Life is a Highway

Life is a Highway
Source: YouTube

Sunday, 2 September 2012

HBO Sports: When it was a Game (1991)


Source:IMDB- from the HBO Sports documentary.

"This film consists solely of 8mm and 16mm film taken by players and fans from 1934 and 1957. All but a few minutes of the film are in color. Included is color footage of past major league players and ballparks, many of the parks now defunct. Also included are literary readings, remembrances by former players, and baseball related music." 

From IMDB 

"When It Was a Game" 

Source:HBO Sports- name that player.

From HBO Sports

Baseball in the 1930s, 40s and 50s wasn't a perfect time: players were well underpaid and didn't have nearly the same economic freedom as the average American, as far as being able to decide where they work and so-forth and lets face it: pro sports is work or otherwise it wouldn't be professional. 

Even though Major League Baseball was diverse ethnically: plenty of Irish, German, Italian and others playing the game and even some Latinos, African and Jewish Americans were denied the ability to play Major League Baseball, simply because they were Jewish or African. Which is one reason why the Negro Leagues came about, but even with all the injustices in MLB, there was still this sense that baseball was about baseball even in MLB, that players played literally for the love of the game. 

MLB players knew they weren't going to get rich playing baseball, but did it anyway, because they loved playing baseball. Which is something that Major League Baseball has lost a bit of where players holdout because they want another 100K$ on their contract or even they are under contract. They see someone else who plays the same position and they do, signing a contract for more money and feel they deserve at least that amount and won't play another game until their contract is redone.

Management of course isn't innocent here: players get traded or released because management doesn't want to fulfill their end of the contract. Or don't want to come up with 100K$ even if the player deserves it. But back then baseball was about baseball and winning, not how much many you can make. Which is a lot different today where you see high profiled free agents signing for huge contracts and getting overpaid by losing clubs, because the club is trying to sell tickets. So they can make money now and win in the future. 

Alex Rodriquez signing with the Texas Rangers in 2000 or 2001, is a perfect example of players simply trying to get as much money as possible while they can, even if it means playing for bad teams. And also back then and MLB has gotten back to this, MLB clubs played in ballparks, not football stadiums that can be converted for baseball. Which is what we saw in the 1970s, something I covered in a blog about the NFL yesterday.

The title that HBO Sports came up with for this film When It Was a Game, says it all about Major League Baseball in this time period. Because it was a business back then as well and no one is disputing that but back then MLB had the feel of a game rather than a business. 

Baseball games back then were like community events where people could get together and watch their team together. Rather then where people would go to relax and get caught up with their email or something but they were there to watch baseball.

Maryland Democrats: ‘Hubert Humphrey 1968 Political TV ad’

Source:Maryland Democrats- man in the commercial apparently trying to figure out what Richard M. Nixon ever did for him.

“Hubert Humphrey 1968 Political TV ad: What has Richard Nixon ever done for you? Nixon, Nixon, Nixon….. 


Hubert Humphrey running as the Washington insider in 1968: “What Have You Done For me Lately?” Which is a Janet Jackson song, but that could also be the title for this political commercial in 1968.

Hubert Humphrey, was a U.S. Senator during the first half of the 1960s and is a big reason why the 1964 Civil Rights Act was passed. By 1968, Richard Nixon was out of political office completely for almost eight years. His last job in government was as Vice President of the United States under President Dwight Eisenhower. And he was an effective Vice President and had real responsibility under President Eisenhower as his counselor and adviser on all issues and chief political enforcer if not strategist, but by 1968 America even though it was moving right was still in the Progressive Era.

Dick Nixon, was out of office for most of the 1960s when a lot of popular progressive legislation was passed: Medicare, Medicaid, the Civil Rights Act and the 1965 Voting Rights Act, the 1968 Fair Housing Law. Humphrey, either in the Senate, or as Vice President, had a role in all of this legislation that was passed in Congress that was signed by President Lyndon Johnson.

Unless you were Barry Goldwater, or another Conservative Republican with a safe seat like in the West in Congress, you needed to show voters that you at the very least wouldn’t try to repeal all of this legislation. Nixon at the very least wasn’t quick to support all of these bills even though he did.

So what the Humphrey Campaign was trying to do with this commercial, was to say that Humphrey and other Progressive Democrats were responsible for all the popular legislation from the New Deal and Great Society. While Dick Nixon was either on the sidelines or trying to defeat it.

I don’t know how effective this commercial was, but at the very least Humphrey has a very good case here: What Have You Done For Me Lately? Nixon didn’t have an answer to that. He was almost a Washington outsider at this point even though her served in Congress for six years and was Vice President for eight. But in the 1960s he made a lot of money in the private sector and campaign for other Republicans while he was out of office. 

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