national grouch day
If Halloween gives license to be scared, today's greeting-card holiday is an excuse to be just plain scary. Oct. 15 is National Grouch Day, the singular 24-hour period each year when having a case of "the Mondays" is not merely allowed, but encouraged.
Although the pill purveyors might disagree, experts say there's good reason to celebrate the walking, talking rain clouds of the world -- if only for a day.
"When you look at the complexity of modern everyday life, the temptation is to be completely cynical," says Robert J. Thompson, a professor of popular culture at Syracuse University in New York.
Grumpy girl.
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Font:****"Yet, most of us, for whatever reason -- manners, or wanting to be liked, or how we were brought up - generally don't feel comfortable expressing that disdain all the time. So, in some ways, the grouch is the cultural mercenary we hire to say all the things we're thinking."
This phenomenon is most evident in the popularity of the anti-hero on television, where such ornery characters as Dr. Gregory House, Grey's Anatomy's Dr. Miranda "the Nazi" Bailey, and American Idol's Simon Cowell have emerged as surly stars in a cast of fluorescent smiles and pleasant platitudes.
"When you see someone who's really grouchy, you get this urge to cheer them up. It's just like seeing a wounded animal you want to nurse back to health," Thompson says of the TV characters' appeal.
"Real-life grouches are much less lovable. They're grumpy, they bring the temperature of the room down, they see the dark side of everything, and they don't have any scriptwriters to redeem them in the end."
Karen Tober, a receptionist from Edmonton, confesses that she's "a natural born grouch" who's been known to complain that the sun is too bright. But after realizing the negative impact her gloomy outlook was having on those around her, she began making a change.
"While one of my favourite creatures on TV is House, I certainly don't think it fitting to celebrate his nasty attitude," says Tober. "On TV, it seems to inspire the folks around him to rise to a higher level. In the world around us, I'm not sure it has the same effect."
For many Canadians of a certain age, their baptismal splash of snark came courtesy of Oscar the Grouch. Sesame Street's trash-can-dwelling Muppet, who incidentally inspired National Grouch Day, may be the most prominent example of how society is taught to humour those with little humour.
"The characters (on Sesame Street) could be viewed as deliberate attempts to foster appreciations for different types of personalities in real life," says Richard Graham, chair of the children's TV division of the Popular Culture Association.
"Oscar exemplifies what psychologists call oppositional defiant disorder. He's the archetype that teaches children to tolerate this kind of individualist in society."
It seems fitting then, that a real-life sourpuss informed Oscar the Grouch. The story goes that Jim Henson and a friend went to a Manhattan restaurant -- varyingly recounted as either 'Oscar's Salt of the Sea' or 'Oscar's Tavern' -- where they were waited on by a server so grumpy as to be comical.
According to the book Sesame Street Unpaved, Henson and his companion were so amused by the man's behaviour that they made trips to Oscar's a regular form of "masochistic entertainment ... and their waiter forever became immortalized as the world's most famous grouch."
College football usually produces drama that builds over the course of the season. It's why we like sports. Hollywood pays millions to try to recreate that kind of tension.
There is drama -- USC and Texas doing a four-month tango; Ohio State and Michigan moving inexorably toward their November rivalry with the added weight of BCS implications -- and there is what college football has produced through seven weeks this season.
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Kentucky's Steve Johnson caught the game-winner in OT to knock off No. 1 LSU.
There is drama, and there is anarchy. Dramatic tension? Forget it. In cinematic terms, this is the Marx Brothers.
On the day that the first BCS standings arrive in our inbox, this mishmash of a title race might be "Duck Soup," and it might be a dog's breakfast. In mid-October, the easiest way to figure out who remains in the national championship race usually is to count the unbeaten teams. There are six: Ohio State, South Florida, Boston College, Arizona State, Kansas and Hawaii.
Take a good, long look, and when you ask yourself whether there are two teams in that bunch that will play for the national championship, you willl start to count the remaining one-loss teams. Don't bother; I've done it for both of us. There are 15.
Pardon the skepticism, which might be nothing more than the product of snobbery shacking up with tradition. If ever there has been a season to throw out the old rules, it is this one. After all, we've spent the first half of the season throwing out the old teams.
In Nebraska, they are wearing black shirts for quite a different reason. At USC, the coaching "genius" of Pete Carroll is looking more every week like the byproduct of having had the athletic Matt Leinart and Reggie Bush in the same backfield. The same goes at Texas, where Mack Brown and the Longhorns have resumed their pre-Vince Young habits of being almost good enough to contend.
