Tuesday, March 24, 2015

The NCAA March Madness - the greatest sports event in the world - amateur or professional - in terms of money that is!

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In spite of the fact college basketball is an amateur sport, there is nothing amateur about the way money is generated from the NCAA playoffs.  So massive is the revenue that it far surpasses even the Super Bowl.


Perhaps a better gauge of popularity is the amount people bet on the games and here Las Vegas knows the winner.  For every dollar bet on the Super Bowl, at least seven dollars are bet during March Madness, well over $7 billion.

In fact, if you combine revenue from the entire NFL playoffs including the Super Bowl, it is one third less than the NCAA playoffs.  If you combined all the revenue from the professional NBA, Major League Baseball, and National Hockey League playoffs, it is still one third less than the NCAA playoffs.
    

King Midas is alive and well in NCAA country.

When it comes to college basketball, one might be driven crazy by all the constant changes in conference members, the odd television broadcast schedules, the incessant drive for perfection, and the big business aspects.


There is a reason for these things as big business is big bucks.

Of course in spite of all the billions of dollars spent during March Madness, the players, those gladiators in the ring, get nothing.

But ad revenue is just a small part of the story. Investopedia identifies four more extremely lucrative ways the tournament makes money, none of which goes to the players:


1) Broadcast rights: In April 2010, the NCAA inked a deal with CBS that made the network its exclusive March Madness outlet. The contract lasts for 14 years and is worth a whopping $10.8 billion. This contract alone is projected to generate $771 million per year for the NCAA.

2) "The basketball fund": The NCAA's annual March Madness revenue is divided among the different basketball-playing schools and conferences (i.e. the Pac-12, SEC, etc.) based on factors such as schools' numbers of sports teams, scholarships awarded and tournament performances.

Conferences also have a hand in divvying up these large money pots (between 2005 and 2011, the top-earning Big East conference made $86.7 million) either evenly amongst schools or based on March Madness performance and revenue generated. According to Forbes, a team's trip to the Final Four earns its conference $9.5 million.


3) Ticket sales and sponsorships: During March Madness, tickets and sponsors generate about $40 million in revenue. Combined with the money from the broadcast rights, this accounts for 96% of the NCAA's total annual revenue.

4) Wagers: What happens in Vegas stays in Vegas, especially if it involves an unlucky March Madness bet. Americans wager an estimated $7 billion a year on the tournament. That is $1 billion more than the Super Bowl.

Also, consider the average ticket price at face value for the final four in Indianapolis is about $1,400 per person with fees up to $500.  Of course if Kentucky gets in, from the neighboring state, the scalped price may have no ceiling.

Finally, the economic impact of the NCAA tournament for host cities generates millions and millions of dollars in local revenue not to mention the Friday through Monday night schedule for the Final Four, meaning people will spend four days to see two games.

Because of the complexity of the money trail, I am including an excellent report done by Bloomberg Business on the business of money and the NCAA March Madness.  You would do well to review it in detail.

March Madness Makers and Takers

The way the NCAA distributes the staggering revenue from the basketball tournament has created a polarized system where some schools make money and others just take it.

By David Ingold and Adam Pearce | March 18, 2015

Twenty five years ago, the NCAA decided something had to be done about March Madness money. The year before, CBS agreed to pay a record $1 billion to broadcast the 1991-1997 tournaments. That was fine with the powerhouse basketball schools that routinely made it into the postseason: Under the rules at the time, they divided most of the revenue based on the number of games they won.

Conference officials feared that without a change, a handful of schools would get rich while others got nothing, and the student athletes competing in the tournament would face increasing financial pressure to win games.


Annual TV revenue from NCAA Division I men’s basketball tournament $800 million CBS and Turner Broadcasting begin $10.8 billion , 14-year deal Basketball Fund goes into effect after CBS nearly triples annual revenue to $143 million ,TV rights switch to CBS from NBC Source: NCAA reports Note: Chart shows the average annual rate over the course of a contract.

The Basketball Fund Is Born

So in 1990 the NCAA created the “basketball fund,” a plan intended to more fairly divvy up tournament revenue and parcel it out among the country’s Division I schools.

The new plan cut the amount of the payout that’s directly tied to teams’ wins and losses. Most of the tournament’s TV revenue is now earmarked for things like academic programs and financial assistance for student athletes. Even schools that don’t play in the postseason get a cut.

