Tuesday, November 29, 2011

Athabasca

BURBANK, CA -- No, not Lake Athabasca, but the Athabasca Oil Sands in Alberta, Canada. Just saw this article with satellite images out of NASA today... surely this kind of strip-mining must be a good thing for our planet, right?

1984 on top, 2011 on bottom. Cheers.

Monday, November 28, 2011

Sky Harbor v2.0

PHOENIX, AZ -- Greetings again from Sky Harbor Intl. Airport! I really love this free wifi thing - with a layover and a fully charged laptop, easy decisions!

Just got a little work done and now have a few minutes to kill before boarding the plane to LAX.

As a first comment, it was great landing here and being in sunshine for a good 45 minutes before it just set a moment ago. It was the second time I have had the sun on me in the past nine days - it came out once at home throughout my entire trip. If I ever suggest I intend to spend another winter in Chicago, please refer me to this post as the reason not to. At least it wasn't that cold out though - kind of warm at home for the most part still. The only day it was truly cold was Thanksgiving morning, when we ran that 10K. As mentioned in my last post, the run was great, but it definitely gave me a little cold. I'm about 85% now but still not quite back to perfect. But the key is to be at 60%+ for flying... anything less and your head explodes with the altitude and pressure changes. I was totally fine on this last flight, so I shouldn't have any problems on this little skip over to LA now.

Overall despite my weather complaints and the little cold, I had an excellent trip home as per usual. Got a ton of time catching up with friends and family, watched sports, good home cooking, and a lot of exercising to match it (I collectively ran over 20 miles while home - not bad at all for basically a week). One comment that I made that rings true was in reference to our yard at home. At this point, 95% of the trees are dead in town, as are all of the other plants. At our house? Dozens of plants are still in bloom, the trees are still covered in red and yellow leaves - it was nice to see and not at all surprising!

Alright, time to board my flight... on the last one, we had a great approach. Flying into Sky Harbor from the North or East, you either head SW and make a turn to come in due West directly, or you have to circle around town and kill 15 minutes for no real reason, flying in over downtown. Usually we get stuck on the latter route, but this time we lucked out and got the direct. As such, we had a phenomenal flyby of Four Peaks and the Superstition Mountains Weaver's Needle.

Catch you in Los Angeles!

Friday, November 25, 2011

Happy Thanksgiving!



BUFFALO GROVE, IL -- Happy Thanksgiving everyone!!!

I have had a very busy but productive week here at home. Definitely not in my normal blog-writing mode, but nonetheless thought I would give a quick update.

Yesterday was a very nice holiday. Got up before the crack of dawn at 6am and headed over to Highland Park for the 2011 North Shore 10K Turkey Trot. The course was winding and hilly, it was cloudy, cold, and a frigid wind chill (35F/1C), but I managed to beat both my reasonable and 'stretch' goals. My reasonable goal was 62 minutes (10 min/mile pace), my stretch was 60 minutes (9:40 pace, but under 1 hour for the full thing). I ended up clocking in at 58 minutes and 2 seconds, a 9:21 pace. A little slower than last year at the 2010 Lincolnwood 10K Turkey Trot, when I clocked in at 55:40 (8:57), but for that race I had been training for 10 weeks straight. This time, due to all the crazy injuries and foot procedures I only had 3 weeks of training - I'm sure with another 7 weeks I could have beat that time. Overall I am very pleased! Kudos to Josh, my sister's boyfriend who smoked the course at 48:29, my brother who took 8 minutes off his time from last year, and my dad who crushed his time from last year by taking 12 minutes and 30 seconds off it, and in doing so finishing only 42 seconds behind me!

After the run we came home, got the turkey in the oven, and spent the day cleaning the house for everyone to come over. All in all we had a great Thanksgiving meal with family - the benefit of running the 10K is you can eat whatever you want (900+ calories burned). I have attached a couple of photos below. I remember a couple of years ago in London during Thanksgiving and it was very odd going to classes all day while knowing everyone at home was relaxing and together. Later that night I had a wonderful meal with some very good friends over in London, and then Skyping back to my family here at home. It is nice to be here in person instead of having to Skype in from halfway around the world.

More from this week later when I have time to update. For now, I am off to make my final big Antarctica-related purchase, a DSLR camera! Happy Black Friday to all.



Saturday, November 19, 2011

Shoreham-by-Sea

PHOENIX, AZ -- Can I just say how I love it when you go to log onto wifi at an airport and it's both lightning-quick and FREE?!?! Thank you Sky Harbor (PHX), for reaffirming my faith in airport decency.

