cy3r9
Idea 1) Go someplace that doesn't provide ketchup in glass bottles, but some alternative, like a centralized pump, or that serves it with a blob of ketchup in a little paper cup-like thing.
Idea 2) Use a knife down the middle of the bottle-neck
Idea 3) Meditate, then eat your cheeseburger without putting any ketchup on it, imagining the taste of ketchup.
Idea 4) Order the burger with BBQ sauce and skip the ketchup.
Idea 5) Write your Congressman.
Idea 6) Write Mrs. John Kerry.
I've found that holding the bottle upside down by your side then giving it a few purposeful downward shakes (while your index finger covers the cap, just in case) usually does the trick...
http://tinyurl.com/2qu4w3
The ketchup bottle thing cracked me up because when I eat with my girlfriend anymore, she does the ketchup for me. Tom47 is right, you have to hit the "57" spot where the neck starts. I can't do it though for the life of me and then I too get frustrated. Next time I am in Chicago, we should have a beer. I was there this last weekend and the weather was beautiful. Nice "breaking the 4th wall" post dude, it was funny.
As for the above post, Step Eight doesn't seem so abandoned, nor so terribly pretentious.
You didn't see the long version.
16 , 18 : In my defense, the knife I used to gouge out my condiment was clean. The again, if you read Pete Jordan's great book Dishwasher you might argue that anything passed off as clean in a public eatery might be dirty as hell.
You left out one possible route of attack somewhere around Step Six-and-a-Half:
"The Astros' jerseys of the '70s were, like, really unhinged! And awesome! They were the bombiest! Like avocado-green fridges!"
Unfortunately, Gene's decision to wear what looks like his off-season fishing jacket to his photo shoot deprived you of that schtick too.
Gene's just damned hard to peg, you're right. Maybe he could have been the drummer for Poco or something.
I've always been a Hunt's guy, as opposed to a Heinz guy. Sorry Mrs. Kerry. But there's no distinguishing marker like the "57" to hit on the Hunt's bottle.
And does anyone out there ever use relish on their burger? I love a good pickle, but I've never learned to appreciate the jar of relish.
Kind of like you with fruit.
Reading most of these comments had made me retch-throated and uncomfortable.
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