Tag: Remember

  • Teammates, managers, opponents remember Rickey Henderson


    Late in Rickey Henderson’s career, his Seattle Mariners teammate Mike Cameron would reach for the bus microphone as the team lumbered from airports to hotels, and he read aloud some of the recent achievements of his fellow players from the media relations notes.

    Maybe someone was about to hit a round number — 400 career RBIs, 500 strikeouts. In comparison, though, Henderson’s numbers were otherworldly, Cameron recalled. It was as if Henderson were an alien designed to play the earthly game called baseball, and to look great doing it.

    During Henderson’s 25-year career, he played 3,141 games with 671 teammates, for 15 managers, against 3,099 opponents. Henderson’s prolific production is indelible: The goal of the sport is to score the most runs, and Henderson did that 2,295 times — more than anyone, ever.

    And yet as incredible as Henderson was for his accomplishments as a player — for stealing a record 1,406 bases, for hitting with power, for his physicality — he was almost as renowned for his personality, his style, his irrepressible confidence and devotion to each game.

    Henderson died on Dec. 20, five days shy of his 66th birthday, and this Saturday, he will be honored in a celebration of life at the Oakland Arena.

    Those who knew him are saturated with stories about the Hall of Famer, about his devotion to excellence, his acumen, his persona and those moments when he transcended the sport. “The legend of Rickey Henderson still lives on through the numbers of the game,” Cameron said, “and the legendary stories.”

    Here are just a few.


    The art of the steal

    In 1988 — although similar conversations undoubtedly took place throughout the 1980s, a decade in which Henderson wrecked conventional managerial strategy — then-Baltimore Orioles manager Frank Robinson said before a game in Oakland that he told pitchers and catchers to not even bother attempting to keep Henderson from running if he got on base.

    “Why should we even try to throw him out? We’re never going to get him, and we might throw it away trying to get him,” Robinson said. “Don’t even try to get him. He’s too good.”

    Of course, Henderson walked to start the first inning that day, and stole second … without a throw.

    Former Texas Rangers manager Bobby Valentine landed similarly. “We used to talk about two outs, nobody on, ninth-place hitter at the plate,” Valentine said of a hypothetical game situation. “Walk him, hit him, let him get on first base [in front of Henderson] because it just wasn’t fair when Rickey got on first and no one was on in front of him. It wasn’t fair to the catcher.”

    “He was unbelievable in the ’80s. Oh God. Rickey stopped the game with everything he did. He stopped it walking to the plate. He stopped it when he’d take a pitch. He stopped it when he hit a pitch. He stopped it when he got on base. He was wonderful to watch, except when you knew he was beating your ass.”

    Manager Tony La Russa had Henderson in his dugout across seven seasons — but also saw from across the diamond.

    “I managed my first 10 years against Rickey, and managing against Rickey was terrorizing. You care about winning the game, as we all do, you were so nervous in a close game, a one-run game, up one, down one, tie game, and in my lifetime, the most dangerous player of our time was Rickey Henderson. He had this miniscule strike zone. If you threw it in there, he’d hit it. If you didn’t throw it in there, he’d walk, and it was a triple. He would walk, steal second and third and score on a weak ground ball. We called them Rickey Runs.”

    Cameron had always been a base stealer in his rise to the majors and felt he understood the art, but Henderson gave him a more enhanced view. With a right-hander on the mound, Cameron had been taught to look for the collapsing right leg as the first move. Henderson narrowed that focus: the back heel. With left-handers, watch the left shoulders.

    Raúl Ibañez recalled how Henderson seemed to have the tell on every pitcher’s pickoff — some bit of body language that betrayed whether the pitcher was going to throw the ball to the plate, or to first base. And if a pitcher appeared whom Henderson had never seen before, he would go to the end of the first base dugout and watch until he found the tell.

    If Henderson played in this era, former manager Buck Showalter said, “with the rules we have now, he would steal 200 bases. … There was a science to what he was doing, he knew exactly how many steps it took to reach second base. And you never knew when he was going. Runners always have a slight bend to the knee right before they were going. Rickey’s knee never buckled. He’s the only one I’ve ever seen who was like that.”

    La Russa noted, “They did everything they could to not let him beat them. He was a marked man. All the different strategies to beat him — waiting him out, slowing him down on the bases — he defeated all of them. People tried to intimidate him. My favorite phrase is the one I used years ago: ‘You can’t scare him. You can’t stop him.’”


    How he saw the game — on and off the field

    Henderson’s stance at the plate was unique, a low crouch that turned his theoretical strike zone into the size of a QR code. “I just remember how difficult it was to make a tough pitch to him with his small strike zone,” All-Star pitcher Roger Clemens said.

    Cameron once asked him how he could hit so well from that stance. “That’s how Rickey see the game,” Henderson replied. “I see the game small.”

    Everything Henderson did on the field came with his own trademark style. When he thought he hit a home run, he’d pull the top of his jersey — pop it. He ran low to the ground, moving with peak efficiency, and slid headfirst, like a jet landing on the deck of an aircraft carrier. He’d catch routine fly balls swiping his glove like a windshield wiper.

    And the panache carried off the diamond, too. Cameron recalled how Henderson always walked into the clubhouse beautifully attired. Dress slacks, silk dress shirt tucked in. When Cameron and teammates went to Henderson’s room to play cards or dominoes, he would greet them at the door wearing the hotel robe and slippers.

    “He had his flair,” La Russa said, talking about the time he managed against him. “It didn’t bother me as long as it was normal and natural. What bothered me is when he would get on first, steal second and third, and score on a ground ball. That’s what bothered me.

    “His schooling was limited,” La Russa continued. “He did not have a classic education. He talked in the third person. People did not understand. Rickey’s IQ is not just a baseball IQ. Rickey is a very intelligent guy. If you’re around him, you realize how smart he is.”

    Henderson didn’t talk a lot during games. “He might’ve talked to the umpires more than [to] anyone else,” Mariners teammate Alex Rodriguez noted. And his interaction with the umpires was more of a monologue, as longtime umpire Dale Scott remembered. If Henderson disagreed with a strike call, he was apt to say: “Rickey don’t like that pitch.” Then he would move on and concentrate on the next pitch.

    Henderson was ejected 11 times over his long career, and nine of those were about disagreements over the strike zone, but he was not a serial whiner, Scott said he thought. “He never went goofy on me,” Scott said. Whether he was at the plate or on the bases, he talked to himself — maybe to push himself, maybe to heighten his focus. A pitch could be thrown outside and Henderson might say out loud, ‘Rickey’s not swinging at that.’”

    He was a challenging player to umpire, Scott recalled, because of his speed, his acute understanding of the strike zone and the way he crouched in his stance. Bill Miller, who was in his early days as an umpire as Henderson’s career neared its end, guesstimated that Henderson probably had more high strikes called on him than anyone because of his setup at the plate. When Scott worked the bases, he knew every infield ground ball hit off Henderson’s bat carried the potential of a bang-bang play at first, and every time he reached base, there were bound to be pickoffs or close safe/out calls on attempted steals, with Henderson crashing into bases to beat throws.


    ‘Fueling the machine’

    Those around Henderson were awed by his incredible physical condition and the methods he used to stay in shape.

    Tim Kurkjian once asked him how he got so strong. “You must lift weights all the time,” Kurkjian said.

    “Never lifted a weight in my life,” Henderson said. “Pushups and sit-ups. That’s all.”

    Cameron backed this up: “I never saw him lifting weights. The prison workout: Pushups and sit-ups. And a hand grip.”

    Showalter said, “I was driving home from a spring training game and I saw Rickey leaving a vegetable stand with three bags of vegetables in his arms,” Showalter said. “He took immaculate care of his body, I don’t think he ever drank. He didn’t eat at McDonald’s; he went to a vegetable stand. He was fueling the machine.”

    “He was a very physical runner and slider,” Showalter said. “He had different gears. He was like an airplane coming for a landing, leaning forward while accelerating. The end of the runway was the bag. I never saw him slide off the bag. He took a beating with all the sliding he did. Guys tried to pound him on tags. They’d block the base. He’d just smile at them as if to say, ‘You can’t hurt me.’”

    In A.J. Hinch’s rookie season, 1998, he wore No. 23 and Henderson wore 24, so they lockered next to each other. At the All-Star break, they happened to be on the same flight to Phoenix. “I hear him call out with his raspy voice and his cackle for a laugh,” he recalled. “I sit in the aisle seat in the exit row and Rickey is in the window seat. We land in Phoenix, and as we get off, Rickey asked me where I was going. I told him my girlfriend is at baggage claim, to pick me up. He said, ‘No, why are you walking? Rickey doesn’t walk. Rickey needs to save his legs.’

    “So we were there for five minutes. Ten minutes. Twenty minutes. Almost half an hour, and then a courtesy cart came to get us at the gate. He wouldn’t let me leave so he could save his legs. That was his way of teaching me to be a big leaguer.”

    La Russa said, “It is remarkable how often he stayed off the disabled list with the pounding he took. What I learned is that when Rickey said he couldn’t go, he couldn’t go. When he could feel that his legs were getting tight, they were vulnerable, he would take a day off. It wasn’t that he didn’t want to play, he knew his legs and body well enough that it was smarter to give them a day for sure. I learned to appreciate that.”

