All other issues aside, I have trouble seeing how Wilson could mock Penney's logo font ("without even bothering to update its ancient Helvetica Light logo") when publishing in the New York Times. Especially now that it seems she was only thinking of the local print audience (women in Connecticut and a few gay guys in Manhattan). The body text of the NYT print version is set in Cheltenham, a font designed in 1896. And the paper name is in Old English Text, a font of unknown provenance but reminiscent of 15th century blackletter typefaces.
Buffy ,'Help'
Natter 64: Yes, we still need you
Off-topic discussion. Wanna talk about corsets, duct tape, or physics? This is the place. Detailed discussion of any current-season TV must be whitefonted.
Baseball peeps - what is an unassisted triple play, please?
Fuse is showing a concert Kanye West did earlier this year at the Chicago Theater for CPS students. It's cool to have the chance to see it, but I'm a little agog at how out of tune he is much of the time and how much sound correction they must do on his albums.
It's not even a criticism, exactly. What makes Kanye special isn't the purity of his voice. (And in fact, watching this has made me head over to iTunes to fill in the holes in my collection.) Still, it's a little startling.
SIGG water bottles: not quite so BPA-free as they were claiming. [link]
Baseball peeps - what is an unassisted triple play, please?
I'm assuming it's one person making three outs all by himself. Maybe catching a ball, stepping on a base to get the runner out, and tagging another runner?
Ah, OK. I was thinking it was one guy doing it all, but I couldn't make a viable picture out of it. There was way too much running around in my scenario.
Go Dana. That is the typical way to get an unassisted triple play. I know Miguel Tejada achieved this when he was with the A's.
All unassisted triple plays except one have taken this form: the infielder catches a line drive (one out), steps on a base to double off a runner (two outs), and tags another runner on the runner's way to the next base (three outs) (almost universally, the "next base" is the same base on which the infielder stepped to record the second out.)
I wikipedia'd it.
Motherfucker. I guess I'ma have to rip off someone else besides Cintra now.
I think maybe the Phillies just (or, whenever the game was) beat the Mets that way. I'm inferring from a Facebook post, so, you know...
ETA: Thanks, Dana!