Had a good flight over from LAX, and currently waiting to board for ORD. Got upgraded to first class on both flights, which is awesome! On the first leg I literally talked with the woman next to me the entire time. Turns out she is the Director of the UCLA Career Center. Over the course of an hour and a half of talking, she dropped her first name once and her last name once, and her job title once, all in the context of other things. Thanks to the creepy effectiveness of Google, I was able to find her email (although strangely, no bios on the UCLA webpage... surprising). Maybe I will shoot a hello. Apparently she's from West Virginia originally, so I mentioned my upcoming trip there to get to the last of my 50 states, which is exciting. Very interesting person... familiar with some incredibly obscure (and varied) places (Shoreham-by-Sea, Abu Dhabi, Joshua Tree NP, Dublin, Cairo, rural southern Japan... just a few places covered in an hour flight). What is the most heavily-recruited job at the moment, for a top UCLA grad? Financial services. What is their top competitor? Teach for America. Really interesting and yet not at all surprising on both fronts. Clearly financial services are on fire recently, and I have a long list of TFA connections as well. What is interesting is that the people who would be offered jobs in financial services are already engaged in TFA (some out of morals, but many out of the thought that they stand no chance in an overall crummy job market).

Anyway, good flight and an interesting conversation. On an "odd" note, it's quite strange being here at Sky Harbor and only connecting. Not sure if I have ever connected here before, for the 30 (50?) plus times I have been here visiting to/from Arizona. It's a phenomenal day - not a cloud in the sky and 70s. I had a two hour layover, and it is quite tempting to grab a cab over to Camelback Mountain and go for one of my favorite hikes in the world. Oh well, not to be on this trip. Maybe my return will hit a snag and I'll have to spend a night here and do it then (I have a layover back here on my way back to LAX in a week and a half). The experience of having a layover here though - being at an airport I am VERY familiar with and yet not having gone through security - reminds me of one trip where I actually had a layover at ORD, the one airport I am even more familiar with than PHX. On that trip, a good four years ago, I was en route from Madison to Washington D.C. on a lobbying trip, and we connected in Chicago. Walking around Terminal 1 was just a very odd feeling, being "home" yet not at all. Not really sure what the right expression or emotion I am trying to convey is, but these are definitely "interesting" experiences.

What else is going on? My suitcase that I checked weighed 15 pounds, which I find hilarious. The reason/logic is that I need to bring my winter Antarctica gear back with me to LA so that I don't have to by much of anything. Hoping I am able to fit my winter coat, snow pants, goretex rain gear, and some of my other hi-tech Arctic Circle fishing gear in the suitcase and right now I am feeling hopeful. I'll test it out mid-week.

The Badgers are currently playing at Illinois. I walked by a TV as I landed and saw they were down 14-0, which was quite surprising and a little disheartening. Well, they came out in the second half on a mission, and currently lead 28-17. 9 minutes to play... hoping I get a final score before the flight goes, but we board in 10 mins (and football minutes are way longer than real minutes).

On that note, have a great weekend and will post from Chicago!

Thursday, November 17, 2011

I love my calendar (and a lot of other things too)...

BURBANK, CA -- Okay, so I knew it would be hard to keep this blog updated on a regular basis, being insanely busy and all. BUT, thanks to my little recurring Thursday morning calendar entry "forcing" me to blog, we get updates!

Been a good last week without traveling this past week. Starting Saturday I will not have a full week without travel at LEAST until January, possibly (but not likely) beyond.

On the running front, all is finally well. I ran 5 miles on Sunday, which felt great - the most I have done since the Long Beach Half Marathon. Although, as I came around to the final stretch at the 4.9 mile mark, the breeze in my face and euphoria of a great long run at its peak, I felt a leaf fall in my hair. Instinctively went to knock it out and BAM! Sharp pain shooting up my finger, hand, wrist, all the way into my upper arm. What the heck? In the midst of the sudden pain I looked over and saw a stupid ass bee fluttering to the ground. In hindsight I do regret not going over there and stomping the thing to pieces, but it is dead anyway. Plus, I was in full stride as this all happened in a total of maybe one second, so by the time I realized what had happened as with what I saw, I was already a good 30+ feet ahead, towards the finish. In the next two seconds, I looked at my hand, saw the stinger lodged inside of it, right at the base of my middle finger where it meets the palm, and mid-stride took it out. I sputtered over my makeshift finish line and instead of stretching and walking around for a cool-down, got straight into my car. Cranked the A/C and had a sip of water, my left hand now bright red and a tingling sensation of pain shooting through it.

What now? What do you do with a bee sting? I have been stung a couple dozen times (mainly on my hands, as with this case, but I have some fun stores of bee stings behind the ears, under the shirt... yeah, they like me - wonderful), but it has been a number of years. Called home, decided to run over to the pharmacy, and then realized I had no money. I had left my wallet in the apartment and only drove with my license. So, ran home, grabbed some frozen peas, which instantly made my hand feel a whole lot better, then at the pharmacy got some pepto bismol, and basically retired for the day.

All of that happened on Sunday. Today is Thursday. Yesterday was the first day the swelling was truly gone, and while there is still a nice mark there, today is the first day it isn't painful to put pressure on it (washing my hands has been all kinds of fun this week).

In any case - overall, minor thing, but one of those stories I deemed worthy for the blog. I digress...

