My book is out! You can find Smart Baseball absolutely everywhere – online, in bookstores, and even in some libraries. HarperCollins has links to various online vendors, but if you prefer to walk into a bookstore like it’s 1947 and buy the book directly, well, I like to do that too. I know thousands of you have already bought it, so my thanks to all of you.
I went to MLB Network on Friday and appeared on MLB Now, the show hosted by my friend and former ESPN colleague Brian Kenny. You can watch our discussion of the book. I talked to SI’s Richard Deitsch about baseball on TV and about not sticking to sports on social media. I also appeared on my good friend Will Leitch’s podcast to talk about the book and mock his hatred of Fletch.
I also discussed the book on over 50 radio shows this week; highlights included a long chat with WNYC’s Leonard Lopate, talking to Connell McShane on the Don Imus show, appearing on the Felske Files podcast, appearing on the Fantasy Focus Baseball podcast (with Karabell! But no bias cat), talking to WBAL’s Brett Hollander, and talking to WABC’s Sid Rosenberg.
I do have some upcoming appearances as well: May 8th at Pitch Talks Philadelphia, May 16th at The Georgia Center for the Book (in Decatur), and May 18th at Moon Palace Books in Minneapolis. There are further readings/events scheduled in Toronto, Miami, and Brooklyn for June and July.
My other writing from the past week included ranking the top 50 prospects for this year’s draft for ESPN Insiders, a list I’ll eventually expand to 100. It wasn’t easy getting to 50, though. For Paste I ran through the best new boardgames of 2017, including a few titles from the tail end of last year.
OK, finally, let’s get to some links:
- Longread of the week: Nathan Fenno of the LA Times looks at how Rays prospect Brandon Martin went from first-rounder to accused murderer. Martin was a legit prospect, briefly, but cocaine use and what sounds like undiagnosed mental illness led him to murder three people, including his own father.
- Another great longread: Buzzfeed looks at the twice-convicted fraudster who has access to Trump via Mar-a-Lago because the con artist’s wife is the guest reception manager there.
- The Senate Intelligence Committee investigation into Russian interference in our 2016 election is an understaffed, underequipped joke.
- I’ll be watching the STARZ adaptation of American Gods tonight; in advance of that, Pacific Standard interviewed author Neil Gaiman about the series and its unexpected political relevance.
- SNL insiders consider Kenan Thompson, now in his 14th year on the show, its most important cast member. I thought the quotes from castmates, writers, and producers were interesting given Thompson’s limited profile beyond the show.
- A woman who briefly worked for Fyre Festival says it was always going to be a disaster.
- Scientists claim to have created a fluid with “negative mass.” What I, a non-scientist, couldn’t grasp here is whether they actually did that, or created a supercooled fluid that behaved the way we would expect a fluid with negative mass to behave. Those aren’t the same thing, I think.
- Mina Caputo, the longtime lead singer of metal band Life of Agony (with some interruptions), discussed coming out as transgender in the metal community with Rolling Stone.
- I know you’re shocked, but our dear leader didn’t think through that whole border wall plan, since the land on which it would be built can’t support it.
- Mother Jones proposes an alternate, “ecotopia” wall zone between the countries, which is really a rather witty troll job.
- Under President Turnip’s tax plan, most of us would be better off becoming LLCs rather than individuals. The plan to cut the tax rate on corporations would allow the highest earners to register (and work) as LLCs and drop their marginal rate from 39% to 15%. Also, the real money quote: “After Kansas eliminated its state tax on pass-through income, the number of people taking advantage of the exemption soared, leading to hundreds of millions of dollars in lost revenue for state coffers.” Kansas is run by idiots, which doesn’t say much for the people who voted them into office.
- North Carolina Republicans, not satisfied with blocking legal protections for LGBT residents, have pushed through multiple bills aimed at suppressing the vote. If you live there, and any of your state reps are Republicans, you should be calling them daily.
- Meanwhile, in Virginia, Governor Terry McAuliffe has restored the voting rights of over 150,000 felons – rights they would never have lost in many other states.
- The governor of Kentucky won’t say who owns the house where he lives, a property that was sold in March for a price below its assessed value. The lack of disclosure mirrors the current federal Administration’s refusal to reveal potential conflicts of interest.
- I won’t even pretend I followed this entire argument/spat over the “hot hand” theory in sports, although I think the 49/99 argument therein is merely a fancier application of the gambler’s fallacy. (The argument goes, if we expect a coin to turn up heads on 50 out of 100 flips, and the first flip is heads, then the expectation for the remaining 99 flips should be 49, not 49.5. I don’t agree with this, but given the behavior of some of this spat’s participants, I’m staying right here in my safe space.)
