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    Will Friday Night Lights burn out or fade away?

    Tuesday, February 12, 2008, 7:36 PM [General]

    Now that the writers are officially back (congrats, and welcome) life can finally get back to normal. We can stop reading books again, get back to eating our dinners from a TV tray and start petitioning networks not to cancel one of the best shows currently running.

    Of course we're talking about Friday Night Lights here. Who isn't? Thanks to some negative off the cuff comments from NBC exec Ben Silverman and the news that last Friday's episode represented the last the cast and crew were able to complete prior to the writer's strike and you have a lot of people realizing all at once that they may have seen the last of the Taylors, Riggins, Garrity, et al.

    And, as much as I want to see it continue, I'm not entirely convinced the quick death isn't the best available fate. That's how much I like the show, but that wasn't always the case.

    While there were a number of noteworthy critics lauding Friday Night Lights from the pilot episode, I gave the show a rather tepid but hopeful review after one episode. While relying too heavily on the precedents set by the book and the movie, I wrote the following:

    "No longer set in 1988, the school is now the fictionalized Dillon. The players, while drawing heavily on their real-life models, aren't real either. The super-quick cuts and Explosions in the Sky soundtrack are carried over from the film, but at this point the topic isn't new...It's become hyper-realistic, so bizarrely true that we don't even notice anymore."

    I was wrong. The characters have revealed a depth that puts any reality show star to shame, the very people who are supposed to be real, relatable. Tim Riggins, in the 30-plus episodes we've seen thus far, has easily become the most compelling character on television, drinking pitchers before practice, yearning desperately for the girl who has made the breaks he's never been able to catch. (And his hair reminds women of Jesus, so there's that.)

    Up against American Idol for most of its first season, FNL struggled for viewers. Websites started sprouting up in support of the show and, after some deliberation, NBC renewed it for a second season. On Friday nights.

    As many predicted, the crappy time slot put the show in an almost impossible position. It's tough to draw viewers on a night when there aren't any and even the critical approval of sports-culture figureheads like Bill Simmons and Chuck Klosterman can't replace the ad revenue that the show apparently cannot deliver. We're not making art here, we're pushing product and if the latter coincides with the former all the better. If not? There's always My Dad is Better than Your Dad.

    Which brings us to the very real possibility that last week's mid-season ending was the ending. As fans of the show we've already been granted a death row reprieve once, the odds for a second in showbiz are about as long as Tim Street impregnating a beautiful and understanding waitress.

    If that's the case, however, I am prepared to let the show go. Cruelly cutting the cord, considering the circumstances behind it and the public support against it, would only serve to make the show even more memorable.

    This isn't a particularly profound or unique thought. You could have your pick of clich

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    BOss of the Plains

    Sunday, December 2, 2007, 8:46 PM [General]

    William Jennings Bryan's title is safe. Bo Pelini, while certainly young for his position, will likely never inspire any title as grandiose as the "Boy Orator of the Platte" but I think that's sort of the point.

    We had a guy not too long ago who had perfected the art of saying something without saying anything at all. A smooth, slick and ultimately meaningless answer was always at the ready. Few men can talk football better than Bill Callahan, which made Pelini's press conference, where he was visibly nervous and even bought himself some time on a few questions with a "how do you mean" or two, that much more refreshing.

    This isn't a coach who likes talking about football, this is a coach who loves coaching football. It's possible that this worried a few Nebraskan's as they tuned in Sunday and it's possible that it will worry a few more down the road but if I had to characterize Pelini's persona today there's a word that comes immediately to mind: Nebraskan.

    Chuck Klosterman wrote perhaps my favorite passage regarding the Midwestern ethos while describing his upbringing in North Dakota in Fargo Rock City:

    "...what this culture lacked (and still lacks) is an emphasis on ideas--especially ideas that don't serve a practical, tangible purpose. In North Dakota, life is about work. Everything is based on working hard, regardless of what it earns you. If you're spending a lot of time mulling over the state of the universe (or even the state of your own life), you're obviously not working. You probably need to get back to work."

    Swap Nebraska for North Dakota in that passage and you have the perfect description of where I grew up and I couldn't help but think of it while watching Pelini undergo his first Q&A session as Nebraska's head coach. For some people, most of the people I knew back in Nebraska, talking about working is a lot more difficult than actually working. Pelini seems to be one of those people and those people are typically the ones you want working beside you.

    In my mind, Bo left that press conference, immediately removed his tie like a young boy after Christmas Eve mass, put on a grey sweatshirt and started calling recruits. More likely, he probably had a nice dinner with his family, watched to see where LSU would land and then went to bed but the important thing here is perception and in the end it came down to this: Pelini may not be polished behind a mike but he already feels like one of us.

    My favorite part of the press conference came after it was officially over. Dr. Tom had already stepped in and delivered the "one more question" decree and then there was Pelini, sort of looking around wondering if it was actually over. Somebody suggested a family photo and then a employee of the athletic department walked in front of the podium and asked Bo if he'd like a hat.

    "Yeah, the white one," the 28th head football coach at Nebraska said before exiting stage left.

    Good choice. The good guys always wear white hats.
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    Pederson Out as NU AD

    Monday, October 15, 2007, 1:58 PM [General]

    The embattled Nebraska AD was officially ousted this afternoon at 2:15 p.m. according to the Lincoln Journal-Star.

    Chancellor Harvey Perlman was quoted as saying:

    "We are of course disappointed about the progress in our football program. Steve has done many positive things for Husker athletics during his tenure but I think only new leadership can objectively assess the state of our program and make the decisions necessary to move us forward."

    Perlman is scheduled to speak to the media at 4:oo p.m.

    Read the full press release here.

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