The remaining amount makes up the basketball fund—and it’s no small pot. Last year the fund totaled about 28 percent of the tournament’s TV revenue, or about $194 million. These coveted dollars are won or lost on the basketball court, and the battle among schools to claim them accounts for a lot of the Madness each March.


The tournament TV contract brought in $700 million in 2014… $498 million went to Division I schools… with $194 million given via the basketball fund… $199 million this year … and that amount keeps growing.


How It Works
Teams earn a “unit” for every tournament game they play up to the championship game. So a team that makes it to the final four will earn five units. Each unit is worth a specific amount each year. Instead of paying schools directly for the units they win, however, the NCAA now gives the units to a team’s conference, and the conference is responsible for distributing the money to its members. A conference can divide up the money however it wants, but the NCAA suggests schools evenly split the payout, and most conferences follow the recommendation.

The End of the $300,000 Free Throw


One goal of the basketball fund was to reduce the financial impact of individual wins and losses. Under the old system in which schools were paid each year for their wins, a player who missed a single game-winning free throw cost his team $300,000 or more. The fund changed that by spreading out the tournament payments over six years; and since that money is also split among the dozen or so teams in a conference, the dollar value attached to any single game is diluted.

Every unit won in 2015 will be worth at least $1.6 million over six years. For a strong team like Kentucky, which might earn as many as five units if it makes it to the final four, that once meant a massive payout at the end of the tournament. Under the basketball fund, those units will be split with the other 13 schools in the Southeastern Conference—dropping the per-school value of its units earned this year to about $560,000 over the next six years.


Conferences Are Key


One big effect of the fund is that it shifts the emphasis from winning teams to winning conferences. All 350 Division I teams will get a cut of this year’s $200 million basketball fund—but strong conferences with many winning teams will rack up more units and take home a much bigger share of the pile.

The nation’s top basketball programs have historically been in one of six major conferences: the ACC, Big East, Big Ten, Pac-12, Big 12, and SEC. These conferences only account for 20 percent of the teams in Division I, but they’ll likely receive about 60 percent of the basketball fund payout this year.

The fund is supposed to be about rewarding performance, and it’s fitting that the top programs will receive the largest cut of the money. But the strongest conferences also include schools with weak basketball programs—and they get an equal cut of the winnings even if they didn’t play a single game in the tournament.


Basketball Fund earnings by conference, 1991 - 2015

A System of Makers and Takers
This focus on conferences instead of teams has resulted in a system of makers and takers, where colleges in a conference lean on a few key schools with powerful basketball teams to earn money for everyone else.

Take Michigan State, a Big Ten school that’s earned 21 units during the current six-year payout period. That translates to about $5.1 million for the Big Ten in 2015 alone. After its earnings are lumped together with the rest of the conference and equally doled out, MSU will get back one-third of the amount it’s put in. Other top makers include Duke, Kansas, Kentucky, and North Carolina.

This effect is magnified in smaller conferences, where a single team could be responsible for the bulk of tournament appearances. Gonzaga University plays in the West Coast conference and is responsible for half of its revenue. It gets back an even smaller share, roughly 20 percent of what it contributes.

The inverse can be true for weak programs in strong conferences. An extreme case would be Northwestern University, which also plays in the Big Ten. Unlike Michigan State, Northwestern has never made it to the NCAA tournament – not once since 1939.

Despite contributing zero units over the last 30 years, Northwestern has received an estimated $24.5 million from the fund. This year, the school will receive roughly $2.2 million, the same amount as Michigan State.

The chart below compares how much schools have earned for their conference and how much they've gotten back. It assumes conferences equally split their basketball fund revenue like the NCAA suggests. Looking at all the schools together, it's clear that some are getting back a lot more than they put in.


Makers and takers by conference, 1991 - 2015

Movers and Shakers
Schools are continually changing conferences, typically to improve their financial situation. Though football-related money is the biggest motivator, all that jumping around also has a big impact on the basketball fund, since schools rely heavily on one another for units. Conferences with multiple earners can tough out the loss of a powerful team. But the departure of a breadwinner can mean a huge financial hit for weaker conferences.

Take the Horizon League, a mid-sized conference with schools from the Midwest that doesn’t have the depth of the ACC or Big Ten. Twice the conference has lost its top earner to the Atlantic 10, a more financially attractive conference. Xavier left in 1995, Butler in 2012. The last of the units Butler earned for the Horizon League expire in 2016, and if another program doesn't step up, the League’s revenue could drop to $1.6 million in 2017 from $5 million in 2011.


