Stick to baseball, 5/24/25.

My first Big Board, ranking the top 100 prospects for this year’s draft, is now up for subscribers to The Athletic; I held a Q&A on Thursday to take questions about it and other prospects. I also posted a minor-league scouting notebook from my recent looks at Andrew Painter, George Lombard, Jr., Jhostynxon “The Password” Garcia, Mikey Romero, and others.

Over at Paste, I reviewed the game Diatoms, which has some incredible art and high-quality components, and almost plays too quickly – I wanted a few more rounds to keep building patterns.

I’ve now sent out two issues of my free email newsletter in the last two weeks, which I think counts as a streak.

And now, the links…

  • Longreads first: The best thing I’ve read this month is this San Francisco Chronicle story by their food critic, MacKenzie Chung Fegan, about her experience eating at The French Laundry and how chef-owner Thomas Keller treated her. It is nuanced, thoughtful, and ultimately allows the reader to draw their own conclusions.
  • Matthew Cherry won an Academy Award for his short film Hair Love, which then turned into a book and an animated series on HBO Max. He’s now working on a new short film, an animated musical project called Time Signature, and has a Kickstarter up for it.
  • My editor at Paste, Garrett Martin, reviewed a new video game called Despelote that is about sports but not specifically a sports video game. It sounds fascinating.
  • Two new boardgame Kickstarters this week: Tangerine Games has one for Sauros, a dinosaur-themed trick-taking and tile-laying game.
  • Board & Dice, which specializes in heavy Eurogames, has one for a new edition of Trismegistus, which is very highly rated on BGG but also has a game weight rating of 4.18/5.

Comments

  1. I have had many cats in my life and it seems all of them are at least somewhat bonkers, regardless of coloring. (And adorable and endlessly entertaining.) Thanks for the interesting read; I’ve always found the genetics around cat coloring fascinating.

  2. He killed them because he thought they were Jews. He had no idea they were embassy employees. He went to a Jewish venue and a Jewish event for the purpose of killing Jews. And he did it, expressly, because killing Jews is deemed an acceptable form of “resistance.” Referring to them as embassy employees, while technically true, white washes the virulent antisemitism that has taken hold on the far left and the pro-Palestinian movement.

    • killing Jews is deemed an acceptable form of “resistance.”

      Bullshit. Citation needed, desperately.

    • Brian in NoVA

      Almost no one thinks killing Jews is an appropriate response to what’s happening in Palestine. You can easily be pro-Palestine and think what happened in DC was awful. It’s not complicated. Just like I can be appalled by what happened on October 7 and still think the Israeli response has been awful to the point where I think Bibi deserves to be tried at the Hague. There’s a lot of gray area here.

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