August 4 - Found, but did not buy, a comically large 200-watt compact fluorescent light bulb in Menard's.
Late August - Liz coined the word "over-extrenuated".
August 28 - Made a sandwich. Finished the peanut butter, the jelly, AND the bread. Aced it!
August 31 - Went to MN State Fair with out friends Squid and Lemur. Survived, despite eating all of the following:
Chocolate chunk scone
Black currant iced tea
Cappuccino
Cinnamon currant scone
Big Fat Bacon
Ice cream sandwich samples
Fried apple pie w/cinnamon ice cream
Microwave beef pot roast sample
Cider Freezies
Chai on a stick
Mocha frappe
Hamburgers
Kettle corn sample
Elk burger
Summit beer
Cheese curds
Roasted corn
Corn ice cream
Pretzel dog
Soft pretzels
Spring Grove Sodas
Dole Whip
Deep-fried Reeses
Bourbon chicken
Sweet Martha's cookies
Milk/Chocolate Milk
Weird rib sandwich
Ocean Spray samples
Shave ice
The fried apple pie was my favorite out of the whole bunch. Highly recommended for next year's State Fair.
Late August - Stroke of genius: In five years, my 1996 Corolla will be eligible for Minnesota Collectors Plates! It's still all-original everything, down to the factory-installed AM/FM/Cassette player! Soon, my ho-hum black car will officially be a Sweet Ride!
September 27 - Liz and I went to our first Twins game at the new Target Field. It was the next-to-last game in the season, and if they lost it would have been the Twins' 100th loss of the season. They won, and won the last game of the season as well, thereby avoiding 100 losses for the year. At this game we saw: a grand slam home run, a near inside-the-park home run, and an extremely large bug flying around the lights that was eaten in flight by a bird. Plus, we got free hats. Overall, it was a pretty good night.
They also had grapes, but we were there so late in the season that there wasn't much left to pick. We found only about ten or so, here and there, but they were terrific. The orchard also grew pears, but those were completely done for the season. We learned our lesson - go in early September.
So we continued our aimless drive through Wisconsin with a bag of apples in the trunk. Then down to Rochester for barbecue, then back home. Best day ever. Next year, we go in September to pick pears and grapes.
Early October - I was saddened to read that WKPQ/Hornell, NY (Power 105.3) had flipped music formats from Hot AC (sort of a kinder, gentler top 40) to Country. When I was going to school in Rochester, NY from 1986 to 1990, they were my favorite station. For a while, I lived in a ninth-story apartment facing due south, and they came in clear as a bell from up there.
Back then, it seemed like they would play anything released on a 45. It was, and still is, the only commercial station I ever heard play Far Corporation's 1986 remake of "Stairway To Heaven" (put together by Frank Farian, producer of Boney M and Milli Vanilli).
Their morning show was the "Cavalcade Of Whimsy", a phrase I still use regularly. One of their morning local news stories (and this was a serious story, not a bit) was that at a local construction site, an unmanned, parked steamroller had somehow gotten loose and rolled down a busy hill. Miraculously, no one was hurt.
In all my radio experience in Rochester, nothing even comes close to being as memorable as the runaway steamroller I heard about from a tiny station 70 miles to the south. I'll miss them.
Early October - Noticed that one of the columns in front of the house was leaning. Severely. So we called Todd, our go-to contractor, and one week later, we had brand new concrete steps in front of the house and new columns. Every homeowner needs a Todd! It wasn't nearly as expensive as I'd thought, the house looks a lot better, and I can sleep a little easier knowing that the old 1964-era concrete steps won't continue sinking into the front lawn.
October 22 - Celebrated my birthday with a poker game with the guys, while Liz went to a Scary Movie Night with the girls. I finished the evening up by exactly ten cents, which is probably the closest I've ever gotten to breaking exactly even. Plus, Liz made me a bunch of homemade black and white cookies, the best treat in all of New York City.




Mid-December - Had a portion of our bathtub regrouted. December was not very exciting.
January 2 - Saw one of the most informal concerts I've ever seen - The Driftbenders at the Dakota Jazz Club.
I don't think the Driftbenders were even an actual group; they were just Joey Molland (the guitarist from Badfinger) and Phil Solem (half of The Rembrandts), two local pop music legends up on stage playing guitar with no backing band. They took turns playing each other's songs for their entire set.