The West Coast conference now faces a similar situation with Gonzaga University. Located in Spokane, Washington, Gonzaga earns more than half the conference’s units and is a #2 seed in the tournament. A strong March Madness showing could increase its attractiveness to more powerful conferences. The school is already rumored to be a contender to join the new Big East. That leaves West Coast schools to cheer Gonzaga's success, count the millions it brings them, and pray everything stays the same.

Monday, March 23, 2015

Pythagoras & Aristotle Report on March Madness - How peculiar those Americans - The Sweet Sixteen

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Enough from the sports analysts, arm chair point guards, loud mouth fanatics, news and entertainment personalities, geeks and computers, after two or three rounds, the first of many odd math facts attached to March Madness, we have sixteen teams left.


The bracket says three rounds were played but reality says we went from 64 to 32 teams (1st round), then 32 to 16 teams (2nd round).  My math says two rounds.  We have left 16 to 8 (3rd round), 8 to 4 (4th round), 4 to 2 (5th round), and the championship (6th round).  Since when did a play in by a couple of teams constitute a tournament round?


Clearly, no one involved in the billion dollar March Madness money machine worries about details like accuracy, math, or specifics, just the bottom line.  Well the bottom line started out with Kentucky the favorite and after two or three rounds, nothing has changed.


The first rounds destroyed the East coast, or specifically the Northeast, as a perennial powerhouse of teams which seems a logical shift, but that is part of the analysis to come.


For insights free of the often-hysterical outbursts by all our specialists, I have channeled Pythagoras, ancient Greek mathematician, and Aristotle, ancient Greek philosopher, to get their analysis of what is going on.


First, they offered as background a review of the definition of "Madness", as used in the made-for-TV phrase March Madness.  Does the term "Madness" contribute to the branding of the NCAA championship?

Here is their composite definition:

mad·ness
noun

Madness

The definition of madness:
1. insanity, mental illness, dementia, derangement, lunacy, instability
2. folly, foolishness, idiocy, stupidity, insanity, lunacy, silliness 
3. frenzied or chaotic activity

The synonyms for various states of madness:
1. mania, psychosis,
2. craziness
3. bedlam, mayhem, chaos, pandemonium, craziness, uproar, turmoil, disorder, all hell broken loose, (three-ring) circus


According to my learned ancients, it would appear the term indeed describes the state of chaos resulting from March Madness.

Pythagoras was most interested in the mathematical puzzles, assumptions, thesis and hypothesis involved in seeding, results, conferences, and all the other trivia associated with the payoffs.  Some of his observations included conference power rating, note the numbers represent the conference standings of the tournament teams, not the NCAA seedings.

So far through the first two or three rounds here are conference results.

Atlantic Coast Conference
Conference champion (1) Virginia lost
(2) Duke, (3) Notre Dame, (4) Louisville, (5) North Carolina, (7) North Carolina State won

Pac 12
One team lost
(1) Arizona, (2) Utah, and (4) UCLA won

Big East
Top five teams lost
Only (6) Xavier remains

Big Ten
Five teams lost
(1) Wisconsin and (3) Michigan State remain

Big 12
Five teams lost
(3) Oklahoma and (4) West Virginia remain

SEC
Four teams lost
(1) Kentucky remains

Missouri Valley
One team lost
(1) Wichita State won

West Coast
One team lost
(1) Gonzaga remains


Pythagoras is also curious about the relationship between tournament seedings, and actual results to date, so here are the stats.

Seeds Surviving
 1.        three teams  Kentucky, Wisconsin, Duke
 2.        two teams     Arizona, Gonzaga
 3.        two teams     Notre Dame, Oklahoma
 4.        two teams     North Carolina, Louisville
 5.        two teams     West Virginia, Utah
 6.        one team       Xavier
 7.        two teams     Wichita State, Michigan State
 8.        one team       North Carolina State
11.        one team       UCLA


Other Pythagorean factoids to bear in mind:

No team whose name began with a "V" survived the opening rounds, four teams lost.

Three teams whose name began with a "N" and three whose name began with a "W" made the Sweet Sixteen, along with two whose name began with "U".

North Carolina was the state with the most teams, three, while Kentucky and California had two teams each.

