Stick to baseball, 12/17/21.

My big item this week was my annual ranking of the top board games of the year for Paste, which runs 15 titles deep (plus a bonus for the best reissue). My music rankings will go up here next week, and I’ll have a PAX Unplugged recap at Paste next week too.

Nothing new at the Athletic from me, as I work on prospect rankings and there are no transactions to cover. I’ll do a chat next week, though, even if it’s mostly non-baseball stuff.

On The Keith Law Show, I spoke with Nik Sharma, author of the great cookbooks Season and The Flavor Equation, about those books, underused ingredients, and his unusual career arc. You can subscribe and listen on iTunes and Spotify.

I will also send out another edition of my free email newsletter this week, although I have a feeling with baking plans and the kids home I am already setting myself up for failure. And one last time, here’s another reminder that I have two books out, The Inside Game and Smart Baseball, that would make great gifts for the readers (especially baseball fans) on your lists.

And now, the links…

Comments

  1. Keith, did you see the chef from Bros. Lecce’s response to the blog post. It was probably just as amazing.

  2. I keep trying to figure out what is the point of continuing to be one country… we clearly aren’t, and so many of your recent articles in these weekly roundups show that there’s not even a path forward, anymore.

    • The problem is the fault lines aren’t geographical anymore, at least not by state. Joe Biden got at least 45% of the vote in 29 states (plus Iowa at 44.89%), including the big red ones that always talk of seceding, Texas and Florida. Donald Trump hit that mark in 33 states and just missed in Minnesota, owner of the longest run of voting for the Dem nominee for president this side of DC. So how are you going to carve the country up?

  3. Each party hosts a constitutional convention and drafts a new constitution. The constitutions are released publicly, to 60 days of debate. Then, every person over the age of 12* gets to vote. On a smallest political unit scale, majority wins. Then there is 1 year* of equivalent transfer between communities based on how the community votes. E. G. if you own a 3 bedroom 2 bathroom 1600 sq ft house on 0.5 acres, you can transfer with someone else with equivalent numerical values in a community that voted differently than yours, with documentation that you voted in the manner of the community you are moving to.

  4. AJ in Pasadena

    Realistically, we are not going to be able to divide the country in two (or any other number). That didn’t work very well in 1861 and it’s even less doable now. We’ve either got to make the democracy work or we lose it–I think the choice is that simple. We can disagree about the best path forward, but for me it involves three things above all else: getting the virus under control (probably at best as a permanent nuisance illness); passing some infrastructure, climate change, and maybe immigration legislation, stuff that gives Biden some wins going into the 2022 midterms; and hoping Trump and Trumpism (while unlikely to vanish) can be made to recede at least. More Liz Cheneys (can’t believe I’m saying that) and fewer Josh Hawleys would greatly help–a Republican party returning to some version of its pre-trumpian self. I think if we get the first and second of these things, the third may follow. Otherwise, we’re pretty much doomed. The country is not more divided now than it was in 1860 or 1788. The worry I have is that there seem to be no Adamses, Jeffersons, or Lincolns on the national scene today.

  5. The worst part about Robert Kennedy is he’s married to Cheryl Hines. I love Curb Your Enthusiasm & every time I see her I’m disappointed she’s married to such an asshole in real life. I know she’s her own person & shouldn’t get the “Scarlet AV” , but, she has to know what he espouses or maybe even tacitly agree, right?

    OK, this is tongue in cheek, but, it does bug me.