I graduated college.
I got a new car.
Okay, so two things happened this last year. But next year will be better. It has to be.
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Sports, Politics, Humor, Religion, and Several Other Topics That I May Write About...
Are you noticing a trend here? I am more into cars than I’ve ever been. I’ve always been a bit of a nerd. I have never been much of a gear head or grease monkey. About the only thing I know how to do on a car is fill the gas tank when it reaches E. I’ve changed a tyre once in my life, and that was by necessity.
But something new has happened… well, not exactly new, it’s been around for ages, only I’ve just now discovered the greatness of it, and, much like Formula 1, I’m hooked.
It’s called Top Gear. Before we go any further, Robert, stop smirking, you knew this day would come. See, Robert over at Skewed has been a fan of Top Gear for longer than I’ve known him. And when I told him the other day that I was started to like the show, he actually groaned in dismay. Apparently (and I was unaware of this fact) the BBC produces Top Gear for the sole viewing pleasure of Robert Rennie.
But Top Gear is a beautiful show. The hosts are Jeremy Clarkson, Richard “The Fridge Magnet Hamster”
Once upon a time, not so long ago, in fact, it was probably about a month ago, I couldn’t tell you anything about a car engine. Then I spent most of last night talking to my dad about the Audi RS6 Estate Car, with a 5 litre V10 engine with twin turbochargers, clocking in at 572 horsepower and a top speed governed at 155 miles per hour, but ungoverned on the Autobahn the Audi test pilots have had it over 200mph.
Watching Clarkson fly around the track in a Ferrari Scuderia was a blast. Watching the The Stig do it, even better, because the Stig drives like a Thomas Kincaid painting, it looks better and better, no matter what light you put it in.
The boys of Top Gear have their own test track, their own tame driver (The Stig), and a seemingly endless revenue flow from the producers. Richard Hammond is the heartthrob, according to pretty much every female that watches the show. Jeremy Clarkson is the comic relief. And James May looks like he smokes a doobie before going out on stage every show.
One week the boys’ll be burning down a car wash (yes, they actually burned down a £1 million car wash), the next week they’ll take five supercars and race them against each other with only one gallon of petrol (we call that gas). One of the best moments was when they took on the challenge of proving that, in the 1970s, British Leyland actually did make a good car. All three failed in hilariously spectacular fashion.
I really enjoyed watching as they were each given 1000 quid and told to buy a used car that would serve as the new British police car. Jeremy Clarkson showed up with a Fiat Coupe, James May with a Lexus, and Richard Hammond in a salon… I mean, a Suzuki Vitara.
Clarkson put spike on his rear tyres, sticking out to puncture the tyres of a fleeing criminal, or to takes the legs off of pedestrians.
May’s moment of brilliance included putting paint guns along the back of his car to spray the windshield of a criminal. He forgot, unfortunately, about the windshield wipers.
It’s fun. It’s informative. My knowledge of cars has essentially doubled just from watching a few episodes. The “Star in a Reasonably Priced Car” bit is usually quite funny. The intros for the Stig get better each episode. Some say he’s had to give up binge drinking now that it’s up to one pound a litre. Some say that after making love he bites the head off his mate. He is… the Stig.
Top Gear just might be my new favorite show.
I really want to go to
I’m beginning to feel as though I have nothing left to give. My job search has been less that fruitless, my sanity is fraying in a very obscenely slow manner, my bank account is dwindling, and I’m realizing that there just aren’t enough smart people around me. I’m not being pushed anymore. I’m in the real world, and the mental competition is essentially over. At least in college I was being continually pushed by those around me to strive to do better. Not anymore.
In short, I need to be somewhere else.
Currently, my sights are set on Appalachian State, in beautiful, scenic,
I want to teach, preferably at the collegiate level, and I want to teach History. Yes, I graduated with a degree in English, so what? I minored in History and let’s face it, which sounds more fun: a) this a verb or b) so let’s talk about what cause World War II?
There’s only one problem. I have no money. I can’t find a job. It’s getting ridiculous. Over the last two weeks I’ve been to fifteen different places, and each place told me, rather resoundingly, that they’re not looking for help. I’ve even been to places that I was told was looking for help, only to be told by said place that they were currently overstaffed.