Roughly speaking, the geographic distribution of teams is:

Northeast - 1
Southeast - 3
Midwest - 8
West - 4

Of those from the Midwest, six were east of the Mississippi River, and two were west of the Mississippi River.


As far as mascots, which interested Aristotle, here are the teams, seeding and mascots.  As you can see, there are two Wildcats, Kentucky and Arizona, and little else in common among the schools.  Aristotle seemed most interested in the Spartans of Michigan State.

1 Kentucky Wildcats       

1 Duke Blue Devils      

1 Wisconsin Badgers    

2 Arizona Wildcats       

2 Gonzaga Bulldogs ('Zags)        

3 Notre Dame Fighting Irish   

3 Oklahoma Sooners     

4 Louisville Cardinals      

4 North Carolina Tar Heels      

5 Utah Utes        

5 West Virginia Mountaineers    

6 Xavier Muskeeters          

Michigan State Spartans     

7 Wichita State Shockers  

8 NC State Wolfpack       

11 UCLA Bruins


 
   

Of course one stat that is not in the formula is the fan intensity and the cheerleader impact and we can thank the lowest seeded team for bringing along the highest rated cheerleaders to the tourney, eleven seeded UCLA.


So what do my friends Pythagoras & Aristotle think of this unique American past time? 
Stay tuned.
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Friday, March 20, 2015

Happy Spring Equinox Fellow Earthlings

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Today is the Spring Equinox beginning at 6:45 pm eastern time, one of the most ancient of all celebrations.


This morning a spectacular total eclipse of the Sun took place if you lived in Northern Europe and there will not be another like it for 27 years.


There is magic in the air as we move to spring, the season of birth or rebirth, the winter may have come to an end, spring officially begins, and if the weathermen do not get it right this time they will be banished from ever lying to us about the weather again.




Be kind to Druids today - they help protect Mother Earth from us, and be sure to hug an Oak tree, the most sacred of all trees.


If you are really enlightened, you can jump into the inter-dimensional portal, shift frequencies, and sail off into the universes.


Here are photos of people in England watching the solar eclipse.



Here are also photos of us in the 1950's with the same 3D glasses.


Has nothing changed in the past 60 years?  

CPT Spirits in the Sky - Another Star Lights up the Legends in the Sky

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What Goes On!

Kim Fowley: 1939–2015

MOJO pays tribute to the LA producer, songwriter and svengali who passed away on January 15.

By MOJO Staff
KIM FOWLEY NEVER stopped. Only a few months ago, while undergoing painful treatment for bladder cancer, he was in discussion with a brace of MOJO journalists about a possible life-spanning feature. At the same time he was completing the second instalment of Lord Of Garbage, his two-part biography intended to be released after his death, and recording his SiriusXM Radio show on Little Steven Van Zandt’s Underground Garage. In November he made an appearance in Beyoncé’s Haunted video. Self-promotion, right up to the end. It’s what he would have wanted.
Fowley was born in Los Angeles in 1939. The son of Singin’ In The Rain actor Douglas Fowley and ’40s noir actress Shelby Paine, Kim Fowley arrived into a world of performance, attending Los Angeles’ University High School with Ryan O’Neal, James Brolin, Sandra Dee, Nancy Sinatra and Jan & Dean. He started out as a survivor, and continued in like style: diagnosed with polio at the age of 18, he would check himself out of hospital to become the manager of a local rock band, The Sleepwalkers.
“Kim Fowley is a big loss to me. A good friend. One of a kind. He’d been everywhere, done everything, knew everybody.”
Steve Van Zandt
Fowley charmed, hustled and beguiled his way into the LA studio scene as a producer, promoter, publisher and songwriter. He was still a teenager when, in 1960, he co-produced the Number 1 novelty doo-wop hit Alley Oop for The Hollywood Argyles. He also wrote the novelty number Nut Rocker for B. Bumble And The Stingers, discovered Bread’s David Gates while hitchhiking through California and worked publicity for P.J. Proby’s controversial trouser-splitting British career in the mid-’60s. Instrumental in the nascent careers of Slade, Soft Machine and Ritchie Blackmore, Fowley saw out the ’60s producing Gene Vincent and Warren Zevon, and writing for The Byrds with his friend Skip Battin.
Although his own recording career was regarded by many as a joke footnote to his management skills, Fowley’s sinister psych-pop recordings such as The Trip, Night Of The Hunter, Wildfire and Animal Man later became cult collectables, with Sonic Youth covering Bubble Gum on their 1986 LP, Evol.
However, it was on the Sunset Strip in the mid-’70s that Fowley’s career came into its own. Production work continued with Kiss, Alice Cooper and an early incarnation of The Modern Lovers. Then, in 1974, Fowley placed an advert in Greg Shaw’s Who Put The Bomp fanzine to find female performers for an all-girl group. There were no takers, but Fowley’s Sunset Strip recruitment policy led to a meeting between Joan Jett and Sandy West, and with the addition of Cherie Currie, Lita Ford and Jackie Fox, the birth of The Runaways. Fowley managed the band and co-wrote their biggest hit, Cherry Bomb. Although Fowley’s management paperwork led to a series of legal tussles with the band down the years, in 2008 Fowley and Cherie Currie buried the hatchet and last August Currie moved Fowley into her LA home to help with his care.
There were a few other attempts at Runaways-style projects in later years, but if Fowley largely faded from the pop foreground he continued to make friends in the background, extending his myth by way of his own word-of-mouth. MOJO regularly received letters and compilation CDs in the post from Fowley, introducing us to new bands and new songs and we would occasionally be on the other end of long-distance phonecalls, one-way conversations detailing Fowley’s ongoing pop philosophy, delivered in that inimitable style that hovered somewhere between the charming and the sinister.

