“From Sandlots to the Super Bowl: No two teams better represent the NFL’s progressive traditions than the Packers and Steelers”
By Rob Ruck via the Post-Gazette
24 plays
“TV Flap: Will the NFL Live Up To Its Socialist Ideals?” by Frank Deford
I heard this on NPR today. Interesting little snippet about Pittsburgh in there.
…Better blacklist the NFL.
HERE WE GO STEELERS
4 plays
If you’ve watched the Steelers at any point in the last 15 years or so, you’ve probably heard the Steelers cheer song, “Here We Go (Pittsburgh’s goin’ to the Super Bowl).” But this lesser known “Steelers Polka” was a staple during the glory years in the 70s. If I remember correctly this version was updated for the ‘95 Super Bowl, but to my knowledge it hasn’t been updated with new names since then. I remember reading an article either in Sports Illustrated or ESPN magazine in which the author said something like, “Pittsburgh is one of the only cities you can still hear polka music on the radio.” This is true, but I’m fairly positive he was referring to this song in particular. It seems that when Pittsburghers - and especially non-Pittsburghers - image the city, they understand it as a place that preserves those things that have otherwise been lost — a “smash mouth” brand of football and defense, good ol’ fashioned blue collar work, hairdos of decades past (the mullet), and polka music.
Coffee Prescription - 24 May 2012
Tree planting in Pittsburgh, 1901 [Western Pennsylvania Conservancy]
I love you, Richard Simmons, yesterday and today and forever.