The running part has been great. Did a 5K on Tuesday and hit a distance-accounting milestone of an 8:54/mile for the whole thing. Nowhere near my true fastest, but without a doubt the fastest I have run at that distance in a good 5 months. Yesterday I had an appointment with the podiatrist, who confirmed I am 100% healed from my little foot procedure three weeks ago. No need for any more medicine, protection, etc. Great news all around! Today I have a short little 2-miler to run, looking forward to it. :)

In other news, it has been an extremely hectic but rewarding work week. Tuesday night I was up working until 2:30am. Yesterday morning I was back cranking out paperwork at 6:45am. Just a small example, but really, I enjoy the crazy hours sometimes, especially in a great situation such as the example from this week. On the We Heart It front, it has been a great week as well. It looks like I will transition to start a hiring process for a few jobs within the organization. If you (or anyone you know) have skills in the world of social media, online advertising, possibly marketing, or even some really good core business experience, please shoot me an email and let me know if you are interested. Finer details coming soon!

On the hockey front, longtime readers will note that I withheld from hockey references in my last post, which is actually rather uncommon. Without scientific data to back this up, I would guess that 80% of my posts have some type of hockey references. Well, the background is at the time of posting last week, the Hawks were doing a decent job of stinking up what had been a pretty good start to the season. I figured the post was long enough as it is, and didn't want to get into it. In reward for my withholding a scathing attack on the defensive capabilities of Niklas Hjalmarsson, the Hawks have won four straight games, all by significant margins. Last night they went into Vancouver and sufficiently obliterated the Canucks in their own building. A (perhaps strange) hobby of mine is to read the Vancouver beat writer posts after their team manages to fail at every turn. Good stuff. The Hawks now lead the NHL standings and power rankings.

On the once-a-week intellectual/philosophical debate, many thanks to good men Adam S. and Alex F., who brought attention to the question of the impact of photography on travel. James Durston, of CNN, wrote a piece two days ago: "Photography has ruined travel." Mr. F (no, not the AD reference), inquired as to my opinion, and after reading, I obliged:

"Really interesting article and something I have toyed with myself. I guess I divide my actions based on a few different things. First, if the trip is a week or longer, and you are in some type of group, I always take every third or fourth day and leave the camera behind. Other people have great cameras, know how to take pictures, and I will end up with copies of anything. In place, I get to actually experience the places I visit with a more profound intimacy. Now - that said, I also consider photography to be one of the funnest parts of travel, especially if going solo. There is a hell of a lot to be said for taking a 12 mile hike through Anchorage by yourself, and taking a few minutes every half hour to snap some of the best pictures you will ever get. It is an art form, and in those experiences, the travel is both defined by the raw experience AND the photos you have taken. I think the overall point is to ensure you are properly balancing yourself - if you are behind the camera all day, you are really losing something, as evidenced by the writer's story (and, I confess, a few of my own). As for using your phone/google maps/yelp for good restaurants, again I think it depends on circumstance. For example: some of the best hole-in-the-wall restaurants I've found in NYC are thanks to Yelp. Indian in LA? Same deal. When I'm in Florence for four days? Not a chance - go with the locals, as that is part of the fun. I guess in short, I tend to rely more on these things within the US, and avoid them religiously while traveling internationally."

I still agree with my above take from yesterday, on reflection.

Wrapping up, should be a good afternoon and day tomorrow to wrap up the week, looking forward to getting home on Saturday and for some Turkey next week, running a 10K in the freezing sleet should be a ton of fun! :)

Here is some good reading on "Why firms go green," G Adventures Seven Wonders, and for your viewing pleasure, an INCREDIBLE mind-blowing video of our planet from the International Space Station, embedded below.

Have a great Thursday/Friday/weekend everybody and will try to post from Chi-town.




Earth | Time Lapse View from Space, Fly Over | NASA, ISS from Michael König on Vimeo.

Thursday, November 10, 2011

A REALLY random assortment of updates

BURBANK, CA -- Where do we even begin? Full disclosure, this is going to be a really long blog post. I'll get to the Penn State saga at the end.

I suppose this week I'll start with personal updates. All is well. I leave to go home for the week of Thanksgiving in nine days, and I am looking forward to that. It snowed yesterday in Madison for the first time, and while I'd rather be soaking in more of this Southern California sunshine, the first snow of the year is always special, and I was feeling a little nostalgic at hearing the news. The Antarctica countdown is now under 1 month, which is incredibly exciting. For reference, I booked this trip in February. It has been a long journey and wait just to get to this point!

Work-wise, I was up late last night compiling some incredibly impressive statistics on the growth of one of the websites I do work for, We Heart It. Since January, suffice it to say that everything is up by a huge margin, no doubt a huge credit to the various product improvements that have been made over the course of 2011. Comparing the website now to when I started in February, while the layout and the "feel" is the same, the features are far more powerful, which is resulting in continued user growth worldwide. For me, I love the new "sets" feature, which is organizing things in a far better way than what was available in the past. Facebook and twitter integration are vastly improved, as is searching, tagging, "friending," and the core user experience as a whole. Happy to answer any questions you may have about the details - just let me know, and enjoy the website!