Kim Fowley. “Charmed, hustled and beguiled his way into the LA studio scene.”
On her Facebook page yesterday Cherie Currie wrote, “Just before 8am this morning, January 15, 2015, Kim Fowley passed away at his home with his wife, Kara Wright, by his side after a long and hard battle with cancer. He was 75 years old. I am so blessed that I got to get to know you again Kim… really get to know you on a personal level and that we became friends. Mostly that you spent time here at my home. It’s a time I will never forget. The last record you made is in good hands and I am so glad that record is mine. It was a pleasure. Thank you for starting my career when I was a just a child. You were instrumental in so many getting started in this crazy world of music. You are a genius… you are loved. You will be so missed.”
Bandmate Lita Ford tweeted: “My first manager, my start in the music industry, my first band put together by Kim. Sometimes I wonder if there would ever have been a Lita Ford without Kim Fowley.”
“Kim Fowley is a big loss to me,” said Steve Van Zandt. “A good friend. One of a kind. He’d been everywhere, done everything, knew everybody. He was working in the Underground Garage until last week. We should all have as full a life. I wanted DJs that could tell stories first person. He was the ultimate realization of that concept. Rock Gypsy DNA. Reinventing himself whenever he felt restless. Which was always. One of the great characters of all time. Irreplaceable.”
Ariel Pink, who Fowley collaborated with on 2014’s Pom Pom tweeted, “RIP Kim Fowley. no words. prayers go out to his wife, kara. his music, life, and spirit will continue to be an inspiration.”
 For more information about his career, head to www.kimfowley.net.
PHOTO: Getty Images/ Alamy
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Thursday, March 19, 2015

My Newest Book - Take Me Now God! - on Amazon Digital - Finding Meaning and Purpose in Life

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I am pleased to report that my newest book will be out in the next day or so through Amazon Digital Services.  The following is a puff piece introduction to the book.




TAKE ME NOW GOD!

A story by Jim Putnam

So what happens when one pursues every course of self-enlightenment and discovery available to people with too much time on their hands?  And what happens when they have exhausted their search through religion, cults, mysticism, spiritualism, Native American cultures, prophecies, politics, the psychic world and beyond?

At the journeys end they have only one option left.  "Take Me Now God!"  A demand to the Creator, Source, or God, no matter what you choose to call him or her, for immediate salvation.  As the author says, "In the beginning was the Word, and no one listened."


In the first chapter of this "unauthorized autobiography", he laments; "She's right you know.  I'm not compatible with humans.  Hell, half the time my damn dog loses it's loyalty.  She once asked me if I ever considered suicide.  Who wouldn't after what I'd seen.  But I said no. So she rephrased the question.  Maybe I should consider suicide.  That's why I decided to end it."

Beginning with the opening Post Mortem, the author rushes to dispose of all that is important in his life so God can take him now.  Prepare yourself for a hilarious journey through the world of religions, the metaphysical, spiritual and more, leaving a trail of shattered searches for inspiration and failure to find the hidden meaning in life.


Excerpts:

True love: "I was star crossed from day one, double crossed by day two, and nailed to the cross by day three."