Mid-January - Came up with a new band name: Tuna Meltdown. I've done better.
Mid-January - The 1968 DJ event from November showed me the future of DJ work, so for Christmas, I got a new laptop that I dedicated to just music stuff. It has a 500 GB internal hard drive, which can hold a good portion of the permanent "Crap From The Past" library in an uncompressed format ("flac" files, if you're playing at home.)
Picture pilfered from the internet |
Again pilfered from the internet |
Also pilfered from the internet |
If you're going to dabble in the DJ stuff, some advice: (1) Get the best-sounding music files you can. Mp3s suck rocks, but if you have to use them, get them at 320 kbps. Better to use flac, if you can. (2) Be meticulous about getting the tag information correct on your files. (3) Invest in the extra hardware for sound output and controlling. It's worth it, and it'll make people take you far more seriously than if you try to run everything off your Ipod.
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Yes, also pilfered from the internet |
I was heading out to do some shopping, and asked Liz if she needed anything. She jotted down a few items for me to pick up on the way home - small pineapple, bananas, four granny smiths, four fujis or galas (whichever is cheaper), red grapes (half bag?), green grapes (half bag), and strawberries. I should point out that this was about three days before we left town to visit family. Liz is ambitious.
Late January - To celebrate our anniversary (five years already?), Liz made another New York City staple: rainbow cookies. I used to call them "stripey" cookies or something to that effect, but hey're actually called rainbow cookies. You make basically a big layer cake, then slice it into the little strips. It was fantastic, maybe even better than the black and whites.
February 11 - Got new glasses. We wandered into Visionary Optical in the Southdale Mall and told the twenty-year-old girl behind the counter that I wanted something stylish that would look good on my face. She said, "Try these." And I said, "I'll take them." And that was that. Liz got a pair of prescription sunglasses, too, based on the same instructions. It was probably the easiest sale they've made all year. (There's a picture of me below with the new specs.)
Early February - Every year, radio station KVSC in St. Cloud, MN (about an hour northwest of the Twin Cities) runs a Trivia Contest. For a fifty-hour period from Friday evening to Sunday evening, they ask questions on the air, and teams phone in their answers and get points for correct answers. The team with the most points at the end of the weekend wins. I wouldn't say that it's well-known around here, but it's definitely considered a tradition, especially among us radio folks.
So this year, being the 33rd year of the contest, the theme was Long Play Records. Since I tend to have a reputation of knowing a thing or two about records, I got recruited from a St. Cloud radio friend of mine. Do I want to be on the team? I sure do! Liz had the weekend off, so we were both in.
We were part of this year's team called "Learned Pigs and Fireproof Women". They took their name from the title of a book that I haven't read. I was given instructions to show up at a particular house in St. Cloud, the basement of which was converted into the "war room" for the team. I was amazed to find about 20 people, all with laptops, all wired into some custom software specifically written by the team members for the trivia contest. There were about 50 people worldwide on the team, all linked in by the internet to this software. It was very sophisticated, and very impressive.
KVSC asked about nine questions an hour, spaced apart by a few minutes, with relatively short windows to call in the answers. The team operated in shifts, so that we could cover all fifty hours.
Unfortunately, my actual knowledge of music stuff wasn't really necessary. The questions were asked in such a way that to find the answer, you had to use the internet. A sample question: "Big-screen characters X and Y go into a record store and are talking to the clerk about guitar lessons. Over X's left shoulder are seen two albums displayed on the wall. What are those two albums?" So to answer, step one was identifying the movie or TV show in question. Step two was finding the actual video online, which usually involved someone's Netflix streaming account. Then step three was relatively easy, once the scene played out on a team member's screen.
Out of the 450+ questions, I was able to answer only three of them off the top of my head. Those three questions involved playing a clip of the B-side of a hit, and they wanted to know the title and artist of the A-side. I easily identified the B-sides of "Seasons In The Sun" by Terry Jacks, "Rainy Days And Mondays" by the Carpenters, and "Aquarius/Let The Sunshine In" by the Fifth Dimension. While I identified those songs in about two seconds, the sad thing is that eighteen seconds later, the Shazam app on people's iPhones did the same thing. They really didn't need me at all.