    Cameron once asked him how he could slide headfirst throughout his career without getting overwhelmed by the pounding, and Henderson held up his hands. His fingers pointed in different directions “and looked like spiderwebs,” Cameron said. “I don’t know how he hit so well, with his hands beaten up like that.”

    There was a game in that 2000 season when Henderson’s back was sore, Rodriguez recalled, and the Mariners played into the bottom of the 13th, with Henderson due to hit leadoff. “He would go an entire game and not say a word to anybody,” Rodriguez remembered. “The top of the 13th ends, and I’m hustling to the dugout to get ready to hit, and Rickey waves me down.”

    As Rodriguez related the memory, he moved into an imitation of Henderson’s distinctive voice, as so many of his teammates and friends do. “Hey, hey, Rod,” Henderson said to Rodriguez, mixing in his trademark third-person usage of his own name. “Listen — Rickey’s back hurts. I’m going to walk, and I already talked to [David Bell] — he’s going to move me over. Make sure you get me in. Rickey don’t get paid for overtime.”

    Facing a young Roy Halladay, Henderson singled. When Bell dropped a bunt, Henderson beat the throw to second. Rodriguez singled to load the bases, and then Edgar Martinez ended the game with another single. “Now that’s what I’m talking about!” Henderson said happily, as the Mariners celebrated. “Now let’s go get in the hot tub.”


    Henderson, the teammate

    When Henderson was traded from the New York Yankees back to the Oakland A’s in 1989, Henderson “was very conscious of the perception that he was not a great teammate — an ‘I/Me’ guy,” La Russa recalled. “He was very sensitive to the perception that he was egotistical. He was expressive to the point that he was all about the team. That perception was totally shot. When he came to our team, he made a great team the greatest team ever. We divided the pressure around here.

    “Talk to anyone he played with, and he played with a lot of teams, there wasn’t a superstar part of his attitude in the clubhouse, the dugout, the planes, on the buses, He was beloved. When you hear noise in the clubhouse, it was Rickey laughing, he was always in the middle of everything. That truth is not always recognized by fans. Before he played for us, I had no idea he was that way. You see all the flair. But he never played the superstar card with his teammates.”

    Henderson was traded to the Toronto Blue Jays in 1993, joining, among others, Paul Molitor. “There are guys, when you play against them, that you don’t care for them, their act or their gait,” said Molitor. “When Rickey came to Toronto, I changed 180 [degrees] with him. We had a pretty good team when he got there, but I found that he loved to be a part of a team, he loved to win. He made no waves whatsoever.”

    Ibanez idolized Henderson while he grew up, mimicking the way Henderson caught and threw as one of the very few major-leaguers who batted right-handed but threw left-handed, and during the 2000 season, Ibanez played with him. “One of my favorite teammates I’ve ever had,” Ibanez said. “Hilarious. Thoughtful.”

    Ibanez often watched Henderson in batting practice, working through his swing among teammates like Edgar Martinez, making adjustments, sometimes talking to himself. “Rickey is trying to hit like Edgar,” Henderson once said. “Rickey can’t hit like that.”

    Henderson’s pronunciation of Ibanez’s first name always included an emphasis on the ‘h’ sound in the middle — Rah-houl — and Ibanez remembers him being open with advice, and instilling confidence from his own bottomless well of it. “Once you get the opportunity,” Henderson rasped to Ibanez, “you’re going to hit, Rah-houl.”

    Young players loved Henderson, recalled Bruce Bochy, who once managed Henderson when he played with the San Diego Padres: “Rickey would play cards and dominoes with them before games, and on the plane.” When the Padres acquired All-Star slugger Greg Vaughn before the 1997 season, and in those days before the National League adopted the DH, Bochy was concerned about how Henderson would handle the situation — two very accomplished left fielders. “I bring Rickey into my office to tell him about the box I’m in,” Bochy remembered. “He looked at me with understanding and said, ‘That’s OK. All Rickey ask is that you let him know when he’s playing the night before.”

    Problem solved.

    Henderson’s communication with Piniella was a little different. Among his players, Piniella was known as a hard-ass, to the degree that Cameron’s instinct to run on the bases was curtailed to preempt a possible chewing out from his manager. When Henderson arrived, Cameron recalled, it was his presence that loosened Piniella, the two of them jabbing verbally at each other while those around them laughed. At one point during the season, Piniella gave Henderson a couple of days off, and Henderson lobbied for a return to the lineup. “Hey, Sweet,” he called out to Piniella in the dugout, using Piniella’s nickname. “Rickey don’t know about two days off. Rickey’s legs are good.”

    “They should be good,” Piniella retorted with some friendly sarcasm. “You couldn’t move before.” Henderson “was the only one,” said Cameron, “who could talk s— to Lou.”

    It wasn’t always clear to some of Henderson’s teammates if he actually knew their names. Hinch played with Henderson in Oakland, and later in Hinch’s career, when he was with the Kansas City Royals and Henderson was with the Boston Red Sox, some of Hinch’s teammates doubted Henderson would remember him. “So here we are at Fenway Park about to go out for pregame stretching telling Rickey stories,” Hinch wrote in a text response, “when Roberto Hernandez” — the Royals’ closer — said there’s no way Rickey knows my name.”

    “I tried to convince him and the others that my locker was next to his. I had scored a lot for him as the nine-hole hitter and him leading off. I had flown with him. I had worked out in the offseason with him at the complex. Yet they were not convinced. Roberto put his money where his mouth was and told me he had $1,000 if Rickey referred to me by name when we went out there. I asked if it counted if he used any initial — JP, DJ, PJ, AJ, any of them. Roberto said, ‘Nope, has to be A.J.’”

    “We head out and I go directly to left field and give Rickey the bro hug in front of Roberto and he says, ‘A.J., my man, how are you?’ HE NAILED IT. When I got back to my locker, I had 10 $100 bills in my chair.”

    He might not have talked much with teammates during games, but he was talking constantly — in the direction of fans, to himself. Playing center field, Cameron could hear Henderson at his position, just talking out loud: Hey, hey, hey! Baby!

    Henderson was a leadoff hitter through his career, but Cameron would see him in the clubhouse only minutes before a game, finishing a game of spades, or pluck. “Never in a hurry,” Cameron remembered. And then he would start to stretch. Cameron, batting second, once called out to his friend from the on-deck circle as the home plate umpire began to look for the first batter: “Hey, Rick, they are ready for you!”

    Henderson responded smoothly, “The game don’t start until Rickey goes to the plate.”


    Henderson’s place in history

    During Henderson’s chase for Lou Brock’s record for career stolen bases, the two became friends. “Close friends,” Brock said. “I really liked Rickey. I loved how much he cared about the game, about winning.”

    When Henderson broke Brock’s record, he famously pulled third base out of the ground, held it toward the sky and proclaimed, while being interviewed on the public address system at the Oakland Coliseum, “Today, I am the greatest of all time!”

    That was not the plan.

    “Together, Rickey and I wrote a speech that Rickey was supposed to read after breaking the record,” Brock told Tim Kurkjian 20 years ago. “He said he would carry it in his uniform pocket, and have it ready for when he broke the record. When he broke the record, he got caught up in the emotion, and just said what he said.”

    Brock, who was not angry or upset, called Henderson after the game.

    “Rickey, the speech?” Brock asked. “What happened to the speech we wrote?”

    Henderson said, “Sorry, Lou, I forgot.”

    This was on May 6, 1991. Henderson’s career continued for another dozen seasons.

    According to stats guru Craig Wright, Henderson drew 2,129 unintentional walks, the most in history. An amazing 796 times, he drew a walk to lead off an inning, almost 200 more than any other player. There are 152 players in the Hall of Fame elected as position players who played in at least 1,500 major league games. Sixty-eight of them (45%) drew fewer intentional walks in their careers than Henderson did just leading off an inning. “And one of them,” said Molitor, “was in the bottom of the ninth in Game 6 in ’93.”

    In that Game 6 of the World Series, Henderson and the Blue Jays trailed the Philadelphia Phillies 6-5. Henderson walked. Paul Molitor singled. Joe Carter hit a walk-off three-run homer.

    Late in the 2001 season, Henderson closed in on Ty Cobb’s record for runs scored, and Padres teammate Phil Nevin wanted to be the guy who drove him in. Nevin missed opportunities, and in the first inning of the Padres’ game on Oct. 4, 2001, Henderson flied out. Nevin — the Padres’ cleanup hitter — told Henderson he should get himself on base the next time and he would drive him in.

    “You missed your chance yesterday,” Henderson responded. “Rickey is going to drive Rickey in, and I’m going to slide across home plate.”

    In the bottom of the third inning, Henderson pulled a ball that hit off the top of the left-field fence and caromed over the wall, a home run — the 290th of the 297 Henderson hit in his career. With teammates gathered at home plate to greet him, Henderson slid into home plate, feet first.

    “He was so misunderstood because of the speech he made after breaking Brock’s record, when he said, ‘I am the greatest,’” Nevin said. “People thought he was a selfish guy, who couldn’t remember anybody’s name. But he was a great teammate.”