The Illuminati: "The New Age of enlightened beings - the Illuminati.  Often caught up in their own delusional hysteria.  Demanding to be heard. Demanding to be followed.  Judging others as they don't want themselves judged.  Know how to tell the difference between a fraudulent Illuminati and enlightened one?  You can't."


The Rapture: "There are a lot of interesting things in the spiritual world, but of all of them, the Rapture wins hands down.  Think about it, the optimum lift off.  The ultimate high.  No more bills.  No more taxes."


Creation: "Ever wonder about creation?  I do all the time.  Seems the Bible can account for about 6,000 years, back to the time of the big surf, or flood.  The Hopi and Mayan Indian can account for another 250,000 years, including the mystic kingdom of Atlantis.

"Dinosaurs are 60-120 million years old.  The Grand Canyon is 2 billion years old.  Earth 4 billion, while the universe as we know it is 26 billion years old.  I figure that is more than enough time to accommodate just about every version of creation there can be."



Channels:  "I want real proof.  Give me the winning numbers to next week's Powerball lottery and I'll be a true believer for the rest of my annuities.  Those damn lotteries.  Why is it there are only a few thousand possible combinations of winning numbers, yet the odds of winning are 12 million to one?  Where does that math come from?  Pythagoras in a drunken stupor?"


Native Americans:  "I always had an affinity for them.  Was the only kid that ever volunteered to be the Indian.  Didn't bother me to get killed in most battles.  Every once in a while we played Little Big Horn and I kicked some white ass."



Genetic Manipulation:  "I've had suspicions about it since I was 5 years old, when I first tasted cooked spinach.  That shit had to be genetically engineered poison.  And don't you think it made me more than a little suspicious about my mother, who was trying to kill me with it?"


Ancient Prophecies:  "There is nothing I want more than to believe the ancient prophecies.  After the mess we have made of the Earth, we deserve no less than the catastrophic earth changes that have been foretold.  It would be a fitting tribute to our self-aggrandizing ego trip."


From dogs to demons, Christians to pagans, Take Me Now God! takes one on a wild ride through the life of a searcher, albeit, one who came up empty handed but with no regrets.

Here is the opening of the book:

From: Take Me Now God!

Part One
The Fall
  
EPILOGUE

I got to taste the big time
been chasing dreams I thought mine
but then a cowboy he never learns
when to say no, when to go slow

and all those people ‘round me
all those good friends I thought I’d see
they disappeared in the night
maybe they’re right, I just shouldn’t fight

Keep searching for a home with laughter
seems I’ve some upon the final chapter
as I play out the last scene
footlights fade out, an end to my dream

That curtain it - began descending
as that final act was finally ending
that stage of life I had known
left me no home, left me alone

and don’t you know I can’t wait to get out of here
so tired of being alone
don’t you know I can’t wait to get out of here
I’ve got to find my home

  
-  -  -  -  Getting Acquainted  -  -  -  -

First, let me acquaint you with said subject me, the world I am trying to escape, her world, and the great beyond, my world.  Consider the obvious, and the less obvious becomes easier to comprehend.  I was Left Handed, Four Eyed, Small Town, and Catholic, and they called me Lucky.


The second son sandwiched 13 months on either side by much larger brothers.  I was born the first year of the Baby Boomers as the fallout was still raining down from the two atomic bombs dropped on Japan.  My Mother said I was quite an oddball even in the middle of the helter skelter revolutionary and often anarchist generation of the 1950's and 1960's.  

How many people do you know that start life with four strikes against them?  You see, I would have been most fortunate if those were the only strikes against me in life.  However, my role as entertainer to the gods or archangels or whatever celestial beings needed comic relief, endowed far more strikes against me than just left handed, four eyed, small town, and Catholic.


My maternal side of the family, the Campbell clan, left me with a legacy of the fantastic and mysterious ways of the Dark Irish, a familiarity with the little people from Fairies to Leprechauns, an unsought awareness of the ancient Druid wizards and high priests, healers, and storytellers, and a whole bunch of other weird, mystical, and metaphysical stuff.

Genetically manufactured with the best and worst of Scotland, Ireland, and the Celtic Campbell clan, truly, I was the ultimate hybrid or mutant DNA.

Then there was the paternal side, the Putnam clan, mostly English aristocrats with a touch of German engineering and inventiveness, and pretty much at odds with everything from the whimsical and magical world of my mother's ancestors.  They were the aristocratic ancestry leading to various figures of nobility I dare not mention lest I sully their memories in the history books we read.