On the future travel radar, it is looking like I may be able to get to Vegas in early-January for CES, which would be AWESOME! The idea is quite exciting. Then, the first weekend in March is a really good friend/former roommate's wedding from UW-Madison days. Congratulations in advance Mike and Beth Ann! I am very much looking forward to seeing everyone, and I am thinking I will try to attach a week or two of work from Chicago to the trip and just drive up from there. We shall see what transpires. :)

One thing that I don't think I have mentioned since the revamping of this blog a few weeks ago is that part of the inspiration to do so is to ultimately turn this title and spirit into a book. How the hell is it possible to travel to all seven continents AND all 50 states before turning 25? Well, one way is to play the lottery every day, and when you inevitably win, pay your way across the country and across the world. However, back in the real world...

How do you do it? You have to work hard! Set goals! Start early! For the record, while I have taken a number of trips with my family over the years, mainly to Arizona, Wisconsin, Mexico, and Canada, as well as the occasional one-off trip to California, Florida, and Israel, for the purposes of this book, I am thinking I will mention but not formally "count" any of that. Why? Well, most people aren't lucky enough to have had even those experiences. So how do you do it?

I have to confess that I am not entirely sure when it became even a theoretical goal of mine to do this. It probably ran across my mind the first true independent road trips I took: to Bemidji, Minnesota in 2004, and a substantially longer trip to Toronto and Niagara Falls by way of Indiana, Michigan, New York, Pennsylvania, and Ohio. All of a sudden, I had knocked off a decent block of states - in a week. I can't say for sure, but with all probability, the idea of going to all 50 states probably crept up around that time.

When did it become a mission? That's much easier to figure out. February 2009. I had graduated early from UW-Madison in December 2008, knew I had gotten into LSE for my Master's to start in September 2009, and basically spent that gap working part time and traveling as much as I possibly could. A really good friend from High School days was in school at Tulane, in New Orleans, at the time (and he still lives there today). So I drove out to Iowa City, picked up one of my best HS buddies, and we road tripped it down to New Orleans for some February sunshine and warmth. Throughout the trip we created and used a series of rules for formally "counting" states, which had been modified based on experience in getting to that point. However, since then, the rules have essentially stuck, and in creating the set of rules, the theoretical goal became a real one.

What are the rules?

First - if you drive through or fly through, it does not count. Sure, you can flag a country or state that way, but you can't truly say you have been. For flying, this is easy to quantify. If you don't leave the airport, you can't count it. For driving, it's not quite as simple for most states. In the northeast, it's quite easy to drive through numerous states without stopping, so the same rules apply. But when you get down south or out west to the bigger, more numerous states, you HAVE to stop for gas, food, restroom breaks, etc. So what is it that counts? Again, it is easier to eliminate things that do not count. Gas does not count. Restroom breaks do not count. Eating breaks do not count IF you 1) do not get out of the car, and 2) you eat at a restaurant you could find elsewhere. Going into a subway in Laredo, Texas does not count. BUT, here is where it gets interesting. If you stop at a culturally significant restaurant, that absolutely counts! What does "culturally significant" mean, you ask? Diners in New Jersey are a good example. Microbreweries in Anchorage. The Chow House in Samoa, California. Heck, Umami in California. Lou Malnatis in Chicago, or, as listed in the "1000 Places to See Before You Die" book, Superdawg in Chicago. Anything that is either one-of-a-kind, or has a grassroots tie to the place you are visiting.

Other places that count, as are applicable for road trips? Museums, memorials, road-side art projects, self-guided tours, guided tours, historic sites, government institutions, and national, state, and local parks are all just a few generic examples. So... back to February 2009. On our way down via Missouri, we knew we would return the same way, and all in all didn't count it for that portion of the trip. Next up: Arkansas. We decided to stop at a 1912 neoclassical-style courthouse in Osceola. THAT is the kind of randomness but significance I am talking about! Tennessee: Graceland. Much more obvious, but absolutely a historic site and museum that people the world over flock to, as the home of Elvis. Mississippi: The state capitol building and complex in Jackson - stopping at state capitol buildings has since become a semi-regular theme on road trips, and while I certainly spent a lot of time at them (heck, I lived within a mile of the WI capitol complex in Madison for 3+ years) before, they have more or less become an institution on road trips since stopping in Jackson. In Louisiana, suffice it to say we covered a TON of New Orleans. On the return, in addition to spending more time in Memphis, we also did the St. Louis Arch as well as the Budweiser brewery to count Missouri. All told? Illinois, Iowa, Missouri, Arkansas, Tennessee, Mississippi, and Louisiana. Five of those seven states were new for me, and much like the 2005 road trip, taking a chunk of these out for cheap in quick time was really appealing to me.