    Said La Russa: “With Rickey … there’s no doubt you can get to that greatest list of all time, with Willie [Mays] and Hank [Aaron], and Rickey is right in the middle of it. He is right on that club. That’s his greatness. He compares to all of them, Babe Ruth, all of them.”

    Said Valentine: “He’s the best player I’ve ever seen. Up close and personal, in the late ’80s, my goodness, how could anyone be better? I don’t know how anyone could be better.”

    Henderson played his last major league game on Sept. 19, 2003, and was voted into the Hall of Fame in 2009. Twenty-eight writers did not vote for Henderson.


    Myth and legend

    The stories about Henderson were voluminous, with some of them seeming improbable, incredible. Henderson made an appearance on ESPN’s morning radio show “Mike and Mike” and was asked about the veracity of a handful of the legendary anecdotes — a game of true or false.

    Was it true, Henderson was asked, that he once called Padres GM Kevin Towers and said, “This is Rickey calling on behalf of Rickey, and Rickey wants to play baseball”?

    Henderson’s grinned and replied, “False. I like that.”

    When Henderson checked into a hotel, was it true that he sometimes checked in under the pseudonym of Richard Pryor? “Yes,” he confirmed. “[Also] James Brown, Luther Vandross.”

    In the early 1980s, the A’s accounting department was freaking out because their books were off by $1 million — and as the famous story goes, Henderson had taken a $1 million bonus check and framed it without cashing it, and hung it on the wall in his house. Was this accurate? “That’s true,” Henderson said, laughing.

    There was a story that Henderson fell asleep on an ice pack in the middle of August, got frostbite, and missed three games. “Yes, that was with Toronto,” Henderson said. “I was icing my ankle.”


    His final days

    Last year, in La Russa’s last serious conversation with Henderson, the player asked his former manager: “What record did I obtain that you never thought was possible?” La Russa replied, “‘3,000 hits.’ I didn’t think, with all his walks, that he would get to 3,000 hits. You don’t want to walk him. But if you throw a strike, he hits it on the barrel for a single, double, triple or home runs.”

    Last year, Cameron and Nevin attended games in those last days of the Oakland Coliseum. When Nevin bumped into him, Henderson greeted him warmly — “Hiya, Phil!” — and talked about how much he enjoyed getting to know Nevin’s son, Tyler, who played 87 games with the A’s last season. Henderson, Nevin recalled, “still looked like he could put a uniform on.”

    Late in the season, Brent Rooker, Oakland’s All-Star slugger, approached Henderson in the clubhouse, where he was playing cards, and told him he had heard an interview with a longtime writer who opined about the best player he had ever covered. “Who was it?” Henderson asked.

    “It was you,” Rooker said.

    Henderson replied, “Well, who else would it have been?” And for Rooker, it was an affirmation that Henderson’s swagger, his confidence, was indomitable. “He carried that same aura about him all the time,” Rooker recalled, “and he was a blast to be around.”

    In early December, longtime Padres hitting coach Merv Rettenmund died, and some of Rettenmund’s friends and former players scheduled a gathering in San Diego. The expectation was that Henderson would attend. But just before the event, Henderson spoke to a former teammate and mentioned that he had been fighting a cold and hadn’t been feeling well. “I haven’t had a cold in 15 years,” Henderson said.

    Soon thereafter, Henderson was gone.

    “I never saw him have a bad day on a baseball field,” Cameron said. “To get a chance to play with someone of that nature.

    “The joy. It was crazy. It was special.”



    Rickey Henderson was not just a baseball player; he was a legend. Known for his speed on the base paths and his ability to steal bases at will, Henderson left an indelible mark on the game of baseball. As teammates, managers, and opponents, we all have fond memories of the man they called the “Man of Steal.”

    Teammates remember Henderson as a mentor and a leader. His work ethic and dedication to the game inspired everyone around him to be better. He was always the first one at the ballpark and the last one to leave, setting an example for others to follow. Henderson’s knowledge of the game was unmatched, and his willingness to share that knowledge with his teammates helped them improve their own skills.

    Managers remember Henderson as a player who could change the course of a game with his speed and skill. He was a game-changer, someone who could turn a tight game into a blowout with a single stolen base or a well-timed hit. Henderson’s presence on the field struck fear into the hearts of opposing teams, knowing that he could turn a routine ground ball into a triple in the blink of an eye.

    Opponents remember Henderson as a fierce competitor who never backed down from a challenge. He played the game with a passion and intensity that was unmatched, and he always gave 110% on the field. Henderson’s speed and agility made him a nightmare for opposing pitchers and catchers, who could never quite figure out how to stop him from stealing bases at will.

    In the end, all of us who had the privilege of watching Rickey Henderson play will always remember him as one of the greatest to ever step foot on a baseball field. His legacy will live on in the hearts of baseball fans everywhere, and his name will forever be synonymous with greatness. Rickey Henderson may have retired from the game, but his impact will always be felt by those who had the honor of playing alongside him or against him.

    Tags:

    Rickey Henderson tribute, baseball legend Rickey Henderson, Rickey Henderson career highlights, Rickey Henderson Hall of Fame, Rickey Henderson teammates, Rickey Henderson managers, Rickey Henderson opponents, Rickey Henderson legacy

    #Teammates #managers #opponents #remember #Rickey #Henderson

  • Islanders Gameday News: A January to remember


    The Islanders are finally back on the road for their third meeting of the month with the Philadelphia Flyers. The teams split the previous two meetings on Long Island, but now the Isles are looking to close out a month in which they’re 8-3 thus far.

    Philadelphia is playing the second (but little travel) end of a back-to-back after losing badly in Newark last night, splitting a home-and-home with their neighbors.

    The Isles, of course, have a shocking five-game win streak on the line and have won 8 of their last 10. The Flyers are one point ahead of them (but have played three more games) and are one of several teams standing between them and the wild card that they’re not going to get.

    First Islanders Goal picks go here.

    Islanders News

    • Old friend Nick Leddy, on the IR with the Blues, gave Scott Perunovich some encouragement about the opportunity on Long Island. [Newsday]
    • Perunovich said all the usual/right things. Patrick Roy says he’ll get some power play time, though of course there were none on Tuesday. [Isles]
    • Roy said Perunovich had a really good debut; the newcomer felt he had a slow start but came around with help from teammates. [Post]
    • The Skinny: “The Islanders extended the longest active winning streak in the NHL” are not words I expected to read at any point this season. [Isles]
    • Momentum, despite the major injuries, has the Isles in a strange place. [Newsday]
    • Island Ice podcast: “Did the Isles just save their season?” (No. No, they did not.) [Newsday]
    • If you did not access or endure the ESPN broadcast the other night, John Buccigross said Brock Nelson signing with the Wild this summer is “like the worst kept secret in hockey.” [THN]
    • Cal Clutterbuck is enjoying his turns on the MSG broadcast, and his former teammates are enjoying the fact it’s something he always said he’d never want to do. (I’ve been enjoying Shannon Hogan razz him a bit on recent broadcasts, too.) [Isles]
    • Yesterday in Isles history: That freezing Yankee Stadium game and Trottier hits 1,000 points. [Isles]

    Elsewhere

    Last night’s NHL scores included the Flyers getting stomped 5-0 by the Hughes Devils.

    • The Elias Pettersson rift is hilarious drama that appears beyond fixing, somehow, as management lead Jim Rutherford publicly acknowledges. [Globe & Mail]
    • That kind of bombshell reflects just how poorly the Canucks have handled communications about this. [Vancouver Is Awesome]
    • J.T. Miller had no comment on all that. [Sportsnet]
    • Utah will hold an in-game vote for their name and logo. It’s presumably non-binding, like a Russian election. [NHL]
    • After a catastrophic preseason ankle injury, Drew Doughty made his season debut. [NHL]
    • Brandon Saad was waived by the Blues, but rather than report to the AHL he agreed to a contract termination with $5 million left on his contract. Thankfully he’s not a defenseman. [NHL]
    • After six straight losses, Phillipp Grubauer is placed on waivers by Seattle. [NHL]
    • Tough break, Cous’. Nick Cousins is out 6-8 weeks. [TSN]



    The New York Islanders are heating up as they head into the final stretch of January, with a record of 6-2-1 so far this month. This hot streak has catapulted them into second place in the Metropolitan Division and has fans buzzing with excitement.

    In their most recent game, the Islanders dominated the Pittsburgh Penguins with a 4-1 victory, showcasing their depth and skill on both ends of the ice. Goalie Semyon Varlamov was a standout player, making crucial saves to keep the Penguins at bay and secure the win.

    The team’s offense has been firing on all cylinders, with captain Anders Lee leading the way with 10 goals in January. The power play unit has also been clicking, converting on multiple opportunities to give the Islanders an edge in close games.

    As the Islanders gear up for their upcoming matchups against division rivals, including the Washington Capitals and the Philadelphia Flyers, they are looking to continue their winning ways and solidify their position in the standings.

    With their strong play in January, the Islanders are proving that they are a force to be reckoned with in the Eastern Conference. Fans are hopeful that this success will continue into the second half of the season and potentially lead to a deep playoff run.

    Stay tuned for more Islanders gameday news as they look to make January a month to remember. Let’s go Islanders!