Why my father's non-Catholic ancestors even had their own big church near London shortly after the English drove the Catholics out of Britain, meaning back when my father's side in jolly old England drove my mother's side from their ancient homes in the Scottish Highlands to Ireland, and eventually to land here in America.

I do not know a lot about DNA and genetic coding but if we are the product of our parents and ancestors combined DNA then I must have lived in a constant state of revolution and never known who I could trust from my own family.


However, I cannot afford to believe in the children inheriting the sins of their fathers or mothers or ancestors.  From the little genealogy I have dared to research about my family the burden of sins like those are of such tremendous magnitude that us siblings haven't got a chance in Hell of living normal lives.

That sucks...

When I get to the Pearly Gates and confront St. Peter, I expect he will not find my name on the invitation list.  You see, based on the sins of my families my judgment was a foregone conclusion long before I even died.

Still I am a writer and storyteller by birthright, ancestry, and intuitive expectation and I am an occasional believer, when it suits my purpose, that we can create our own reality.  So do not be surprised that the moment of my birth I had the dreadful realization that a very serious mistake took place.

It was a dread that would haunt me through my life.  You see, I just knew there was a serious mix up at God's baby processing facility in Heaven and some absent-minded angel had sent me to the wrong family on earth.

Over time, it was to become obvious.

House of Rothschild
I was supposed to be born a Rothschild in the legendary House of Rothschild in London, home of one of the most mysterious and powerful families in history.  Of course, there is no single House of Rothschild but castles all over Europe and the world.


My real family owned nations, kings, diamonds, gold, banks, and politicians.  Though my palate back in Iowa longed for lobster, caviar, sconces, and tea, I was stuck with pork, corn, hamburgers, and hot dogs.

I did the best I could in a world without soufflé.

Of course, there were serious sacrifices.  I expected armies of servants, limos and trillions of dollars, but I had to settle for an apartment in small town Iowa, parents who were just college students themselves, and a family history of bizarre tragedies and wild magic.

So very reluctantly, I had to accept the cards dealt to me in life and rest assured it was the last time I ever trusted a card dealer.  No matter what my birth certificate said, I was a Rothschild, quite Jewish, an English aristocrat, rich beyond imagination, and lost in the cornfields of Iowa.


My ancestors did not just read the Bible, they wrote it!

However, I never let go of the hope that one day when they audit the baby factory in Heaven they find and rectify the fatal mistake that made a potential Rothschild prodigy into a cursed Campbell-Putnam ancestor.

That "sins of the father" talk hits far too close to home.



Go back to the 1600's, just after the age of my favorite Queen of England, Elizabeth, Virgin Queen.  During her reign she did her best to prevent her father's (Henry the VIII no less her mother beheaded by old Henry) orders to persecute the Catholics by forcing them to renounce their Catholic faith or drive them from Britain.


It just happened that one of the most powerful Catholic clans in Scotland was the Campbell clan, my other folks.  For decades, maybe centuries they had ruled in the desolate but beautiful Scottish Highlands and fought for and against the imperial English rule depending on the mood at the time.

Of course, it was the same English rule that the non-Catholic Putnam family in London was advocating.  After Elizabeth's death at the turn of the 17th century King Henry's rule was finally enforced and the Campbell clan got a choice, denounce your Catholic faith or be banished to Ireland.  Refuse to choose and you lose - you die.

One of many Campbell castles in Scotland
What a choice.  Give up all ancestral religion, rights, titles, and property under Great Britain or go to Ireland.  They made it sound as if Ireland was a far worse fate than losing everything.

The part of the Campbell Clan refusing to convert to the Church of England knew those deceitful Brits were lying about how dreadful things were in Ireland.  The Brits just hated the place because the Irish kept rejecting English rule.  However, where else could Scottish Celts go to be among friends?

Another Campbell castle
My ancestors held to their conviction, then kicked out of Scotland, and banished from their homeland, estates, and titles.  After a few generations in County Cork Ireland, the Campbell family then migrated to America in the 1800's.  They were victims of one side of the family curse.

Once the Putnam's got the Campbell's and other Catholics out of Britain in the early 1600's they migrated to America, arriving in the mid 1600's in New England in the Puritan rush to Plymouth Rock, some 200 years earlier than the Campbell clan.