Okay, so at this point I had taken a couple of big road trips, and a number of smaller ones, but still had some gaping holes in the map. When did reaching all 50 states before turning 25 become practical? While tough to pinpoint exactly, I would say that upon returning from Europe in July 2010, I realized I wanted to take a truly massive road trip, broken up by writing my dissertation for my MSc. Within a week of arriving home, and knowing that I could never truly write my dissertation with the focus it needed by staying at home, I decided to write it from Arizona. I drove there - and back, the long way. While the details can find themselves in another post, from a state standpoint, it went: Illinois, Missouri, Kansas, Oklahoma, Texas, New Mexico, Arizona, Nevada, Utah, Wyoming, South Dakota, Nebraska, Iowa, Illinois. Of those, seven states were new, and in total upon completing the trip in August 2010, I had been to 42 states. That is the point where I consciously decided that not only could I reach all 50 before turning 25, but that I was going to.

Since then, I did Alaska (43) in October 2010, Montana (44) in December 2010, Oregon (45) in July 2011, and North Dakota (46) in September 2011. Currently, I have four remaining: Alabama, North Carolina, South Carolina, and West Virginia. They are all doable in a single trip, and I plan to knock them out by April at the latest.

For the continents, it is much simpler. I was born in and have spent the vast majority of my life in North America (for the book - Chapter 1), first visited and then ultimately spent over a year living in Europe (Chapter 2), next ventured off to the Middle East, geographically Asia and then later returned a few more times (Chapter 3), did a two week alternate break trip in South America (Chapter 4), a week sightseeing trip via London to Africa (Chapter 5), and a week trip via LAX to Australia (Chapter 6). Antarctica, as has been mentioned already in this post and quite a lot recently, is in a month (Chapter 7).

For the book idea, I have been thinking of it for awhile now, and as a concept, it served as a large bit of the inspiration for getting this blog going again. Moving forward, there should be a healthy amount of book-related thoughts spewing out. Special credit for encouragement, however, goes to Matthew Kalkman, a good friend of mine from LSE days. Randomly, we literally lived next door to each other in our Bankside flats, and while not in the same academic program, we were in an Environmental class together. With that as inspiration, we traveled to Copenhagen for the COP 15 together, which was an awesome experience across the board. The fact that the Blackhawks beat his Canucks (he's from British Columbia) in May was just that much better. In any case, since he graduated from LSE last December, he has been writing a book on New Liberalism, which has been published! I eagerly anticipate reading his book and encourage all of you to buy a copy!!!

In other "my friends are doing awesome things" news, a good friend from wayyyyyyyyy back in 3BC/Beber overnight camp days (1999-2000ish), who has always been an excellent singer, has tried out for Glee and is getting a great online response. I highly encourage you to check out her audition video and "like" it!

Also this week - a few awesome updates on the home front!

1) I am running again! Did 3 miles on Friday, 4.5 on Sunday, 3 on Tuesday, and going to do 2 this afternoon. My feet feel great, even with the work done a couple weeks back (they actually feel better than ever, which was the entire point of course). It feels phenomenal to be back out there running and working out, and my sleep and mental health are better (as well as physically, obviously) within just a week. Short-term goal is the 10K Turkey Trot at home, 2 weeks from today! Medium-term goal is the 13.1 Surf City Half Marathon in Huntington Beach, one of the best races (ranked) in the world. It's also the last race I need to run to get the special tri-cities medal, for completing Orange County, Long Beach, and Surf City consecutively. I'm 2/3 of the way there! Long-term, I think running the Chicago Marathon would be just awesome next year - we'll see how the healing progresses and make a decision in the next few months. :)

2) Solar panels arrived!!!

Here they are, sitting on my ledge outside in the sun in the late-afternoon. There are two, 2-watt solar panels with a battery and circuit breaker. All told, the package ran $100. Expensive, for sure, but a ton of fun as well!


Even in indirect sunlight, the two solar panels were able to draw enough sunlight to power my phone directly for a bit.

Yesterday they ran at almost perfect efficiency in direct sunlight throughout the day. This morning they powered my phone from 5% to 55% for about an hour, but then some clouds rolled in and they tapered off. Still, the fact that I haven't plugged in my phone since Sunday is quite awesome, and the juice I do have should last me at least throughout today. I'll probably have to plug it in tonight for the first time. If they keep working well, I'm considering buying a much larger, but still portable 15-watt solar panel from these guys. That's enough to power a cell phone fully in 1-2 hours in direct sunlight, the same speed as when you plug into the wall, and it's enough to fully power a laptop in 3-4 hours. Even in ambient light, the panel is far more powerful than 2-4 of these 2-watt panels, and seeing as I alternate laptops throughout the day, it would be cool to power them via solar as well. Interestingly, apparently it costs around 2 cents to fully charge your cell phone out of the wall. Doing the math, that means you need to charge your phone 50 times to make $1 back. Off the $100, that means 5,000 phone charges. Economically, the break-even point is about 13 years. While this is only pennies, if you start doing the math for laptops, larger panels, and larger appliances, the same is roughly true. Currently, the break-even point for solar power runs in the 10-15 year range, which, given solar panels are certified for 25-30 years, means there is a substantial amount of money to be made if done correctly. Not only is it the morally right thing to do, but there are some serious economic incentives too.



