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Lary Bloom

Writer, Editor, Teacher

The Bloom Blog


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Monday, November 13, 2006

Sonic Boo

The good citizens of Seattle have rejected a measure that would have revamped its basketball arena with public funds. And so the Supersonics apparently will move elsewhere.

Rick Horrow must feel, this morning, like George W. Bush. Rick is the marketing genius who over a 20-year period convinced city fathers and mothers around the country to float bonds or hike taxes in the short term in order to support such projects. How he did this was fascinating -- I watched him do it, as we worked together on his memoir, When The Game Is On The Line.

Rick retains no doubt that such funding is critical to a city's economic development. This argument has been challenged widely. Critics argue that the numbers Rick produces are suspect, and that very rich men who own sports franchises ought to finance their arenas.

Seattle, as it turns out, is something of an anomaly. It is one of the few cities that have demonstrated this hardline approach -- and this only after one of the world's richest men, Paul Allen, had the gumption to ask citizens to help him finance a home for his pro football team, the Seahawks.

As with every issue, the wisdom is somewhere in the middle. The Hartford Whalers, a team I once supported, brought revenue to downtown Hartford. How much revenue was probably overstated. But Hartford, in those days, was a destination. When it lost the Whalers to that traditional hotbed of hockey, North Carolina, it also lost a part of its indentity and fervor, and hasn't yet recovered.

Cities like Seattle, however, don't have as much at stake. It matters not whether it has a world-class sports team -- Seattle has its great downtown market and living community, Boeing and Microsoft, a spectacular natural setting, and attracts tens of thousands of young people who could care less about who is good at dunking a basketball.

And yet, for Rick, who seems to live a charmed life, this will all work out. He convinced the citizens of Oklahoma City to build an arena on spec -- and it just may be the place where the Sonics find their home.

Posted by:Lary Bloom at 6:13 AM  

Tuesday, November 07, 2006

The Party Line

A long line at the polling place this morning -- so pleased to be waiting in it. The kind of line usually reserved for presidential years. But then, in a way, this is a presidential year -- a year in which citizens are doing something in addition to to pulling a lever in support of this one or that for the Senate or Governor's office or Legislature. There are larger issues at stake including the consuming matter of what kind of country we want to be. What do you think?

Posted by:Lary Bloom at 8:29 AM  

Wednesday, November 01, 2006

An Explanation

My dentist pointed out that this blog has been idle since May. I've heard this from others too, including a former student of mine who has found fruitful work as a reporter in Alaska. A writer in the midwest wonders what gives.

What gives is information and opinion overload. Not my condition. Our collective condition. There is a blog clog, and I am not eager to contribute to the pollution.

What moves me at this point to return, if only briefly, is to urge you to do what only you can do --cast a ballot in your name. If you're like me, just before you pull the lever or mark the card, or push the electronic button, your senses are heightened -- and, for a moment, you become overwhelmed by the responsibility. We may all argue in polite company, and even with ourselves, over how much our vote counts. Ut counts plenty. It says what you are made of.

We are all responsible for the acts of outrage our country commits, particularly if we don't stand up for our points of view.

Posted by:Lary Bloom at 9:13 AM  

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