December 11, 2009
by Geoff Shannon
2 Comments

Are you my Daddy? The Great Baby Search

So, I’ve been cleaning out my desk as part of Inside Lacrosse’s move to our new palatial estate in the Power Plant Pier IV building. During the dumping, in my desk I found a mysterious brown folder. Said folder held a thank you note with a Tiger on the front, and the below baby picture:

Now, I have no idea who this baby is, who its parents are (though I know its not my baby), how it ended up in my desk or why said photographer would pose the child in a bowl surrounded by pink roses. I’m guessing someone loosely related to IL, but any suggestions will do. So, dear internet friends, maybe you can help. WHO IS THIS BABY? Post names, thoughts, leads or just stupid shit below.

December 10, 2009
by Geoff Shannon
1 Comment

Natty Boh Bottle Cap Game: No. 114

As always, first to comment on the blog post will have their name immortalized on this post and in InPraiseOf’s soon to be published Mr. Boh Cap Game Hall of Fame (we’re wrapping up the first five games so HOF’mers look for your honor soon), plus word spread throughout the Facebook/Twitter world. Have a cap that you would like to mail for me for inclusion in the game? Shoot an email toinpraiseof@hotmail.com.

December 9, 2009
by Geoff Shannon
Comments Off on Scenes from New York: A Few Thoughts at 33rd and 8th

Scenes from New York: A Few Thoughts at 33rd and 8th

There is a crush of humanity here. It’s humbling. Faces pour by in sheets, an artist’s pallet of brown, beige, pale flesh, pink. Phrases cut the air, foreign languages; English, Spanish, French, German, Franco-African, Chinese, Japanese, all the tongues. How many are there? Why are they here? There are so many of us, we could be stomped dead, the weight of a galactic child attacking an ant hill at this intersection, and who 1,000 years from now would know what happened? Would it make a blip on the universal radar? Continue Reading →

December 7, 2009
by Geoff Shannon
1 Comment

Scenes from New York: Aunt Frankie’s Salon

Because of our Aunt Frankie’s retirement ambitions, the price for a New York City sojourn has been considerably cheap for The Shannon Family in the last decade. Wanting to spend her golden years close to her Upstate New York-resident daughter (my cuz) Shannon -she with the young son Hudson and two twin boys on the way- and to otherwise have a small nook to settle down in post-work, Aunt Frankie purchased a one-bedroom condo on Manhattan’s Upper East Side (location remains undisclosed.) Though she settled on the apartment about a 10 years ago, she continued to live in Washington D.C. in order to finish her career with the Federal government. So, the apartment has been a respected family “crash pad” for weekend getaways, as well as a part time residence for familia hoping to make it big in the Big Apple.

Though an intimate space, my Aunt Frankie has taken a decades long love for antiques and Asian design, and turned her apartment into a Salon to rival the great collections of Gertrude Stein and the Cone Sisters. This is not a flat-and-fouton, college-buddy-trying-to-make-it-by crash pad. Walls, painted a rich yellow, are decorated in bamboo-framed prints from China and Japan, body-length scrolls, oil canvases and a Himalayan pack sled. Glass-encased hutches hold multi-piece china sets, hand painted serving dishes and crystal wares. Wood-carved wardrobes contain pillowing mounds of textiles and tapestries from Iran, Turkey, India.

Persian rugs cover the floors, sheep skin settles over the upholstered couch. Floor length mirrors add depth, while a stuff llama and a tinker toy carousel sprinkle in a bit o’ whimsy. On a corner table, two lamps in the shape of French blue roosters, cobalt chests puffed proudly, dominate the space.

This is an apartment that stimulates, inspires. It instills adventure, the want to walkabout. Its a ground base that pushes the mind abroad. It is NYC.