The problem continues to get worse. I’m down to 20 hours a week where I work. If you figure in car payments, car insurance payments, health insurance payments, and cell phone bills, along with the other various payouts you have to make to survive, well, I’m nearing the point of negative gain. If my math is right, I’ll run out of money sometime around January 24th.
And it will remain that way unless I can get a job, or at least find some other way to make money. Let’s see, you only need one kidney to live. You can make it through life with half a liver. I don’t use my left arm all that much. You can technically get by with only one eye. Hmmm… What do you think, angry baby?
Truth be told, I feel like I’m standing on the edge of a precipice. From this point on, there is no middle ground; the resolution of this problem will be epic. You got it! I’m poised for either epic win or epic fail. I’m either going to pass Timo Glock and regain P5 and the World Championship, or I’m going to set a bowl of corn flakes on fire. One way or the other, there will be a resolution.
So that’s where I stand. I have nothing left to give… except a kidney, half a liver, an eye and my left arm.
Well, I think I may have come up with a system that works, keeps the major bowls in place, granted without their conference affiliations, but they remain in place nonetheless.
In the NFL, each conference sends 6 teams to the playoffs. The top two teams, by record, get first round byes. Then the remaining 4 teams play each other, the two division winners getting home games.
The proposal for college is simple:
Take the 6 BCS conference champions and rank them 1-6 in the playoff format, using their current BCS ranking as their position in the playoff bracket. The top four conference champions receive first round byes, thereby making the regular season mean something. I don’t understand why people think that a playoff in college football would make the regular season meaningless. Is it meaningless in college basketball? What about the NFL? No? But in college it would be.
So the BCS conference winners get in. Then you take the top 6 teams in the BCS after the champions are taken out, and put them into the brackets. The teams with byes would play their first match in the Quarterfinals, at one of the four BCS Bowl sites. The first round games would be played at the home stadium of the highest ranked team in the match-up (ex. 10.
Let’s use the final BCS standings from the 2007 season as an example.
1. LSU
2. USC
3.
4.
5.
6.
7.
8.
9. Virginia Tech
10.
11.
12.
Conference Champions: LSU, USC,
Under my proposed playoff system, LSU, USC,
Bracket 1
1. LSU – bye
4.
12.
9.
Bracket 2
2. USC –bye
3.
11.
10.
After the first round, the Quarterfinal Games are set. I’m using a hypothetical here, so don’t get mad. Remember, these are the standing from last season.
Bracket 1
9.
5.
Bracket 2
2. USC vs. 11.
3.
These games would be played at the current BCS Bowl sites, as indicated. As the Quarterfinals were played, and the Semifinals determined, the Semifinal games would be played at neutral sites, as determined on a rotation basis.
Bracket 1
1. LSU vs. 4.
Bracket 2
2. USC vs. 7.
The National Championship Game would be played at one of the BCS Bowl sites, two weeks after the Quarterfinals. Under my system, and remember, it is my system, so I get to make the rules in this little example, Georgia would face LSU for the National Title.
And Georgia would win.
Now,
For some screaming Injustice time.
It's looking more and more like 2-loss Ohio State (10-2) is going to a BCS Bowl, but that 12-0 Boise State, ranked one spot ahead of Ohio State in the latest BCS Poll, will be lucky to get a berth in the Humanitarian Bowl, played at their own home field. It's just not right.
I need Academia.
I never thought I would say those words, but it rings more and more true everyday. I need to be in an Academic setting. It’s where I thrive. This real world stuff just isn’t cutting it.
I did learn a bit of good news, however. Appalachian State has a hope-giving device on their website. Appalachian State is very high on my list of Grad Schools. They have a good History Department, according to Dr. Jespersen, and that means a lot to me. So, back to this hope-giving device…
It’s a mathematical equation. (Don’t fret, Robert, I think we’re both safe.)
It looks like this:
UGPA(x100) + GRE V + GRE Q + GRE W(x100) = 1550
If you multiply your Undergraduate GPA by 100, and multiply your GRE Writing score by 100, then add your actual GRE score to that, so long as it equals a minimum of 1550, you will be considered for admission into the Appalachian State Graduate Program.
For me that equations looks like this:
279+570+570+350=1769
That’s 219 points better. That makes me rather happy. It gives me hope.
Now, if only the money would work itself out.