World Wide Wednesday

How I saw the Internet this week

Deep Routes

- A throwback from 2005: an exhaustively researched, beautifully written Atlantic piece by David Foster Wallace that delves into all aspects of AM Radio. It’s one of the best things I’ve read in months and worth reading all at once, or if you have massive ADD like I do, keeping open in a tab and reading it bit by bit over the course of a day or two. (Via Will Leitch)

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Jason Varitek’s Retirement and Legacy + Bobby Valentine’s Controversial Start

A guest post by my friend Asif, who writes Uninformed Commentary.

On Thursday, Jason Varitek will announce his retirement. Varitek will likely be most remembered by casual fans for shoving his glove into Alex Rodriguez’s face on July 24, 2004. That moment will forever be enshrined in myth as the moment when the Red Sox began their run to their first World Championship in 86 years. The problem is that like so much else with Varitek’s career, it’s just that, a myth, and that’s a disservice to the man who has been the Red Sox captain for the past six years.

(My Favorite Part of this Picture: Jeff Weaver (I think) looking stoned in the background)

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Under the Radar, LeBron James is Having his Best Season

For the past few weeks, we’ve all been talking an awful lot about Jeremy Lin. So much so, in fact, that Deadspin notes in its fascinating weekly Bristolmetrics column that almost 45% of total NBA coverage on SportsCenter last week was devoted to the Knicks and that these 69 minutes of coverage were more than the 66 minutes devoted to all of college basketball.

You know who must be the happiest man in the NBA about all of the attention Jeremy Lin is getting? LeBron James, who is performing at a historically brilliant level while his team is tied for the best record in the NBA.

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Is Ryan Braun Innocent or Guilty?

Based solely on the outcome of the three-man independent arbitration panel that nullified Ryan Braun’s 50-game suspension for violating the MLB’s performance enhancing drug policy, one would assume that Braun’s previously good name should also be restored. The arbitration panel was presided over by MLB executive VP Rob Manfred, union head Michael Weiner (who shockingly split votes), and independent arbitrator Shyam Das.

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World Wide Wednesday

How I saw the Internet this week

Deep Routes

- NYTimes’ Keith Bradsher profiles Jeremy Lin’s grandmother in Taiwan. The extent to which his grandparents need to go to avoid the paparazzi is unreal. (via Richard Deitsch)

- Erik Malinowski with an excellent piece on Deadspin about the 20-year anniversary of the classic Simpsons episode Homer at the Bat. The Simpsons backlash referenced in the article is pretty amusing considering that kids now watch Jersey Shore and its other heinous equivalents. Even if it was crass, at least the Simpsons (at that point in time) was well-written, smart, and good.

- NYTimes food critic Pete Wells details Shake Shack’s struggles with consistency. His complaints notwithstanding, we are going to see continued exponential growth from that chain over the next few years (via BobbyBigWheel).

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On Tim Wakefield

Written by Asif Attarwala. Find him regularly on Uninformed Commentary

Tim Wakefield retired on Friday as the third winningest pitcher in Red Sox history after 17 years with the team. Wakefield won’t be remembered as the greatest pitcher in team history (that honor belongs to Pedro Martinez), but for nearly two decades he’s been the greatest point of continuity for the team as it emerged from the dark days of the late 90′s and early aughts to become a perennial championship contender. For the average fan he will perhaps be best remembered for giving up a series-ending home run to Aaron Boone in the 2003 ALCS. Red Sox die-hards, however, will recall Wakefield forgoing a Game 4 start by volunteering for mop-up duty in a Game 3 blowout loss to the Yankees in the 2004 ALCS. That effort, along with Wake’s three-inning appearance in Game 5, were critical to the Red Sox preserving their pitching staff to complete the greatest comeback in sports history. For that we’ll always be thankful.

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Response to Buzz Bissinger’s New York Times Op/Ed

In yesterday’s New York Times, Friday Night Lights author and former Philadelphia Inquirer reporter (as well as one of my favorite writers) Buzz Bissinger penned an op/ed that details the dangerous prospect that Philadelphia’s two daily newspapers–the Inquirer and Philadelphia Daily News–as well as Philly.com are being bid on by a consortium led by Edward G. Rendell. Previously, Rendell has been the mayor of Philadelphia, chairman of the Democratic National Committee, and, most recently, governor of Pennsylvania.

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World Wide Wednesday

How I saw the internet this past week…

Deep Routes

- Steve Hehn writes about the biggest risks of Facebook’s impending IPO for NPR. What happens to the company’s culture when Facebook’s most talented employees–many of whom are in their 20s–are set for life? If I were in their position, I’d probably bounce.

- Grantland unearths David Remnick’s classic New Yorker piece on Michael Jordan’s first basketball comeback. Note to self: learn how to write this beautifully.

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Linsanity vs Tebowmania

My friend Asif, who writes Uninformed Commentary, also took a stab at the Jeremy Lin story. Here goes…

Linsanity has taken hold here in my light-less bog cave. Even though I’m a huge Celtics fan and long-time Knicks hater, I have to admit that I’m rooting for Jeremy Lin’s continued success. The honest truth is, I can’t think of another time that a player has come out of as much obscurity as Lin to post these types of numbers. Since being inserted into the Knicks’ starting lineup, Lin has filled up the stat sheet, he’s averaging 22.7 pts, 3.8 rebounds, and 6.8 assists in just over 30 minutes per game in February. And while the competition hasn’t exactly been the strongest out there (last 5 opponents: Minnesota, LA Lakers, Washington, Utah, New Jersey), he’s done this without the help of Carmelo Anthony and Amar’e Stoudemire and there’s some reason to believe that this performance is sustainable (more on that later). One of the things that surprises me most about the Lin phenomenon is that I haven’t seen a rash of columns comparing Lin to Tim Tebow. You know it’s going to happen — sportswriters LOVE writing about Tim Tebow — so I figured I’d get out ahead of this and break down why Jeremy Lin is much easier to root for than Tim Tebow (leaving aside the respective popularity of their sports).

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Lin, Lin, Lin No Matter What

Like a Republican presidential candidate rocketing to the top of the polls, New York Knicks point guard Jeremy Lin has come out of absolutely nowhere to captivate the national consciousness this past week. Lin–the son of Taiwanese immigrants and a 2010 Harvard graduate–went undrafted, played in just 29 games and 285 minutes last season for the Golden State Warriors, was released twice before the start of this season–by the Warriors and, later, the Houston Rockets–and emerged only due to a string of Knicks injuries.

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