December 7, 2009
by Geoff Shannon
1 Comment

Scenes from New York: A Reading from James Baldwin

Seeing as Amtrak commuter trains don’t fit my budget and I would rather put a corkscrew in my cranium then drive, a trip to New York City from Baltimore involves a 3 1/2 bus ride up I-95 and the New Jersey Turnpike. This is a beneficial circumstance, as it provides a period of meditation, allowing a NYC travel time to message open the mental pores so they are willing to absorb the stimulus that’s about to come. So, even though my Bolt Bus was plugged in with Wi-Fi, instead read New York author James Baldwin‘s “The Fire Next Time.”

James Baldwin

Published in 1962, the 100+ page essay find’s Baldwin (who in the above photo oozes ’60s NY writer cool) is split into two story arcs; a reflection of his youth in Harlem as a young preacher/his relationship with Christianity and a contemplation on a dinner meeting with Nation of Islam founder Elijah Muhammad. Through those two lineages Baldwin examines American culture, African-American’s unique history and place, the civil rights movement, the hypocrisy and intoxication of religion, existentialism, life, death and living.

There are countless quotes in the book worth mulling over on a ride to New York City, but there was one in particular that knotted in my brain, as it came close to articulating my own personal philosophies on life. Toward the end of “A Fire Next Time,” Baldwin is hashing out why structures like religion, government (this is the time of the Red Russian enemy) and other institutions and cultural entities continue to hold such sway over Americans:

“Life is tragic simply because the earth turns and the sun inexorably rises and sets, and one day, for each of us, the sun will go down for the last, last time. Perhaps the whole root of our trouble, the human trouble, is that we will sacrifice all the beauty of our lives, will imprison ourselves in totems, taboos, crosses, blood sacrifices, steeples, mosques, races, armies, flags, nations, in order to deny the fact of death, which is the only fact we have.

It seems to me that one ought to rejoice in the fact of death- out to decide, indeed, to earn one’s death by confronting with passion the conundrum of life. One is responsible to life: It is the small bacon in that terrifying darkness from which we come and from which we shall return. One must negotiate this passage as nobly as possible for the sake of those coming after us…It is the responsibility of free men to trust and to celebrate what is constant -birth, struggle and death are constant, and so is love, though we might not always think so- and to apprehend the nature of change, to be able and willing to change.”

As a writer it was both reassuring and disheartening to know that this mission statment had been captured in print already.

Welcome to New York indeed.

December 3, 2009
by Geoff Shannon
1 Comment

The Natty Boh Bottle Caps Game: No. 86

Back for another turn, its the Natty Boh Bottle Caps Game. This is No. 86 in the cap series.

As always, first to comment on the blog post will have their name immortalized on this post and in InPraiseOf’s soon to be published Mr. Boh Cap Game Hall of Fame (we’re wrapping up the first five games so HOF’mers look for your honor soon), plus word spread throughout the Facebook/Twitter world. Have a cap that you would like to mail for me for inclusion in the game? Shoot an email to inpraiseof@hotmail.com.

December 3, 2009
by Geoff Shannon
1 Comment

The Greatness of Man-Acting: The 101 Course

InPraiseOf introduces a new editorial series, “Man-Acting Greats,” featuring the best in the art of Man-Acting in movies and television. In this post, we help define the art of Man-Acting.

“You better be real careful how you navigate around this one.” -Clay
“Or what, you’ll put a bullet in the back of my head too?” Jax

A select group of men are privileged enough in this life to act for a living. Of these, an even more elite few have the talent to Man-Act. Continue Reading →

November 22, 2009
by Geoff Shannon
1 Comment

The Natt Boh Bottle Caps Game: No. 353

Back for Turkey week with the Natty Boh Bottle Caps Game. This is No. 353. First to post will have their name immortalized on this post and in InPraiseOf’s soon to be published Mr. Boh Cap Game Hall of Fame, plus word spread throughout the Facebook/Twitter sphere. Have a cap that you would like to mail for me for inclusion in the game? Shoot an email to inpraiseof@hotmail.com.