...and now for non-personal updates:

1) By far the less significant of the two, Rick Perry is a complete moron. So is Herman Cain. The GOP race is down to Romney and Paul, and if Huntsman ever gets his act together, I cede him the intelligence to stand a chance. Watching the GOP debates has been brutally painful. While I don't hide the fact that I want Obama to win, I would rather he face a serious challenger, which would elevate President Obama to act. Instead, everyone gets bogged down in a never-ending monotony of political BS.

2) By far the more significant of the two, what the hell is wrong with everyone in "Happy Valley?" In case anybody has been living under a rock since Saturday, the short story, as I see it, is as follows. [Warning: I'm not going to refrain from telling this story like it is, and it is both graphic and sickening. If you don't want to know, don't read further.]

Jerry Sandusky, the former longtime men's football assistant coach at Penn State University, under Joe Paterno, has spent the better part of the past 20 years raping at least 19 10-to-13 year old boys. He founded a non-profit dedicated to enriching the lives of young boys in need. He used his status within the organization and within Penn State to hand-pick his victims, and coerced them into all manners of rape. According to the Grand Jury Report (if you want to read all 23 pages, click here, BUT, it is extremely graphic - you have been warned), which details the rape and molestation of eight young boys, in 2002, after Sandusky had been forced to resign for "unknown" reasons, a then-28 year old graduate student assistant coach walked into the Penn State locker room to drop off a new pair of shoes. To his surprise, the shower was running and the lights were on. As he walked closer, he saw Sandusky raping the then-10 year old "victim 2." The graduate student, instead of grabbing a bat, a gun, recording any of this, or calling police, immediately took off, went to his father, who suggested he go to his boss, head coach Joe Paterno. The grad student told Coach Paterno what he saw, and never followed up by calling police or anybody else, thinking that Paterno would report as appropriate. Paterno, the following day, reported the incident to his boss, Penn State Athletic Director Tim Curley, again, without reporting anything to the police or other proper authorities. A week and a half later, Curley met directly with the grad student as well as Penn State Senior Vice President for Finance and Business, Gary Schultz, and the student reported exactly what he saw. Curley and Schultz promised to take care of it. Two weeks later, Curley and Schultz told the grad student they had taken Sandusky's locker room keys away and reported him to his own charity non-profit. Curley also reported the testimony to his boss, Penn State University President Graham Spanier. In essence, nothing further happened. Nobody reported this 2002 incident to police or child protective services, despite Curley and Schultz having a legal obligation to do so. As such, they have both been arrested and released on bail.

In addition, however, last night the Penn State University board of trustees fired Spanier and Paterno. While Spanier was never fully informed of the conduct that occurred in 2002, as President of the university embroiled in such an enormous disgrace, he is responsible for the actions of everyone. Two Penn State employees and two Penn State senior staff never reported the incident to police. Individually, that falls on the responsibility of the individuals. In sum, that falls on Spanier, and as such, despite not facing any criminal charges, he is gone. Likewise, Joe Paterno, football legend status aside, fulfilled his legal obligation to report the incident to senior staff at the institution. As such, he has not been charged with any crimes and it appears unlikely that he will be. That said, he failed the biggest moral test of his career. Joe Paterno has more authority than all of the other people in this story combined. He could have gone to police and in an instant busted this case open to serve justice. Instead, he did the absolute bare minimum, and as a result, for the past nine years, Sandusky has been raping and molesting an untold number of victims.

The fact that in 1998 Sandusky was investigated for a similar incident makes this all the more shocking and disgusting. At the time, Paterno essentially forced Sandusky to resign, which he did in 1999, without saying much as to why. In 2002, after this incident, he was forbidden from bringing children to Penn State - again, the absolute bare minimum, except in this case, because there was an eye-witness report, Curley and Schultz are unexcused, thus their arrests.

Why didn't Joe Paterno go to authorities with what he seemingly knew in 1998? Why didn't he walk the graduate student with him straight to the police the day the student told him what he saw, to file out a police report? Why didn't he follow up with Curley, Schultz, or Spanier to ensure the incident was properly followed-up on? Perhaps most shockingly - why didn't he ever address Sandusky, his longtime friend and assistant coach for decades, about the allegations? Just LAST WEEK Sandusky was reportedly working out in the Penn State locker rooms. The Grand Jury Report, which was made public on Saturday, was written from testimony in December 2010 and January 2011, almost a year ago! Surely everybody knew this was all about to be made public, and yet even so, nobody resigned, nobody acted, nobody did a damn thing to stand up for what is right. Instead, Paterno and everyone else thought they could brush it aside and it would go away. Joe could keep coaching games, the school would keep getting praise, and everyone would keep making a lot of money, selling out games and setting records. Even after all of this broke on Saturday, Paterno could have resigned, in disgrace, but at least on his own terms. Instead, he tried to one-up the board of trustees by resigning, effective at the end of the season. At least the board of trustees had the courage to stop him - better late than never.

