Two new posts for Insiders this week, both on draft prospects I went to see: one on Ryan Weathers, Ryan Rolison, and Ethan Hankins; another on Kentucky’s Sean Hjelle and Tristan Pompey. All five are likely first rounders, although Hankins, coming back from a shoulder issue, could end up going to Vanderbilt if teams aren’t willing to pony up.
My latest board game review for Paste covers the dice-drafting game Sagrada, which is easy to learn but has very high replay value. Players choose dice from a common set, rolled each round, to fill out their personal boards resembling stained-glass windows. I’ve also been playing a ‘pre-alpha’ release of the Terraforming Mars app on Steam, and it looks fantastic.
Smart Baseball is now out in paperback! Buy a zillion copies for all your Linkedin contacts. You should also sign up for my free not-quite-weekly email newsletter, which has more personal essays and links to everything I’ve written.
And now, the links…
- Longreads first: Dayn Perry writes about the new White Sox ballpark that should have been but wasn’t, a tight stadium in Armour Park that would have preserved more of the neighborhood and allowed for more economic development. Instead, the city and state caved to team ownership, funding a monstrous stadium, forcibly removing hundreds of families from their homes, and failing to even charge the team rent for 18 years.
- The BBC has a story written by an American man who was a schoolteacher for 17 years despite being illiterate. He didn’t learn to read until he was 48, and how he got as far as he did is incredible.
- The Guardian‘s long read of the week looks at the ongoing debate over the minimum wage, which tends to be expressed solely in economic terms and often involves one side or the other rushing to claim victory based on a single study.
- Author Junot Diaz (The Brief and Wondrous Life of Oscar Wao) revealed in a first-person piece for the New Yorker that he was raped by a family friend when he was eight years old, never got therapy or any kind of help, and spent the next few decades dealing with the consequences.
- Also in the New Yorker, staff writer Adam Davidson looks at the Michael Cohen case, calling it the beginning of the end of the Trump presidency; I’m not so sanguine. The lawyerly folks at Popehat weighed in on what Monday’s raid on Cohen’s office implied.
- A professor of social psychology and decision-making writes in Scientific American that targeted stories and fake news likely affected just a small percentage of voters in the 2016 U.S. election, but that small number was also more than enough to swing the overall result. The author also looks at why those stories were effective.
- Adweek looks at the change in Facebook’s news feed is killing digital publishers. I’m still there with a public page for readers, but I get less traction there than on Twitter or via this site.
- Franklin Foer writes in Atlantic about our new era of fake videos – not just the ‘deepfakes’ of the porn world, but the new potential for fake news videos or videos of politicians ‘saying’ things they never said.
- Hamilton Nolan has an angry “guide” to how private equity firms are gutting companies for shareholder profits, which was in evidence recently at the Denver Post. A writer at the Boulder Daily Camera wrote an editorial about this very topic that the publisher refused to print, so he posted it on his own blog instead.
- The former Texas Deputy DA who rejected a recommendation to pursue charges against Trump University just landed a nomination to a federal judgeship. I’m sure that’s all a coincidence, though!
- The National Academy of Medicine is resisting efforts to expel a member who plagiarized and fabricated major parts of his C.V..
- Australian novelist Tim Winton argues toxic masculinity in adults leads to the raising of misogynist boys as the latter are discouraged from showing empathy or tenderness to meet a one-sided standard of macho behavior.
- The belief that people have different learning “styles,” usually categorized as visual or auditory, is not supported by any evidence. And folks have certainly tried.
- Antibiotic-resistant tuberculosis is on its way, and North Korea may be its incubator, exacerbated by cuts to global funding (including sanctions by our current Administration) that will include money to try to fight the disease. While looking more into this I found an article from February 2017 explaining how human encroachment on rain forests leads to the emergence of new viruses, profiling one researcher trying to identify new pathogens before they start killing humans.
- CMON Games announced the August 2018 (scheduled) release of a board game based on the Kick-Ass comic book series:
In 2018, @CMONGames will release Kick-Ass: The Board Game. Dudes on a map w/players managing social media, too. —WEM pic.twitter.com/vxOeKOfgsV
— BoardGameGeek (@BoardGameGeek) August 16, 2017
My college history professor wrote this book about that last year of Comiskey along with the machinations behind that new stadium. They couldn’t get their mind around the whole retro thing, so we got vanilla park. Camden Yards came along and everything changed. To be fair, over the years the park has become much more friendly, and even a little more intimate except up top down the lines.
https://www.amazon.com/Baseball-Palace-World-Last-Comiskey/dp/0925065455
That White Sox article was very interesting, especially since I don’t remember the Armour Square option (I do remember the suburb of Addison and even putting a ballpark in Elmhurst Quarry). While Reisndorf may have wanted a “suburban ballpark”, I also suspect that the residents of the politically connected Bridgeport (just north of the area) may have pushed Reinsdorf to that decision. Several mayors, including the Daley’s, have lived in Bridgeport and probably wanted Armour Square Park as a buffer to Fuller Park further south (Fuller Park is probably the poorest neighborhood in the city). This was especially true 30 years ago when the options were being evaluated.
I write a blog about New England craft beer and I have really noticed the Facebook change. Now Facebook is trying to get me to pay money to advertise to people who already follow the blog. I am glad I put way more effort into building a Twitter following. I am also glad the blog is just a hobby, I feel bad for the small businesses who were really hurt by this change.