- My alma mater’s Harvard Business Review has a strange piece arguing everyone should have at least two careers. On the one hand, yes, you can build and use your network to find untapped applications for your skills or even develop new ones. On the other hand, how many people have this kind of free time?
- If you’ve ever used the site or app unroll.me, stop immediately because they’re selling your private data to Uber.
- PBS Frontline aired a new documentary on what fish you should eat if you care about both your health and eating sustainable species. It’s not an easy question, and as the author and star of the documentary says, we need to find an answer if we expect to feed the planet.
- The UN named Saudi Arabia, a country where women can’t drive and have fewer civil rights than a field mouse, the chair of its Women’s Rights Commission.
- This is from 2013, but I stumbled across it last week: Allen Barra, who has also written quite a bit about baseball, wrote a piece in The Atlantic in praise of the novel At Swim-Two-Birds, one of my favorite novels ever.
- Fortune profiles a startup that uses a spray made from discarded food that claims to keep fresh produce from spoiling, at least long enough to get it to distant markets. I would think that, if it works, this could also allow farmers in areas with less access to modern transportation to sell to export markets.
- This tweet from a climate researcher went viral this past week:
Why I cancelled my @nytimes subscription. @BretStephensNYT pic.twitter.com/A3lFZNJdhY
— Stefan Rahmstorf (@rahmstorf) April 27, 2017
I am a NY Times digital subscriber, but I can’t say I see any value in including a science-denier in the name of “balance.” The Washington Post‘s Erik Wemple is similarly unimpressed.
very trivial preference – could you have links to the non-mobile versions of the sites and let the site redirect me to the mobile site if it detects I’m on a phone? The mobile versions of the NYT and Daily Kos sites are a little less pleasant, and obviously I can change the URL but if you do it the other way it’ll happen magically.
It’s not deliberate – I save links as I go during the week, using the Pocket app, so often I’m saving the mobile link without realizing it. I do prefer the desktop versions myself.
Well, I’m not sure what you expect from the Harvard Business Review. It’s not exactly designed to consider the needs of normal people.
I read the article and thought they were just saying “find a hobby and eventually try to monetize on it”. My wife did this 10 years ago. She had her regular 9-5, but decided to start a food blog and taught cooking classes as she was interested in food. Eventually, this lead to her becoming a chef full time for a short while. She had our son and then realized the hours of a chef don’t match up too well to having kids, so she went back to her old 9-5. She has kept her food blog and still teaches culinary classes once a month. So if you’re a software developer and you are interested in landscape design, find like minded people on the internet or at garden centers. Once you get some knowledge, maybe start a blog or Instagram account. Maybe one day, you decide to design your own yard and if others like it, they ask you to help them design their yard. In any case, you expand your network and your skill-set.
Anchovies, FTW
Hmmm…that HBR article read like “hey rich people who don’t have kids, work all the time!”. I especially liked the part where we are supposed to ignore process questions, when process>outcomes is so important in the rest of the HBR world. That part almost ruined the whole article for me.
Now, that said, clearly Keith is doing this. He is writing about games for money. I wonder how many non-famous people, making 40K a year, can afford to ” work for free” like the author of the article, and still raise their kids? I read all the time that writing for free (here, Fangraphs, Craig Calcaterra) is bad for you and for all the other writers. Sure, you can monetize something you are interested in. But is it really realistic for everyone to give away their talent? I know I’ve thought about pitching articles for octo.co. I could write off my trips to breweries and get paid! That would be cool. And, it is in the spirit of the article. But, again, how many people are good writers, and like beer, and have the time and money to do that work?
Maybe I’m off. But, ime, most of the people I know spend their nights driving their 2-4 children to sports, church, scouts, music, dance, etc, and don’t have time to donate their time for no compensation to get their feet wet. It reminds me very much of Keith’s criticisms of baseball using internships….
Now, that said, clearly Keith is doing this. He is writing about games for money.
Correct. And I enjoy it. But it’s not close to a second career, in this guy’s phrasing. It’s a fun sideline that pays for itself and not much more. (I have no complaints about this, BTW. I think Paste treats me just fine.)
I hope you didn’t take that negatively! I love Paste and your work there. I was just using you as a convenient example.
Not at all! I just wanted to be clear with readers who might wonder if my other writing was another “career” the way that author meant it.
Keith – Here’s a link to a personal and moving story about what bullets do to bodies. Tells the story thru a woman who has spent 30 years as a trauma surgeon in Philly – chair of Temple’s Dept. of Surgery – and what she’s done and doing to make things a tiny bit better. You may find it worthy of highlighting in a future Stick to baseball.
http://highline.huffingtonpost.com/articles/en/gun-violence/
PS: Pre-ordered and have now received the book! Yes!