From a social psychology standpoint, the more I've read about this case and seen it in the news, the more I think of the bystander effect. At first glance, it should have forced the graduate student to act the moment he saw something in order to intervene and assist the victim against Sandusky. That said, in wondering why the grad student and Paterno didn't act, perhaps, morally they thought they did by informing their superiors. That said, the grad student still should have gone and informed police. The fact that today he is still employed, now as a wide receivers football coach for Penn State, is surprising given the punishment dolled out to Paterno and Spanier last night. However, just today there were reports that Penn State is paying the legal team for Curley and Schultz's defense. Are you kidding me?

Lastly, a couple of points. First, to the Penn State students who rioted in State College last night, you are an absolute disgrace. While you no-doubt thought you were professing your love for former-Coach Paterno, in the end, what the world saw was a bunch of thugs defending the non-reporting of child rape by vandalizing property and inciting violence. While I have always thought, as a UW-Madison alum, that it might be fun to attend a road game in "Happy Valley," I can say with confidence that I have no desire to waste my time or money for your benefit. I have a feeling as a school, you are going to be losing a substantial number of applicants and athletes partially because of all of the allegations noted above, but more significantly, because of your pathetic tastelessness that you displayed last night. While I am aware that it was not the entire student body partaking, enough damage was done by enough people to be perceived as representing the school, and that is all it takes.

Finally, in this case, the cover-up, bad as it was, is not worse than the crime itself. There are at LEAST 19 victims. There were eight cited in the grand jury report, but since this was all made public on Saturday, police set up telephone hotlines for people to call in with tips, leads, or other reports. As of yesterday, 11 more victims came forward. These people are mentally scarred for life. They were already "at-risk" youth, felt blessed enough to find a charity to help them, and then were abused by the founder of that charity in despicable, unimaginable ways. If there is anything positive that can come from this enormous mess, perhaps it is that more victims will be able to speak out against their attackers, and the public can come to assist those in need. The next time someone witnesses something so horrific happening, after all of this, maybe they will go straight to the police. The next time someone in a leadership position hears a report of something similar, instead of doing the legal minimum, they will do everything they possibly can to help.

For some more reading on this case that I have found interesting, The Daily Beast had an interesting blog. Adam Hoge, writing for CBS Chicago but also former-UW writer at The Daily Cardinal, wrote a scathing and good summary. ESPN, who really fumbled this story out of the gate, has a great piece criticizing their sports-centric initial covering of the story, as opposed to establishing facts and reporting on the real victims. There was, however, a historical piece that really sets the facts straight while simultaneously discussing the impact on the victims.

Monday, November 7, 2011

Antarctica Teaser

BURBANK, CA -- A little teaser for everyone to enjoy, courtesy G Adventures...



Antarctica from G Adventures Culture on Vimeo.

Thursday, November 3, 2011

Five weeks


BURBANK, CA -- Since first and foremost this is a travel blog, I feel obliged to inform you of my travels over the past week, since I last updated.

Last Friday I drove down to San Diego where I picked up a High School buddy who was in town for work, and over the course of the weekend got to do the tourist thing all over Southern California. On our way back we had a spectacular afternoon in La Jolla (seals a plenty). Friday night did Flappers comedy club in downtown Burbank, followed by yet another trip to Umami Burger. I suppose this is the first time I have mentioned Umami in this blog. Suffice it to say that if you are ever in Los Angeles, or for that matter, San Francisco now, you MUST stop at the closest Umami to grab a burger. Hands down the best burger today. Not in an In-N-Out way, or for Chicago references Portillo's, but full-blown you cannot possibly find a better burger on planet earth.

Saturday was a pretty epic LA day trip. Started off at Hollywood and Highland to see the walk of fame, Kodak theater, Chinese theater, the street character actors, etc. From there drove over to Griffith Park and managed to snag a parking spot in the actual parking lot at the Griffith Observatory. For those who have been (and for those who haven't, but understand geography combined with LA air quality), we could see Catalina. Yes, from Griffith. Absolutely the clearest day up there I have seen since January. Did a walk around the building and then the inside exhibits too - all for free by the way. Don't miss this spot on a trip to LA. Afterwords we drove down Sunset through WeHo, Beverly Hills, and UCLA to the 405, flew over to Santa Monica, did the pier and the promenade, hopped on the PCH northbound through Pacific Palisades and into Malibu. Made it through town, hopped on the 23 through the mountains, and at well over a thousand feet in elevation on this tiny winding two-lane road the gas light went on. Craaaaaaaap.

We knew Thousand Oaks was only another 10 miles away, which on a highway or even a normal road wouldn't have been a big deal. That said, with the general 15-25mph speeds (which aren't very efficient), the winding roads, and worst, the elevation changes, it got a little hairy. Ended up making it to a gas station probably with no more than 5 miles to spare. The tank reading was the lowest I have ever seen it. Phew. Hopped on the 101 and did Burbank again in the evening.

Sunday morning headed over to lovely Pasadena, grabbed some crepes, packed up, In-N-Out just because, and then over to LAX. For all of 48 hours in total, we covered some serious ground, had a great time, and really managed to successfully pack it in.