    Tags:

    1. New York Islanders
    2. Islanders news
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    4. January sports news
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    7. Islanders game highlights
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    #Islanders #Gameday #News #January #remember

  • 10 Things You Need To Remember Before Season 2


    With The Recruit season 2 set to be released on January 30, 2025, there are a few things from the show’s first season that audiences need to be aware of. Starring Noah Centineo, The Recruit follows Owen Hendricks, a CIA lawyer who becomes involved in a conspiracy. While there are plenty of action thrillers on Netflix, The Recruit season 1 was unique enough to stand out.

    The Recruit season 1’s final episode ended on a cliffhanger that will have to be solved in season 2. Given the solid reception of the first season, The Recruit season 2 has a lot to live up to. Season 1 was filled with action, plot twists, and big reveals that need to be revisited ahead of The Recruit season 2’s release.

    10

    Owen Hendricks Was Hired As A CIA Lawyer (But Things Got Complicated)

    Noah Centineo smiling in The Recruit season 1, episode 1

    After graduating from college, Owen Hendricks decided to take a job as a CIA lawyer. On his second day working as a lawyer for the espionage organization, Owen’s boss asks him to stop a senator from reading classified CIA information in a public hearing. Desperate to keep his job, he manages to stop the senator, but his job becomes more complicated when he gets involved in a new case.

    A few days into his job, his colleagues, Violet and Lester, hand him files filled with letters from “crazies” who are threatening to expose classified CIA information. While going through the graymail, he comes across a letter from Max Meladze, a woman who is serving a sentence for murder in Phoenix, Arizona. Unlike the other letters from the “crazies”, Max’s contains information that a normal civilian shouldn’t be privy to. Upon further investigation, Owen decided to take Max’s letter seriously and told his boss about what he had learned.

    9

    Owen Got Caught In A Major Conspiracy After He Helped Max

    Owen swimming in The Recruit season 2

    What started as a way to figure out if the graymail that Max sent was a legitimate threat ended up becoming much more for Owen. After helping Max get released from jail, Owen got involved in a conspiracy that revealed how the CIA treats its assets that knew way too much. Max reached out to the agency for them to get her out of jail and take care of her, but she had to provide information that would make them take her seriously, thus revealing how deep her knowledge was.

    After she gets asked to become an asset again, Max deduces that she is being sent out of the US so that she could be killed somewhere that won’t raise suspicion. She once again enlists Owen’s help, since he is the only one she trusts, to help keep her alive. While they succeed in keeping her safe, she ultimately gets shot by someone she didn’t expect.

    8

    Owen And Hannah Had A History

    Hannah in Netflix's The Recruit season 1

    While they were in college, Owen and Hannah were in a romantic relationship. But when Hannah noticed Owen’s need to self-destruct, she broke up with him and the two became roommates. Although Owen was seeing Amelia and had a complicated relationship with Max, it was clear that he still had feelings for Hannah, who was seeing Jeff, a White House employee. Despite Hannah knowing that Owen isn’t exactly good for her, she can’t help but come to his aid whenever he needs her.

    Related


    10 Best Shows Like The Recruit To Watch While Waiting For Season 2

    While waiting for The Recruit season 2, viewers can enjoy similar thrilling shows that share qualities with the distinctive Netflix spy series.

    When Hannah discovered that Owen was in some sort of trouble, she and Terrence followed him to Geneva, where they saw him and Max escape after Xander Goi was murdered. Hannah is a huge part of Owen’s life since she and Terrence are the only family he has. Given their complicated history and Owen’s impulsivity, it remains to be seen if Hannah will be willing to take him back in The Recruit season 2.

    7

    Dawn Was Stealing Money From The CIA

    Dawn in The Recruit season 1

    Owen meets Dawn Gilbane when he travels to Yemen to find out more information about Max. When he gets to the base, he meets Dawn, who proceeds to torture him since he arrived in Yemen without getting proper clearance that would have alerted the VIA agents that he would be going there. Dawn and Owen come to an agreement, but they trust each other, so when she goes back to the US, she attempts to bug his office but is stopped by Amelia, who walks in on her.

    Although Owen didn’t trust Dawn, he wasn’t aware that she wanted to be close to him because she wanted to find out what Max would tell him about her. Dawn had been in charge of recruiting assets who could spy on and give the information to the CIA. However, she was actually stealing the money that was supposed to be used for that task. Max did eventually tell Owen what Dawn was up to and what he will do with that information remains to be seen in the upcoming season.

    6

    The Chief Of Staff Was Max’s Handler

    Owen (Noah Centineo) and Max (Laura Haddock) in The Recruit in front of a window

    When Owen began investigating Max’s case, he was desperate to find out who her handler was, but that information wasn’t easy to come by. After hitting several dead ends, he forces Max to tell him the truth. During a heart-to-heart conversation, Max revealed that her handler went by the name Not Bob. According to Janus, Not Bob was a CIA legend who retired and became the chief of staff for the President of the United States.

    Related


    The Recruit’s 7 Biggest Unanswered Questions Season 2 Needs To Answer

    Between what happened to Max in The Recruit season 1’s finale and where Owen goes now, here are seven questions The Recruit season 2 needs to answer.

    Given the nature of Not Bob’s job, he didn’t want anyone to find out his true identity. When he and Owen’s boss, Nyland meet, he makes it clear that he does not want his name or what he did during his time at the CIA to be public knowledge. Since Owen now knows who Not Bob is, his job at the CIA could be made that much harder as he now knows something that he shouldn’t.

    5

    Max Was Reinstated As A CIA Asset

    Owen (Noah Centineo) and Max (Laura Haddock) in a church in The Recruit

    Before Max was arrested for murder, she used to be a CIA Asset in Belarus and Russia due to her close relationship with the mob. When her mission in Belarus went awry, Max was sent to the US where she was under house arrest as she waited for the all-clear message that meant it was safe for her to go back home. After Owen succeeds in freeing her from jail, Max doesn’t go back home in the capacity that she wants. Instead, Dawn suggests that she should be reinstated as a CIA asset.

    Because of what happened when she was last in Belarus, getting back into the mob’s good books was a challenge. Max needed a lot of money to get back in, which Owen procured by selling her safe-house business. When she is unable to get the $3 million that could pay for her safe passage into Russia, the former CIA asset decides to use the information she had on Xander Goi to earn their trust again. However, her plan doesn’t work as Xander is killed and she and Owen flee to Germany.

    4

    “Marta” Was Max’s Daughter, Karolina, Now Called Nichka

    Nichka in The Recruit season 2-2

    When Owen and Max arrive in Geneva, he is approached by a young woman who calls herself Marta. Marta flirts with Owen, but he turns down her advances. He is able to quickly deduce that Marta might not be who she says she is, but her deceit goes further than he could have guessed. It turns out Marta is Karolina, Max’s daughter. According to Max, her daughter had died when she was just a child, and had spent years grieving for her.

    Unbeknownst to Max, Karolina had grown up and become a Russian spy. She changed her name from Karolina to Nichka when she decided to join the intelligence organization. Her exact role in the Russian espionage organization wasn’t explained in the Netflix action thriller, but season 2 of the series will probably delve into that.

    3

    Owen Decided To Leave The CIA At The End Of Season 1

    Noah Centineo looking at a young lady at a party in The Recruit season 1

    Owen’s father died in the line of duty when the CIA lawyer was just 12 years old. The loss had a huge impact on him because he spent his life after his father’s death doing things that he thought would help him heal. While Hannah chose a job in a corporate law firm, Owen decided to join the CIA because of the thrill of the action.

    When Owen killed a Russian spy while he was in Geneva with Max, he knew that he didn’t want his life to be like that. The amount of death he was exposed to and the constant threat of danger made him reevaluate his decision. Although Owen liked to take risks, he knew in his heart that he wasn’t a murderer. So he called Hannah and told her that he would be leaving the CIA in The Recruit season 1’s finale, but he got kidnapped before his decision was finalized.

    2

    Max Was Shot By Her Daughter

    The Recruit season 1's Karolina sitting and looking at someone off-camera

    For most of The Recruit season 1, Max’s daughter was believed to have been dead. In a shocking turn of events, Karolina turned out to be alive and well and had been working for the Russian government as a spy. When she meets Max in Germany, who she had been spying on since she arrived in Europe, Karolina takes out her gun and shoots her mother for unknown reasons.

    Although Karolina and Max hadn’t been in each other’s lives, it’s still shocking that she had decided to shoot her mother. Granted, they were on opposite sides, but that still doesn’t explain why Karolina seemed to harbor animosity towards her mother, who seemed to love her dearly. But it’s possible that Karolina resented Max because her job meant that her daughter was always in danger and would have been killed by Max’s enemies.

    1

    The Recruit Season 1 Ended On A Cliffhanger

    Max and Owen in The Recruit's season 1 finale

    The Recruit season 1 ended on a cliffhanger that perfectly set up the show for a second season. Max and Owen were kidnapped by Karolina in the season 1 finale, and she shot her mother, who was clearly shocked that her daughter was still alive. However, it’s unclear if Max survived or if she is dead since the last episode ends shortly after. There’s a possibility that Max is still alive as she might have been wearing a bulletproof underneath her red jumpsuit.