A week ago, after a stirring fourth-quarter comeback, LSU appeared to be a team among boys. I had the call-off-the-season-and-send-the-rings-to-Baton-Rouge column written in my head.
Then came Lexington, where Tigers coach Les Miles, like college men who have fumbled through Saturday nights for generations, had a hot date and lost its number.
Charles Scott carried five times for 91 yards and two touchdowns in the first half. He got two carries for 2 yards in the second, the final carry coming on the last play of the game. Scott finished a yard short on fourth-and-2. Kentucky won 43-37 and gave life to a whole new class of BCS contenders.
The new rule is, there are no rules. At least in one half of the BCS equation, anyway. Ohio State hasn't played anyone, thanks to a Big Ten that has laid down its arms and withdrawn its troops from the national battlefield. The Buckeyes can't claim even a nonconference victory over No. 2 Texas, the badge they waved as they traipsed through their daisy-strewn schedule a year ago.
But it is Ohio State, and it continues to play by the aforementioned old rules accorded to the traditional powers. The rest of the BCS standings look like the White House on the day that newly inaugurated Andrew Jackson threw open its doors to the public. Mud spattered everywhere, people climbing over furniture, the common folk taking over the house of the most powerful.
Sounds about right. As Groucho sang in "Duck Soup," "If you think this country's bad off now, just wait till I get through with it!" LAWRENCE, Kan. -- No opponent has been able to slow down Kansas during its 6-0 start.
The No. 15 Jayhawks rank seventh in the country with more than 515 yards of offense per game and second with more than 50 points per contest. The Kansas defense has been just as good, limiting opponents to 240 yards per game and 9.5 points per contest, which rank fourth and second in Division I-A, respectively.
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Kansas has been running away from opponents pretty easily all season.
The Jayhawks finally slowed down in Saturday's game against Baylor at Memorial Stadium, but it had nothing to do with the Bears.
The game was delayed twice by lightning after a very strong system of thunderstorms rolled through the area early Saturday. Kickoff was delayed nearly two hours until 2:15 p.m. ET, and the teams endured another 30-minute delay after lightning struck near the stadium late in the first quarter.
By the end of the five-hour, three-minute contest, lightning also had struck more than a few times for Kansas in its 58-10 demolition of Baylor in front of a crowd of 43,556.
"This was a new experience for me," Kansas coach Mark Mangino said. "I have never been a part of it. It was unchartered waters for us."
The Jayhawks' fast start also is uncharted waters for Mangino, whose team is off to its best start since a 7-0 record to begin the 1995 season. Kansas has won nine of its past 10 games as it heads into consecutive road games at Colorado and Texas A&M.
"We're just a better football team in all areas," Mangino said. "We are better physically. We are better assignment-wise. We are a little bit more mature and mentally tougher than we were a year ago."
The Jayhawks showed their maturity by not letting a lesser opponent and the weather delays affect their focus.
Mangino said some players slept during the delays, while others listened to music on their iPods or read game programs.
"I was concerned in the second half about the kids wearing down a little bit, but they didn't," Mangino said. "They were very focused. I thought they handled it very well. We didn't make a big deal about it. The reason why we didn't is because we don't plan for rain delays in football. We plan for everything, but we hadn't planned for a rain delay."
A Running StartBy Tim Griffin, Special To ESPN.com
LUBBOCK, Texas -- Strong defense always has been an afterthought during coach Mike Leach's tenure at Texas Tech.
The program built its national reputation on a high-powered aerial attack, with the Red Raiders' defense lost in the shuffle over the years.
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The Texas Tech defense has stepped up its play over the past few games, shutting down Texas A&M on Saturday.
But that has appeared to be changing over the past few weeks. Tech has responded to the fiery teachings of interim defensive coordinator Ruffin McNeill, who has stamped the team with an aggressive, swarming philosophy since taking over after Lyle Setencich stepped down Sept. 23.
McNeill appears to have lit a fire under the Red Raiders, as seen in a dynamic effort in the Red Raiders' 35-7 victory over Texas A&M on Saturday.
The fire is hot enough that even though Tech quarterback Graham Harrell blistered the Aggies for 425 passing yards and three touchdown passes, Tech fans chanted McNeill's name as he left the field at Jones AT&T Stadium.
"They probably had a little bit too much to drink," McNeill said, chuckling. "I love our [fans], but they were chanting my name, a big ol' guy? An ol' school, half-bald guy? They must have been talking about a different Ruffin."