Of the many conversations over the weekend, one that is related to travel that I think specifically applies for this blog relates to the mentality of travel, and the opportunities that are out there to take advantage of. On the one hand, the fact that my friend had spent the prior two weeks working in Puerto Rico and San Diego is an example of figuring it out - getting a job that allows (and more-or-less ensures) travel is phenomenal. Then, when finding out he'd be flying back Friday, I tried convincing him to spend the weekend and fly back on Sunday instead. He looked it up, and with the fare change combined with the ticket change fee, it was another $250 that he'd have to pay out-of-pocket. He was mulling over it when one of his coworkers flat-out said it. "If someone offered you a weekend in LA right now for $250, would you take it?" Absolutely yes, no hesitation. Well, that day he booked it. Unquestionably worth it. My advice: the next time you have an opportunity to travel, take advantage of it in a similar mentality.

Also on travel lines, yesterday I spent my day working down in San Diego. I love that city and love getting down there. It's nice to get into the office and see everyone, and I love the progress Nextivity is making. I also love the drive, down I-5 along the ocean and then up I-15 through the mountains. Breathtaking and it's not something you get used to.

As for my two upcoming trips, I'm heading back home to Chicago for Thanksgiving two weeks and two days from today. Much bigger than that, I am off on my epic adventure to Buenos Aires, Ushuaia, and Antarctica FIVE weeks from today!!! Spent a lot of time on the phone last night talking with a friend who went on the same ship during the same window last year, and her advice has been invaluable. More details on this trip will appear as we get closer, but for now, my plan is to head home with an empty suitcase, and use a lot of my fishing gear I have accumulated over the years of my Arctic circle expeditions and then make a trip to get whatever is left in the last week or two before travel.


In non-travel news, long-time readers know there has always been mention of hockey in this space. At a specific level, I usually mention the Blackhawks. The season has just started, but they are tearing up a storm so far. We'll see how things stand in another month - usually December is a good indicator of how the regular season will end up. Tonight they play in Florida and tomorrow night in Tampa Bay; here's hoping for a couple of good games.

The real reason I wanted to bring up hockey though, was to direct you to a couple of my favorite blogs on the net, both hockey related. From a hardcore insider Blackhawks fan perspective laced with a solid amount of hockey humor, check out Blackhawks Down Low. A sample from their game recap after the Hawks beat Nashville:

I wouldn't say the Hawks dominated the third period, but they definitely controlled the flow of play. Kane picked up his second goal of the night just five minutes in. When you have Hossa, Sharp, and Kane coming in 3-on-2, there should be a congressional subcommittee investigating for unfair competitive advantages.

The Hawks are tenth in the NHL in goals against. Edmonton is in first and they're allowing less than two goals per game on the back of Khabibulin. Yeah, THAT will last reaaaaalllll long.

If the season were to end today, everybody would be wondering what the hell happened to the other 71 games we were promised.

From an overall NHL and even just hockey in general standpoint, the best blog for the past decade, by a LONGSHOT, is the John Buccigross "Bucci Blogumn" on ESPN. This week the Blogumn is a tribute to Blink-182, going through the track list of their first album and finding ways to relate the lyrics to hockey. Do yourself a favor. Add this blog to your reading list - it is very simply the best. A sample:

Blink-182 is fast, ferocious, funny, profound, profane, vulgar, touching, honest, insecure, self-effacing, violent and fun. If there is a band that shares adult North American hockey's true DNA, it is this one. There is little difference between a Blink mosh pit and a game-ending hockey scrum in front of the net in a one-goal game.

Track 9: "Kaleidoscope"

It's the first time I'm worried
Of a bad dream, of a journey
On the highway, through the valley
It's a long road through the night

November is here and still no Sidney Crosby. It's now been 10 months since Crosby last played. There is no rush to bring him back since the Penguins -- and the Steelers -- are in first place, and there seems to be little outcry from Penguins season-ticket holders, suite owners and sponsors and the revenue generators to ask for more transparency. Why isn't he playing? Is the team being ultra-extra cautious? Does he still have an injury? Is the plan to give him one full month of training camp-like work after he is cleared to play?

The game needs him, not only for his brilliant artistry, but also because he is one of the more hated players in certain rinks. Every theatrical performance needs a villain. Jonathan Toews will never be hated unless he starts slew-footing schoolchildren at Greater Detroit bus stops.


Well, there you have it. All is well here in Southern California. Still plenty of 80 degree days and I haven't seen a cloud in weeks. Life is good. Work is good. Hawks are good. I got a couple of solar panels a few days back. They shipped yesterday. Looking forward to their arrival and to see what I can do with them in this weather.

Also, as has been documented on my facebook profile, last week I had a procedure done on my feet. Had my post-op checkup on Tuesday and am cleared to run today. May go out and do a quick 2-3 miles to see how it goes this afternoon. Thus the inspirational photo above, taken during the Orange County Half Marathon May 1, 2011. Did Long Beach about 1 month ago, and the goal now is to do Surf City on February 5, 2012! Training starts in 2 weeks.

Have a good one everybody!