But still, of the sixty-seven teams competing this year, we won. Beat everybody else. Yup, we are the champions no time for losers cause we are the champions. I, personally, didn't really contribute much, but I was happy to be there for part of the weekend and proud to be part of the team. And it extends my streak of never having been beaten at music trivia. Really, you do not want to compete against me in music trivia. You will lose.
February 14 - For Valentine's Day, I got Liz an "I Heart Ron" T-shirt, which is based on the character Ron Swanson from NBC's Parks And Recreation. Liz plans on wearing it every day this summer. Perhaps.
February - Liz and I found a great bowling alley in south Minneapolis called Skylanes. The building is currently up for sale, and it needs some pretty severe repairs to the roof (many, many buckets hanging from the ceiling tile grid), but it's completely charming inside. Ten alleys, and that's it.
We went twice in February. The first night, I rolled a one-seventy-something, which would have been way above my average back when I bowled weekly. Then for giggles, we bowled a game lefty - I got a 113.
The second night, we bowled five games - three righty and two lefty. The second right-handed game, Liz beat me 149 to 147, including two consecutive beer frames (that's four strikes in a row between the two of us), and three consecutive frames where I left the same three pins (3, 6, 10) and picked them up for a spare.
February - The radio show, Crap From The Past, turned twenty years old, which is quite a hefty milestone for such a silly radio show. So we got a little press, with mentions in some of the local alternative weeklies. Nothing life-changing, but just enough mentions for the show to feel loved and wanted. It was nice.
To celebrate on-air, I came up with the most ambitious special I could think of. I went back to the American Top 40 shows for the decade leading up to the start of CFTP (that's 1982-1992), and manually extracted the commercials for those shows. To put that in perspective, that's over 500 shows and 2000 hours of audio! It took about two months to get all the commercials in one place on the hard drive. I then picked the most memorable of them, grouped them into little sets, and did an All-Commercial CFTP as the 20th Birthday show. I had talk breaks, just like always, but now I was introducing and discussing old ads instead of old songs. It sounded pretty spectacular on-air. I managed to squeeze in 131 ads during the ninety minute show. Even better is that now I have a library of about 1000 old radio commercials on the hard drive, which I'll be using in small doses in the weekly shows from now on.
You can download/stream the 20th Birthday show here.
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Joel Stitzel, Ron Gerber and Andy Sturdevant on stage, courtesy of a picture I found posted on the web |
So after the burst of excitement about the CFTP birthday, it's back to normal for me. All this discussion about radio stuff is a nice warm-up for KFAI's pledge drive, which starts later this month.
March - Found out that Minneapolis just had the fourth warmest winter on record. Climate change is, apparently, good for Minnesota. Not so much for the rest of the planet.
March - Liz and I went to five weddings last year, so maybe it's appropriate that seemingly everyone we know will be having babies this year. We know of four couples that are due before year's end, and we expect a few more. The next few months should be very interesting indeed.
Mandatory cat picture - This is Poohead, sleeping on the landing, with sunlight streaming through the blinds. It's good to be Poohead.
Mandatory food pictures - Liz has been cooking up a storm, as you'll see. She's modest and says that she's just following recipes, but you need cooking talent to make food look this good. All of the recipes are from the culinary geniuses at America's Test Kitchen.
September 1, 2011 - Fiesta chicken with rice
September 7, 2011 - Don't remember what this is, but it looks really good, doesn't it?
September 20, 2011 - Pork loin with roasted sweet potatoes and cilantro chutney
September 30, 2011 - Don't recall this one, either
October 12, 2011 - Chicken teriyaki
November 2, 2011 - Thai chicken soup
December 12, 2011 - Chili con carne
December 16, 2011 - Pork tacos with mango salsa
December 23, 2011 - Chicken and couscous with fennel and orange
January 3, 2012 - Tacos
January 18, 2012 - Chicken vesuvio
February 5, 2012 - Lemon cake (for Super Bowl party; I think this was gluten-free)
February 8, 2012 - Chicken bon femme
February 21, 2012 - Shepherd's pie
February 29, 2012 - Chicken tikka masala
March 6, 2012 - Pan-roasted chicken with cheesy herb mashed potatoes
Is it any wonder than I'm the heaviest that I've ever been? And probably the happiest, too!
Hope your spring is springy!
Ron & Liz