    The Recruit season 2 will probably begin with confirming whether Max survived or not. But if she did indeed die, it could change things for Owen in the second season in a significant way. Max was someone Owen grew close to despite their differences. Her death could have an impact on how he sees his job and whether he is cut out to live in a world filled with violence and betrayal.

    The Recruit release poster


    The Recruit

    Release Date

    December 16, 2022

    Network

    Netflix

    Directors

    Doug Liman



    Stream




    Season 1 may have left us on the edge of our seats, but before diving into Season 2, here are 10 things you need to remember:

    1. Recap the previous season: Refresh your memory on all the key plot points, character developments, and cliffhangers from Season 1.

    2. Keep track of the characters: With a large ensemble cast, it’s important to remember who’s who and their relationships with one another.

    3. Pay attention to the details: Small details and subtle clues from Season 1 may hold the key to understanding Season 2.

    4. Brush up on the lore: If the show or series is based on a book, comic, or previous adaptation, familiarize yourself with the source material for a deeper understanding of the story.

    5. Watch trailers and teasers: Analyze any promotional material released for Season 2 to get a sneak peek into what’s to come.

    6. Join fan forums and discussions: Engage with other fans to share theories, predictions, and insights about the upcoming season.

    7. Set aside time for binge-watching: Clear your schedule and stock up on snacks for a marathon viewing session of Season 2.

    8. Avoid spoilers: Stay away from social media and websites that may reveal key plot points or twists before you have a chance to watch the new season.

    9. Prepare for surprises: Season 2 may throw unexpected twists and turns your way, so be prepared for anything.

    10. Enjoy the ride: Sit back, relax, and immerse yourself in the world of Season 2. Let yourself be swept away by the drama, suspense, and excitement that awaits.

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    #Remember #Season

  • Meta AI Is Widely Launching Its Memory Feature To Remember Details About You And Offer More Relevant Recommendations


    The AI frenzy is here to stay as companies are actively seeking ways to improve their offering and incorporate AI capabilities into their product lines. Mark Zuckerberg has also been aggressively working towards Artificial Intelligence and exploring its potential. He even shared recently that technology is here to take over the jobs of mid-level engineers not just at Meta but other big companies as well. While Zuckerberg has introduced many changes recently, the recent initiative focuses on Meta AI integrating memory features into its AI systems in an attempt to offer a more personal experience with the platform.

    Meta AI will be using its memory feature to offer better recommendations and a more personalized experience for its users

    While Meta initially launched its memory feature for the AI chatbot, it seems to be now extending the capability to Messenger, Facebook, and WhatsApp on iOS and Android in both the US and Canada. This wider availability of the feature was shared in a blog post on Monday, and it said that it is meant to remember details about you from past conversations, Facebook, and Instagram platforms and then provide more relevant recommendations.

    While users have the option to delete memories at any time, giving more control to the end user of how data is stored, the information that is memorized or fetched is from one-on-one conversations alone and not group chats. This feature is not exclusive to Meta only, as similar offerings are available from ChatGPT and Google Gemini. Say, for instance, you asked for suggestions for a recipe but excluded certain items from it. The feature would remember this and, in the future, offer responses that are tailored to the preferences.

    The feature is intended to remember your information as “memories,” but it goes beyond that, as by extending it to Facebook and Instagram, a more personalized experience would be offered due to the expansive information available. Meta AI could use your home location and offer suggestions that are localized to make the responses more relevant. While it is still ambiguous regarding the type of information that would be stored in the memory feature and fetched from social media platforms, we do know that the experience with AI would be more streamlined and user-oriented.

    Meta is increasingly focused on introducing new features and products for users to improve their experience and bring greater personalization. As Meta AI becomes smarter and more useful, more users could rely on the assistant, and it could appeal to an even wider audience.



    Meta AI, the cutting-edge artificial intelligence technology, is taking personalization to the next level with its new memory feature. This feature allows Meta AI to remember details about you, your preferences, and your interactions, in order to offer more relevant recommendations and personalized experiences.

    With this new memory feature, Meta AI can better understand your likes and dislikes, your past interactions, and even your mood and emotions. This allows Meta AI to tailor its recommendations and suggestions to suit your individual needs and preferences, making your interactions with the AI more seamless and intuitive.

    Whether you’re browsing for products, searching for information, or engaging in conversations with Meta AI, the memory feature ensures that the AI can provide you with the most relevant and personalized recommendations possible. This not only enhances your overall experience with Meta AI, but also makes your interactions with the AI more efficient and effective.

    Meta AI’s memory feature is now being widely launched across various platforms and applications, so you can expect to see more personalized and relevant recommendations from the AI in the near future. This new feature represents a significant advancement in artificial intelligence technology, and is set to revolutionize the way we interact with AI systems.

    Stay tuned for more updates on Meta AI’s memory feature and how it can enhance your personalized experiences with artificial intelligence. Get ready to experience a whole new level of personalization and relevance with Meta AI’s memory feature!

    Tags:

    1. Meta AI
    2. Memory feature
    3. Personalized recommendations
    4. Machine learning
    5. Artificial intelligence
    6. Data privacy
    7. User experience
    8. Technology innovation
    9. Advanced algorithms
    10. Digital intelligence

    #Meta #Widely #Launching #Memory #Feature #Remember #Details #Offer #Relevant #Recommendations

  • What You Need To Remember Before Season 2


    Season 1 of Netflix‘s The Recruit aired back in 2022 and instantly became a hit for the streamer, earning a well-deserved renewal for Season 2. Created by Alexi Hawley, the series follows Owen Hendricks (Noah Centineo), a young CIA lawyer who is unexpectedly thrust into the high-stakes world of espionage. The Recruit returns for Season 2 on January 30, with an action-packed trailer giving fans a taste of what’s to come. If you’re looking for a refresher, here are some key moments from Owen’s Season 1 journey, including that jaw-dropping cliffhanger.

    Owen Is Thrown Into the Deep End To Help Former Agent Max in Season 1 of ‘The Recruit’

    Season 1 kicks off when Owen’s boss, Walter Nyland (Vondie Curtis-Hall), gives him the task of stopping a high-level senator from reading a classified document in a public hearing. With Owen’s job on the line, on only his second day with the CIA, he goes to Senator Smoot (Linus Roache), who is ready to tear him apart. However, Owen shows off his intelligence and skills and ultimately convinces Snoot not to read the document. After this unusual high-profile assignment, Owen is met by his coworkers, Lester (Colton Dunn) and Violet (Aarti Mann), who relentlessly tease the new recruit and are happy to give him the tedious task of going through the CIA’s graymail, sifting through letters from “crazies” who are threatening to expose classified information.

    One letter that catches Owen’s eye is from Max Meladze (Laura Haddock), a former CIA operative accused of treason and serving time in a Phoenix prison for murder. In her letter, Max threatens that if the CIA doesn’t get her out, she will spill agency secrets about clandestine operations, prompting Owen to investigate further. Exhausted but determined, Owen travels to Phoenix to meet Max, where she’s initially reluctant to speak. Eventually, she reveals her knowledge of top-secret CIA operations in Belarus and Russia and tries to exploit Owen’s inexperience. Ultimately, they strike a deal to secure her release, but this moment sets Owen on a dangerous path, pulling him into situations he never anticipated.

    Owen’s Relationship With Max Intensifies and Forces Him to Make Morally Questionable Choices in ‘The Recruit’ Season 1

    Throughout the season, Owen uses his resourcefulness and determination to navigate the morally gray world Max draws him into, doing his best to compensate for his inexperience and naivety. Max proves to be a master manipulator, using Owen’s trust and putting him in dangerous situations while continuously forcing them to work together. Even after her release from prison, Max continues to manipulate him, claiming he’s the only person she can trust. Owen struggles with his morality, receiving warnings from his ex-girlfriend, Hannah (Fivel Stewart), who fears the CIA will amplify his worst instincts.

    An interesting aspect of Owen’s character is how he is often perceived as immature by the women he encounters. Both Hannah and his co-worker, Amelia Salazar (Kaylah Zander), who he briefly dates, suggest that if he matured and took things more seriously, he’d be more appealing. Max occasionally criticizes him for acting like a child, and even a seemingly innocent encounter at a bar with a woman named Marta (Maddie Hasson) takes an uncomfortable and awkward turn when their flirtation shifts to accusations about her being a foreign agent —though in that case, Owen’s instincts weren’t wrong. We’ll come back to that one though.

    The dynamic between Owen and Max is one of the most compelling things about The Recruit. Max constantly vacillates between friend and foe, leaving the audience and Owen, unsure if she can even be trusted. As his attraction to her grows, their relationship becomes much more complex. Although Owen catches Max in a lie about her former handler, she gains even more sympathy by telling him about her daughter Karolina, who she believes is dead. Owen has experienced loss himself, so he can’t help but feel for her. However, the CIA sees their connection as a liability, suspecting him of being compromised and sleeping with the asset. Despite initial resistance, Owen eventually succumbs to Max’s seduction, and they do end up spending the night together. Soon after, though, Owen begins to regret getting close to Max or even helping her at all.