The Red Raiders have strung together three big defensive games since McNeill was named the interim coordinator. During that period, the Red Raiders have allowed opponents 257 yards and 10.3 points per game. Under Setencich, the Red Raiders were allowing 405.5 yards and 28.3 points per game. Those struggles were punctuated in a 49-45 loss to Oklahoma State in which Tech was gashed for 366 rushing yards and 610 total yards.
"We've always had this mentally, but coach Ruff has got it out of us," safety Joe Garcia said. "During practice the last three weeks, it's totally changed our defense. We're more intense, and we run and swarm to the ball. Then we try to do it on the field. The intensity by coach Ruff has been excellent."
The attitude change was visible Saturday against the Aggies. After spotting them a quick touchdown on their first drive, the Red Raiders did not permit A&M any points on its final 10 possessions of the game.
"I think the energy has picked up," Leach said. "Our team is starting to realize that it takes all the components working together to be a good team."
Top 10 WipeoutBy Brett Edgerton, ESPN.com
Remember that preseason AP Top 10? Scrap it. It's time to start all over. It's only mid-October, and not a single team in that group is unblemished. Since the preseason poll began in 1950, this marks the earliest date on the calendar that every preseason Top 10 team has had at least one loss. In fact, Ohio State, winner of a school-record 25 consecutive regular season games, is the only undefeated team left from the preseason Top 20. The only other unbeatens are South Florida, Boston College, Kansas, Arizona State and Hawaii, none of which has ever played in a BCS bowl.
Top 5 Losing To Unranked,
Past Three Weeks
No. 3 Oklahoma 27-24 at Colorado
No. 4 Florida 20-17 vs. Auburn
No. 2 USC 24-23 vs. Stanford
No. 5 Wisconsin 31-26 at Illinois
No. 2 Cal 31-28 vs. Oregon State
The madness has been especially rampant recently. In the first four weeks of the season, exactly one Top 10 team lost every Saturday. Over the past three weeks, however, a whopping 11 of them have gone down, including seven to unranked teams. Five of those seven unranked shockers have come on the road.
And this isn't a bunch of fringe teams that rotate in and out of the Top 10 losing. In the past three weeks, half the Top 5 teams that played (7 of 14 teams) lost, including five to unranked teams. To put that last number in perspective, a total of six unranked teams beat Top 5 opponents over the previous two seasons combined. Throw in Appalachian State's stunner at Michigan -- the one that started it all -- and we're already at six, with nearly half the season still to go.
Want another hard-to-believe note from Saturday? LSU became the first AP No. 1 team in nearly four years to lose in the regular season, dating back to Oklahoma getting swamped by Kansas State in the 2003 Big 12 title game. The previous top-ranked team to lose before November was Florida under Steve Spurrier in 2001.
Rolling Up Impressive NumbersBy Adam Rittenberg, Special To ESPN.com
EVANSTON, Ill. -- The video-game numbers suggest a degree of effortlessness.
But if there's a way to make 990 passing yards, nine touchdowns, no interceptions and a ridiculous 74.5 percent completion rate look difficult, Northwestern quarterback C.J. Bacher found it the past two weeks.
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Northwestern quarterback C.J. Bacher has had a couple of days for the records books.
Bacher followed a school-record 520-yard passing performance against Michigan State with a 470-yard splurge Saturday against Minnesota. His two-week passing total is the second-highest in Big Ten history behind former Purdue quarterback Drew Brees (1,016 yards against Minnesota and Wisconsin in 1998). The 6-foot-2 junior now occupies the first and third lines on Northwestern's single-game passing yards list and the third and fifth spots on the single-game total offense list.
The statistics are staggering, but how Bacher collected them is more impressive. He led Northwestern to back-to-back overtime victories in defense-optional scorefests, keeping a bowl game in the team's viewfinder. Against Michigan State, he converted nine third downs of 6 yards or longer, firing touchdown passes on third-and-15, third-and-7 and third-and-6.
The burden was even greater Saturday as Northwestern fell behind 35-14 with 6:18 left in the third quarter. But Bacher completed all seven of his pass attempts in the third quarter and twice converted on fourth-and-goal in the fourth quarter, wrong-footing the defense on a 6-yard option keeper and finding Eric Peterman for the tying 4-yard score with eight seconds left in regulation.
"There were a couple points in the game where I felt like there was no way we could be stopped," Bacher said, "no matter who was on the other side of the ball."
Bacher wasn't done, slinging a first-down strike to Ross Lane on a do-or-die fourth-and-4 in the first overtime. In the second overtime, his pass fake held the defense long enough for Brandon Roberson to score the final touchdown.
"When we're in the huddle, we look at him and we know everything's going to be all right when he's standing there," Peterman said. "That's the role he's taken on for this offense and for this team."
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