Thousands of readers have been writing in to ask what I think of the Sean Avery affair, seeing as it touches on two of my perennial themes—hockey and misogyny.
For those of you who missed it, Avery, a former New York Ranger, was recently *kicked off the Dallas Stars* for complaining that two of his ex-girlfriends were dating NHL players. What he said, more specifically, was: “It’s become a common thing for players in the NHL to fall in love with my sloppy seconds.” He said this in his role as very annoying guy, right before the Stars played the Calgary Flames, whose star defenseman, Dion Phaneuf, is in fact dating Avery’s ex-girlfriend, who is an actress.
Avery is not a beloved player in the NHL. On YouTube, alongside his comments about sloppy seconds, here, you can also screen “Rick DiPietro Slaps Sean Avery,” “Sean Avery Is a Coward,” and “Hordichuck Beats on Sean Avery.” Nor is he very good at hockey. As the great hockey blogger Puckupdate warned Dallas fans earlier this year:
He’s got some speed. He definitely has some grit. But that’s about it. He doesn’t have much of a hockey IQ. You’ll see a lot of bad penalties and silly giveaways. You’ll see a lot of shots on goal right into the midsection of the opposing goalie. You’ll see average defense. You’ll see some goals from right around the front of the net, but that’s really it. Do yourself a favor and lower your expectations now.
Avery wasn’t having a very good stretch with Dallas, and still it’s just downright amazing—I can’t think of any precedent in sports history—that a player can say something offensive to the other team and be expelled from his own team for it.
But what I mostly want to say is this: Avery is famous for being a “pest”—not, as Newsweek put it last month, for being “the baddest badass in the NHL”—but for talking trash to other players, being dirty, and probably, though I can’t say I’ve ever seen him do this, banging his stick on the ice when the other team has the puck and pretending he wants a pass. People shouldn’t do that. I wish coaches would teach kids not to do that. I *hate* that.
And so, to sum up, Avery was touching on a genuinely important emotional conundrum of late modernity—the fact that all of us have former lovers, which is how we like it, and yet we never actually want them to date anyone ever again. We especially don’t want them to date professional hockey players. And yet, watching the video of his comments, I see that rather than expressing genuine sorrow over this state of affairs he was merely “doing his job.” And for that, I, like the Dallas Stars, cannot forgive him.
Those are my comments on the Avery affair.
The video above shows Calgary defenseman Phaneuf wrecking guys. It’s got a good soundtrack. Halfway through they show Phaneuf scoring a goal—he scores 20 goals a year, which is a lot—and you think the video is going to turn into him scoring goals, but instead it goes right back to him wrecking guys. Recommended.
Hockey is pretty awesome.
Unless it is mad, passionate, extraordinary love, it’s a waste of time. There are too many mediocre things in life—love should not be one of them.— Unknown (via overflowing) (via kari-shma) (via finallyseeing)
benjaminhilts:Everything Will Be Just Finemisprinted type 4.0_art, design and type (1998-2008) Eduardo Recife
A hoax telephone call almost sparked another war between nuclear-armed India and Pakistan at the height of last month’s terror attacks on Mumbai, officials and Western diplomats on both sides of the border said today.— Prank Call To Zardari Almost Led To War. (via soupsoup)
i think i found my new job
PARIS, France (CNN) — Four armed robbers — two of them men disguised as women — walked into a luxury jewelry store in Paris and swiped an estimated €80 million (U.S. $101 million) in jewels, the Paris prosecutor’s office said.

Robbers dressed in drag stole more than $100M worth of jewelry from a Harry Winston store in Paris.
The incident, which lasted about 15 minutes, took place Thursday around 5:30 p.m. at the Harry Winston store near the famed Avenue des Champs-Elysees, around the corner from a police station.
The case has been turned over to the unit in charge of handling organized crime cases, said Isabelle Montagne, assistant to Paris prosecutor Jean Claude Marin.
No shots were fired and no one was wounded, she said.
Watch more on the heist »
After they entered the store, the four thieves pulled out their weapons, forced the customers and employees — about 15 people in all — into a corner, and grabbed jewels out of display cases and safes, the prosecutor’s office said. The robbers seemed to know the locations of secret hiding places for jewels and called some employees by their first names, it said.
The group then fled the store, which is located on a wide street near subways and other public transportation. French state radio reported that it was not immediately clear how the robbers left the area.
Investigators believe it was the work of a highly professional group, and that the culprits were French or from elsewhere in Europe, state radio reported.
In a written statement, the Harry Winston company said, “We are cooperating with the authorities in their investigation. Our first concern is the well-being of our employees.”
The same shop was robbed of millions of euros worth of jewelry just 14 months ago, in October 2007.
tumbledore:(image via vache)
Sometimes I will see an image and just think, “If I don’t share this with someone… even just one person… it would be a damn shame.”
I feel compelled to spread the word.
me too
Distance means so little when someone means so much.—
(via littlemiss) (via pieces) (via stupidinboston) (via kaytee) (via soupsoup)
kathryn taught me this