    Related


    ‘The Recruit’ Season 2 Trailer Breakdown: Owen Is Back in Action To Stop “All-Out War”

    Season 2 drops on Netflix January 30.

    Season 1 of ‘The Recruit’ Ends in a Jaw-Dropping Cliffhanger

    Laura Haddock as Max and Noah Centineo as Owen in 'The Recruit'
    Image via Netflix

    The season 1 finale finds Owen and Max in Prague for one final mission, but things go horribly awry and Owen is forced to shoot and kill a man, leaving him devastated. This moment reminds both Owen and the audience that he’s not a trained operative and that, despite his occasional heroic action-star moments, he is ill-prepared for this dangerous life. As they make their escape, they’re pursued by assassins—including Marta (also known as Nichka), the woman Owen met at the bar. It turns out that she is in fact dangerous and is working for the Russian mob.

    Owen finally realizes how naive he’s been, believing he could save Max when, in reality, she can’t change. His self-sabotage and selfishness has caught up with him, and now he wants nothing to do with Max or the CIA. He leaves Max and calls Hannah to apologize and tell her he should’ve listened to her the whole time. She completely surprises him when she says she’s in Prague and is going to meet him. But, before Owen can reunite with her, he and Max are taken hostage by the Russian mob.

    As they try to understand what’s happening, Nichka appears, and Max, up close, recognizes her. It’s revealed that Nichka is actually Max’s long-lost daughter, Karolina. In a shocking twist, Karolina shoots her at point-blank range and asks a stunned Owen how he knows her mother, leaving Max’s fate hanging as Season 1 ends on a cliffhanger. While Season 2 shifts to South Korea with a new mission and an entirely new ally, Max’s fate will be addressed, along with the mystery of how Owen escaped Marta. If the new trailer is any indication, Season 2 promises to be even more action-packed and thrilling, pulling Owen into even more high-stakes situations.

    Season 1 of The Recruit is available to stream on Netflix. Season 2 will drop on January 30.

    WATCH ON NETFLIX

    The Recruit release poster


    The Recruit

    Release Date

    December 16, 2022

    Network

    Netflix

    Directors

    Doug Liman



    Stream




    As we eagerly anticipate the premiere of Season 2 of our favorite show, there are a few key things to keep in mind before diving back into the world of our beloved characters.

    1. Recap: It’s been a while since we last saw our favorite characters in action, so take some time to refresh your memory on the events of Season 1. This will help you to fully appreciate the developments and storylines in the upcoming season.

    2. Character arcs: Reflect on the journeys that each character went through in Season 1. What were their struggles, triumphs, and growth? This will help you to better understand their motivations and actions in Season 2.

    3. Predictions: As you look back on Season 1, consider what unresolved plot threads or foreshadowing may come into play in Season 2. What twists and turns do you think the writers have in store for us?

    4. Themes and messages: Think about the overarching themes and messages that were present in Season 1. How might these be further explored or expanded upon in Season 2? What new themes might emerge?

    5. Emotions: Remember how you felt while watching Season 1 – the excitement, the heartbreak, the suspense. Prepare yourself for a rollercoaster of emotions in Season 2 and be ready to be fully invested in the story once again.

    As we gear up for the highly anticipated Season 2, let’s keep these points in mind and get ready to immerse ourselves in the world of our favorite characters once more. Are you ready for what’s to come? Let the countdown to Season 2 begin!

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    #Remember #Season

  • Positive Affirmations Cards Memory Matching Game REMEMBER WHO YOU ARE, Therapy Games for School Counselors and Therapists, Positive Affirmation Cards Game for Kids, Teens and Adults


    Price: $19.99 – $17.99
    (as of Jan 22,2025 21:49:43 UTC – Details)



    This Positive Affirmations Memory Matching Game is a great way to promote mental wellness and positive thinking. It is designed for use by individuals 8 years and up and can be used in a variety of settings, including schools, therapy offices, and homes. The game includes 48 memory cards (24 pairs) with positive affirmations on them. To play the game, players take turns matching the affirmations to the correct cards. The game is easy to set up and play, and can be played alone or with others.
    Positive Affirmations Cards Game: This fun and engaging memory matching game is designed to promote mental wellness and positive thinking. It includes 48 positive affirmation cards with beautiful illustrations and inspiring messages. The game is perfect for individuals, families, therapists, school counselors, teachers, and anyone who wants to enhance their mental health and cultivate a growth mindset.
    Therapy Game: Remember Who You Are is a therapeutic tool that can be used in therapy sessions to help engage clients to develop self-esteem, overcome negative thoughts, and regulate their emotions. In schools it can be used as a calm down corner activity in or a mental health game during recess.
    Multiple Ways to Play: You can play this game in the traditional manner, independently, collaboratively (to reduce competitive conflict and promote teamwork), and as a deck of affirmation cards when you just need a quick mood boost. You can also use the cards as conversation starters.
    Growth Mindset: The game encourages a growth mindset by emphasizing the importance of effort, persistence, and learning from mistakes. It helps individuals believe that they can improve their skills and abilities with hard work and dedication.
    Spiritual Healing: The game reminds you of who you really are at your core with affirmations that can help individuals find inner peace, reduce stress, and promote relaxation. It is a great tool for promoting spiritual growth, self love and self-compassion.

    Customers say

    Customers appreciate the positive messages and uplifting design of the game. They find it fun and easy to use, with soothing colors and designs that complement the mental health focus of the game. The cards are well-made and come with directions for four different games.

    AI-generated from the text of customer reviews


    Looking for a fun and engaging way to boost self-confidence and promote positive thinking? Look no further than our Positive Affirmations Cards Memory Matching Game – REMEMBER WHO YOU ARE!

    This therapy game is perfect for school counselors, therapists, and anyone looking to encourage self-love and a positive mindset in kids, teens, and adults alike. The game features beautifully designed cards with uplifting affirmations that players can match and memorize while reinforcing positive beliefs about themselves.

    With this game, players can practice self-affirmation, improve memory skills, and build self-esteem in a fun and interactive way. It’s a great tool for promoting mindfulness, self-awareness, and emotional well-being.

    So why wait? Grab a set of our Positive Affirmations Cards Memory Matching Game today and help yourself or others remember who they truly are – strong, capable, and worthy of love and happiness. Let’s spread positivity one card match at a time! #PositiveAffirmationsGame #TherapyGames #SelfLove #RememberWhoYouAre
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  • Remember That One ‘Smallville’ Episode That Was a Marketing Ploy for…Gum?


    In the early 2000s, shameless marketing on classic network shows was not only common but the standard when it came to television programming. Perhaps the most egregious displays of overt product placement came from shows on smaller networks like the WB and its eventual successor, the CW. One show in particular, the hit Superman prequel series Smallville, had a single character often at the center of most of these marketing ploys during the show’s earlier years: Sam Jones III‘s Pete “the Boss” Ross. So, when Pete, who was once Clark Kent’s (Tom Welling) best friend, returns in the seventh season episode, “Hero,” the entire narrative is framed around this very 2000s style of product placement… And boy is this Stride gum-centered episode a wild ride.

    ‘Smallville’ Devoted An Entire Episode to Product Placement

    Pete Ross (Sam Jones III) shows off his Stride Gum in the 'Smallville' episode "Hero."
    Image via the CW

    Smallville‘s relationship with product placement harkens back to the show’s earliest years at the WB. In fact, midway through the show’s second season, Next TV reported that the network had entered into its first product placement deal in conjunction with Smallville. Be it Sprint Mobile, Old Spice, AOL, Microsoft, or Toyota, it wasn’t uncommon to see some well-known brand pop up on the program. Many of these brands even sponsored tie-in materials, such as The Oliver Queen Chronicles, Kara and the Chronicles of Krypton, and Smallville Legends: Justice & Doom. However, these are nothing in comparison to “Hero.” After a multi-season absence, “Produce Placement” Pete Ross returns to Smallville for a OneRepublic concert at a Stride gum factory. Only, because this is Smallville, a liquid form of Kryptonite ends up affecting the production, leading to a batch of K-fueled chewing gum that produces some disastrous effects.

    After chewing a piece of the radioactive gum, Pete notices a loose speaker that almost falls on Kara Kent (Laura Vandervoort), who attended the concert with Jimmy Olsen (Aaron Ashmore). Unable to get to her in time, Pete (hilariously) stretches out his arms only to grab hold of her from afar, pulling her back and out of danger. While not every meteor freak in Smallville turns into a homicidal killer, Smallville has established that most with Kryptonite-crafted powers end up seeing red, and Pete falls into line here. After a serious conversation with Lex Luthor (Michael Rosenbaum), where the LuthorCorp owner threatens to expose Chloe’s (Allison Mack) identity as a meteor freak, Pete decides that the Luthors are a cancer that needs to be dealt with. Naturally, this leads him to go after Lex, and he soon gets captured, forcing Clark to step in and save his life.

    Though Pete’s powers don’t last, he learns a valuable lesson in heroism. More than that, Pete’s legacy as Smallville resident product master remains unchallenged. Centering an entire episode on the character’s connection to not just Stride gum but a OneRepublic concert (“Apologize,” “Stop and Stare,” and “Mercy” from Dreaming Out Loud are all featured here) is pretty legendary, even as far as Smallville marketing is concerned. While “Hero” doesn’t rank among anyone’s favorite episodes of Smallville, it’s a curious look at the incredibly overt way product placement was once handled on television, particularly on the CW.

    Related


    Will We Ever Get a ‘Smallville’ Sequel? Tom Welling Has the Answer

    “It’s the weirdest thing.”

    The ‘Smallville’ and Stride Campaign Lasted Beyond One Episode

    If you thought the Smallville and Stride partnership only extended to Season 7’s “Hero,” then you should know that the campaign also included Smallville: Visions, a web-exclusive DC Comics story tied directly into the episode’s plot. Originally released on the CW website (and now included as a special feature in the official Season 7 DVD/Blu-ray release), the comic ties back to the Season 3 episode “Hereafter,” revealing that Jordan Cross (Joseph Cross) also attended the concert. While there, chewing the same Kryptonite-laced Stride gum restored his own meteor abilities. Unsurprisingly, he fell into Lex’s hands as well, and before he ran off to save Pete, Clark rescued his old ally.

    Funny enough, Smallville ended up with a far longer-lasting power than Stride, which itself boasted a longer chew than other brands. Years later, Stride was discontinued in North America, while Smallville continues to find new audiences. “Hero” is a strange blip in Smallville history, as is the show’s connection with a gum brand lost to time. While the episode and its comic book tie-in were responsible for the final appearance of original cast member Pete Ross on Smallville, it’s most notable as being a direct (and strange) time capsule of early 2000s nostalgia.

    Smallville is available to stream on Hulu in the U.S.

    Watch on Hulu



    Do you remember that one episode of ‘Smallville’ that was basically a 44-minute commercial for gum? Yep, you read that right. In season 1, episode 14 titled “Nicodemus,” the plot revolves around a mysterious flower that causes the residents of Smallville to lose their inhibitions and act on their deepest desires.

    But what many viewers may not have realized is that this entire episode was actually a clever marketing ploy for Stride gum. The product placement was not subtle, with characters frequently chewing gum and even mentioning its name multiple times throughout the episode.

    While some may have found this blatant advertising distracting, others may have found it amusing and even appreciated the creativity behind it. Either way, it’s a reminder of just how far companies will go to promote their products, even if it means infiltrating our favorite TV shows. So next time you rewatch ‘Smallville,’ keep an eye out for that not-so-subtle gum promotion in “Nicodemus.”

    Tags:

    1. Smallville episode
    2. Marketing ploy
    3. Gum promotion
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  • 10 songs to remember David Lynch’s musical legacy


    NEW YORK (AP) — The loss of singular talent and visionary filmmaker David Lynch is not only felt in the world of cinema, but music, where he had inextricable influence on multiple generations of artists.

    Lynch, whose death was announced Thursday, composed music for many of his films, collaborated with others, directed music videos, released albums and inspired legions of creatives.

    You know his films, now, learn about his musical legacy. (You can hear all of the tracks on our Spotify playlist.)

    “In Heaven” from “Eraserhead”

    Lynch composed much of the soundtrack to the clangorous “Eraserhead,” his 1978 debut movie. It foreshadows both a long career in film and an enduring interest in using music to establish a surrealist ambience in his work. “In Heaven” holds particular resonance in the film. It’s performed by a woman who lives in protagonist Henry Spencer’s radiator, for one thing. It has been embraced by legions of indie rock fans. The Pixies have covered it and it is interpolated into Modest Mouse’s “Workin’ on Leavin’ the Livin’.”

    Chris Isaak, “Wicked Game”

    Chris Isaak’s 1989 desert ballad “Wicked Game” did not become a hit until it was included in Lynch’s 1990 romantic crime drama “Wild at Heart” starring Nicolas Cage and Laura Dern. And that, my friends, is Lynch’s musical power.

    Angelo Badalamenti, “Twin Peaks” theme

    It would be a challenge to name a music and film collaboration stronger and more ideal than the one between Badalamenti and Lynch. They first worked together on 1986’s “Blue Velvet,” leading to a long partnership (and, no doubt, armies of new Roy Orbison fans, given his placement in the film). But it’s Badalamenti’s theme for “Twin Peaks” that fans no doubt think of first when their names appear.

    The singer Julee Cruise had a hit in the song, titled “Falling.” It is the perfect distillation of the show’s beauty, mystery and violence — and that of its setting, the foggy Pacific Northwest.

    Moby, “Go”

    Moby sampled the “Twin Peaks” theme in his 1991 single, “Go,” transforming the song into a career-making rave.

    Later, in 2009, Lynch would direct a music video for Moby’s “Shot in the Back of the Head.” He had quite the run as a music video director, working with everyone from Nine Inch Nails and Donovan to the German nu-metal band Rammstein.

    David Lynch, “Thank You Judge”

    In 2001, Lynch released his debut album, “BlueBOB,” a sometimes industrial, goth-y (no surprise there) blues rock full-length. At times, it recalls the avant-garde no-wave of a cult classic band like Pere Ubu — particularly on the track “Thank You Judge.” It is very distorted, very reverb heavy, and very much not for the faint of heart.

    David Lynch and Karen O, “Pinky’s Dream”

    In 2011, Lynch released the album “Crazy Clown Time,” producing the standout electro-pop opener “Pinky’s Dream.” It features the great singer Karen O, frontwoman of the ‘00s New York rock band Yeah Yeah Yeahs.

    David Lynch and Lykke Li, “I’m Waiting Here”

    On his third album, “The Big Dream,” Lynch teamed up with Swedish singer Lykke Li for the dreamy “I’m Waiting Here,” a breathy, depressed doo-wop anti-hit that sounds like it was recorded in the spot where a sunset horizon hits an open road.

    Chromatics, “Shadow”

    In 2017, 26 years after the end of the second season of “Twin Peaks,” the show returned for a limited series, “Twin Peaks: The Return.” It featured tons of performances from Lynch-approved acts — Nine Inch Nails, Eddie Vedder, Sharon Van Etten and of course Julee Cruise among them. But a performance by the Portland, Oregon synthpop band Chromatics in episode two stands out. The song is “Shadow,” and it is so undeniably perfect for the show, the band appears as if they were made for it.

    Flying Lotus, “Fire Is Coming”

    Lynch is the first voice heard on Flying Lotus’“Fire Is Coming” — a distinctive orator and storyteller, and a curious choice to open to a beat-heavy track from the inventive DJ. But looping Lynch saying the title track over and over again? That’s an inspired decision.

    Chrystabell & David Lynch, “Sublime Eternal Love”

    In her review, The Associated Press’ Krysta Fauria describes Lynch’s last album, “Cellophane Memories” a collaboration with the artist Chrystabell, as “surrealist” and “difficult to categorize within a genre.” She argues it can only be defined by its “austere lyrics and ambient soundscapes carried by Chrystabell’s hypnotic, reverbed vocals.” Now that it has become Lynch’s final album, it doubles as a fitting coda — as does its closing track, “Sublime Eternal Love.” It’s a haunting, romantic vocal performance atop modulating synthetic production, the kind sound long associated with Lynch.




    1. "Laura Palmer’s Theme" – Angelo Badalamenti
    2. "Questions in a World of Blue" – Julee Cruise
    3. "Blue Velvet" – Bobby Vinton
    4. "In Dreams" – Roy Orbison
    5. "Wicked Game" – Chris Isaak
    6. "Love Me Tender" – Elvis Presley
    7. "Crying" – Roy Orbison
    8. "I Put a Spell on You" – Screamin’ Jay Hawkins
    9. "Ghost of Love" – Angelo Badalamenti
    10. "The Pink Room" – Angelo Badalamenti

      These songs capture the haunting, dreamlike atmosphere that David Lynch is known for in his films and TV shows. From the iconic Twin Peaks theme to the timeless classics like "Blue Velvet" and "Wicked Game," these songs are sure to remind you of Lynch’s unique and influential musical legacy.

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  • Josh Hall Tells Christina to Remember Her Last Name in Flip Off Clip

    Josh Hall Tells Christina to Remember Her Last Name in Flip Off Clip


    The Flip Off is about home makeovers, but star Christina Hall’s divorce drama with her estranged husband, Josh Hall, is already stealing the show.

    In an all-new sneak peek from the upcoming HGTV show, Josh, 44, and Christina, 41, have a tense moment while driving to a project ahead of their split.

    “This is a competition, you gotta pull out all stops. Whatever it takes to win, I’ll do it,” Josh tells Christina in the clip.

    To pump up his then-spouse, Josh yells, “Halls rule!” but Christina gives him the silent treatment from the passenger seat.

    Josh Hall Tells Now Ex Christina to Remember Her Last Name
    Axelle/Bauer-Griffin/FilmMagic; Allen Berezovsky/Getty Images

    “You’re supposed to say it with me or repeat it or something to show that you’re with me. Remember, you’re a Hall now,” Josh says, which results in Christina letting out a big sigh.

    Josh then looks over at her and reminds her that they are supposed to be a team. “Don’t get confused in this competition about what your last name is,” he says in a negative tone, before calling the Christina on the Coast star “rude.”

    Christina claims she just doesn’t “over talk,” which fires Josh up even more. “You know how much s— you say and I’m just like, ‘I wish you’d shut up already?’” he asks.

    Christina lets out an audible “uhhh” sound as they continue on their route. “My wife’s pissing me off already,” Josh says to which Christina asks, “Are we there yet?”

    At the end of the clip, Christina meets up with her ex-husband and The Flip Off competitor Tarek El Moussa and he instantly knows something is wrong.

    “I know that look. What’s going on? You good?” El Moussa, 43, asks. Christina takes a beat and then tells him, “No,” revealing, “Josh and I officially split up.”

    Christina and Josh tied the knot in April 2022. During their marriage they worked together on Christina in the Country, which followed Christina’s renovation efforts in Tennessee. He also appeared on Christina on the Coast, which focuses on Christina’s projects in California.

    Christina Hall Is Communicating Better With Exes Ant Anstead and Tarek El Moussa Amid Josh Divorce 688


    Related: Christina Hall ‘Communicating Better’ With Exes Ant and Tarek Amid Divorce

    Christina Hall is juggling a lot during her divorce from Joshua Hall — but her relationships with ex-husbands Ant Anstead and Tarek El Moussa couldn’t be easier. “Everyone is communicating better,” a source exclusively reveals in the latest issue of Us Weekly, noting that both Anstead, 45, and El Moussa, 42, have been “extremely supportive” […]

    In May 2024, the pair revealed they would be competing against Christina’s ex Tarek and his wife, Heather Rae El Moussa, on The Flip Off, which premieres Wednesday, January 28. (Christina and Tarek previously worked together for 10 years on HGTV’s Flip or Flop, which filmed before, during and after their divorce, which was finalized in 2018. The exes share two children: Taylor, 13, and Brayden, 10.)

    While Josh was intended to have a bigger role in The Flip Off than his past collaborations with Christina, that changed when they both filed for divorce in July 2024. (Their legal proceedings are still ongoing with Christina hiring powerhouse attorney Laura Wasser in November 2024 to expedite the process.)

    Us Weekly exclusively confirmed at the time that since The Flip Off was “in production” already, Christina, Tarek and Heather, 37, were “moving forward with the show without” Josh.

    Christina Hall Files New Documents Responding to Joshua Hall’s Request for Divorce


    Related: Christina Hall Submits New Docs Responding to Joshua Hall’s Divorce Filing

    Christina Hall filed her response to estranged husband Joshua Hall’s request for a divorce, eight days after they both filed to end the marriage. According to the new docs, filed on Tuesday, July 23, and obtained by Us Weekly, Christina, 41, requested a dissolution of marriage … again. Christina and Joshua, 43, both initially filed […]

    In November 2024, Us confirmed that Christina’s other ex-husband Ant Anstead would partner with her for a “portion of the show.” Christina and Anstead, 45, were married from 2018 to 2020 and share 4-year-old son Hudson.

    Later that month, Christina opened up about her past relationship with Josh and their working dynamic, which she claimed was not positive.

    “When someone [feels] insecure by you and doesn’t like to see you win, that really puts a damper on everything,” she alleged in an interview with Entertainment Tonight at the time. “I feel, like, I was not shining as bright to try and not make him feel emasculated, but who wants to live like that?”

    Christina said it was “not fun” and she “did not enjoy filming with him,” so their breakup made it “much easier” work wise.

    She then claimed that Josh didn’t like her “dynamic” with ex Tarek. “Some would call it ‘flirty.’ It’s more, like, a sibling-type thing,’” she added.

    Tarek, for his part, exclusively told Us in October 2024 that he “never, ever in my life thought this show would happen” with his wife — with whom he shares son Tristan, 23 months — on one side and ex-wife on the other.

    The Flip Off promises to be “a throwdown competition” between Christina and Tarek (with the help of Heather) to see which ex can “find, renovate and flip a house of the biggest financial gain,” according to the official press release. The winner will get “bragging rights and a first-class vacation paid for by the loser.”

    The Flip Off premieres on HGTV Wednesday, January 29, at 8 p.m. ET and available the same day to stream on Max and Discovery+.



    In a recent clip from the hit reality show Flip Off, tension between Josh Hall and Christina reached a boiling point as Josh bluntly told Christina to remember her last name.

    The heated moment occurred during a renovation project when Christina made a decision without consulting Josh, which resulted in a setback for their team. Frustrated by her actions, Josh confronted Christina and delivered the cutting remark, “Remember your last name, Christina.”

    The comment left Christina visibly stunned and the rest of the crew on edge, as they watched the drama unfold. Viewers are now eagerly waiting to see how Christina will respond to Josh’s harsh words in the next episode.

    Stay tuned to Flip Off to see how this confrontation plays out and whether Josh and Christina can put aside their differences for the sake of their renovation project.

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  • Missing You review – you won’t remember a thing about Harlan Coben’s latest mystery 10 minutes later | Television & radio

    Missing You review – you won’t remember a thing about Harlan Coben’s latest mystery 10 minutes later | Television & radio


    Ten down, four to go. I approach each new adaptation of a Harlan Coben thriller under his 14-book deal with Netflix as a weary traveller on a very long journey – committed to reaching the final destination and grateful every time that we are closer to the end.

    It has been a funny old business, this deal. The adaptations have been churned out in a manner reminiscent of the old studio system – fast, efficiently and apparently with any actors free at the moment of casting and with little time to spare for making them stand up to great scrutiny. Or perhaps they are more like the Catherine Cookson dramas that flooded the 90s television schedules and whose formulaic pleasures can still be found when you are off sick, or otherwise in need of comfort (along with the chance to spot now-star actors in embryonic form). Coben’s are darker and more bloody, but the promise is the same: viewers will get exactly what they came for and go away content.

    So, to No 10 in the Coben-Netflix venture, Missing You. Our protagonist is DI Kat Donovan (Rosalind Eleazar) – feisty, good at her job but terminally single since her fiance, Josh (Ashley Walters), left her, without a word of explanation, 11 years ago. Her father, Clint, played by Lenny Henry, who was also on the force, was murdered by a hitman, Monte (Marc Warren). Coben regular Richard Armitage is her boss, DCI Ellis Stagger (this is his name in the book, so perhaps there was nothing to be done). Donovan has two narratively important friends, private investigator Stacey (Jessica Plummer) and Josh’s former flatmate and close friend Aqua (Mary Malone).

    Add to this a man (played by Rudi Dharmalingam) running for his life over the moors. He is eventually caught, stripped, given an orange jumpsuit and chained up in a farm’s outbuilding – which might be an esoteric spa experience or team-building corporate awayday, I suppose, but on the whole suspect not. Then there’s a missing blonde woman (Lisa Faulkner); a prison nurse (Samantha Spiro – always so good at suggesting the ordinary woman who is ready to snap at any moment) prepared to inject the hitman with some form of truth serum she seems to have invented so Kat can illegally question him on his deathbed about her father’s murder; Steve Pemberton effortlessly creating another terrifying weirdo to give us all sleepless nights; and James Nesbitt hovering on the horizon as Monte’s boss. We’ve really plenty to be getting on with.

    Which makes it all the stranger – especially when you consider the source material, which is always propulsive – that it adheres once more to the flawed template the previous efforts have followed. The first episode or two is largely wheel-spinning. Kat tells three different people the same information three different times, when we’ve such a lot to get through! Stop it! We all understood the first time the very simple point that your boyfriend left you without warning. We do not need to waste time on Stacey telling you/us that “He hurt you. Badly” nor force the poor actor through lines as terrible as: “You shut yourself down and turned off love like it was a hate crime.” Nor do we need people to keep saying: “Wait, what are you saying?” when what they have said is abundantly clear.

    Nevertheless, after the first weirdly repetitive opening episodes, the mission finds its feet and matters begin to twist, turn and improve. Mysteries deepen, nasty secrets are uncovered, treachery (or apparent treachery) and revelations abound and you’re wholly addicted once more. You won’t remember a thing about it 10 minutes after the credits roll, but that’s OK. You know the puzzle got solved and you had fun. What more do you need?

    Missing You is on Netflix now



    Missing You review – you won’t remember a thing about Harlan Coben’s latest mystery 10 minutes later

    Harlan Coben is back with another gripping mystery in his latest novel, Missing You. The story follows the disappearance of a young woman named Chelsea and the desperate search to find her before it’s too late. With twists and turns at every corner, Coben keeps readers on the edge of their seats as they try to piece together the clues leading to Chelsea’s whereabouts.

    While the plot is engaging and the suspense is palpable, Missing You ultimately falls short in its execution. The characters are one-dimensional and lack depth, making it difficult for readers to truly invest in their fates. Additionally, the resolution of the mystery feels rushed and unsatisfying, leaving many loose ends untied.

    Despite these shortcomings, Missing You is a quick and entertaining read for fans of Coben’s work. However, it is unlikely to leave a lasting impression, as the forgettable characters and lackluster ending may fade from memory shortly after finishing the book.

    Overall, Missing You is a decent addition to Coben’s repertoire, but it lacks the staying power of his more memorable works. If you’re looking for a quick mystery fix, this novel may fit the bill – just don’t expect it to stay with you long after you turn the final page.

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