Yet another of the dozen or more surviving Campbell castles
Specifically the Putnam family arrived in New England and once unpacked, some chose to settle in a Puritan place called Salem, Massachusetts, just in time for the Salem Witch trials.  Thus, set in motion the other half of my family's ancient curse.

Here it gets quite complicated.  Look at the court transcripts of that fateful and tragic trial in the 1690's.


You see, there was a Puritan Putnam family who spent years creating a safe and isolated haven to protect the "witches" from harm by the village church fanatics.  They successfully hid those suspected of being witches for decades in their remote estates.  At the time of the trial, supposedly 6 of the 8 largest property owners in the Salem area were from the Putnam family.


Then into the story comes a young Putnam girl named Anne, but not from the Putnam family creating the safe haven, rather she was the minister's daughter from town.  She told her Putnam Preacher pop the witches possessed her and made her do evil things against her will.

It was a rather ingenious story perhaps but with deadly consequences.  Soon a bunch of other local kids joined the chorus and suddenly all those witches protected by one Putnam family were arrested and tried for practicing Black Magic on those poor innocent children of the villagers by the other Putnam family.

You probably heard the rest.  A couple of dozen witches were burned or hanged to death, later the kids admitted they made up the story, and thus began the curse of the Salem witches cast upon the immediate and all future Putnam descendants until the Putnam blood line was wiped out.

Seemed to me our family should have got some metaphysical credit for protecting the witches all those decades.  However, as far as the curse was concerned all Putnams looked alike.  It was as good a curse as any ancient Egyptian curse (King Tut) or medieval curse from the Spanish Inquisition.


At any rate, I would not have thought much about the curse except one day I was reading about Amelia Earnhardt, the world famous airplane pilot, and I realized that Amelia married a certain George Putnam of the New England Putnam family when she was 33 years old, and six years later, she disappeared off the face of the earth.

Well, so goes the story of my ancestry as passed down from generations of Celtic and thus Irish storytellers.  My Irish grandfather on the Campbell side used to tell me one should only half believe any good story told.


I can tell you this.  Where I was born, Iowa City, Iowa, was home to the University of Iowa Scottish Highlanders Marching band, one of the most famous bagpipe bands in the world.  Why a Scottish band was far from the magical land of the Loch Ness monster and located in the same town where I lived in Iowa is a mystery?


Okay, in spite of the curse, we survived which was somewhat unusual but I do feel the DNA coding with its highly conflicting Campbell and Putnam elements, which we did indeed inherit, is an important clue in the story of the wayward Iowa Hayseed.

Think about it.  DNA just might be the direct link to God since most of us blame Him or Her for giving it to us in the first place.  In fact, we do not control a number of critical life elements, like inheriting the DNA.  Did you pick the family you join, the country, state, town, or village?  Did you choose your family status in your town, rich, poor, or dependent?


Then there are the race, income, religion, language, and a host of other major cultural, religious, and demographic classifications in your life, and again you have no control.  Then, wait a minute.  What are the most significant influences on your life?

There is Survival 101 - your parents.  Then there is Survival 102 - your grandparents.  Finally, we have Survival 103 - your elementary, secondary, and higher education teachers.  What do they all have in common?  You did not choose any of them.

Add to that the millions of variables that make up your life, for instance the number and gender of siblings, their smarts, and their attitudes.  Toss a few dozen relatives, priests, ministers, mullahs, or rabbis into the mix and you have yourself one powerful cocktail.

What do these amazingly varied and seemingly unrelated components of your life all have in common?  On Judgment Day, any or all of these variables provide unintended consequences in your verdict.

In spite of the fact your Day of Atonement and moment of judgment will come from whoever your divine God might be, your fate relies on a whole bunch of factors and standards you did not control, select, or endorse!


You did not create!  You did not choose!

Yet they are the measuring sticks for your judgment.

Do not know about you but I feel I have just made a powerful case against the use of "free will" as a determining factor for judgment day.

There is nothing "free" about those varied components we inherited in our lives and it is about time we not be held responsible for all those impediments to the exercise of genuine "free will" on our part.

They are all someone else's "will" being unfairly imposed on our life.

That compelling argument and consequential attitude should get me off the hook on a whole lot of stuff when I stand before St. Peter awaiting judgment at the gate.

Youth is, wasted on the young.  If only we could have waited until we piled up all those experiences, feelings, joys, failures, loves found, and lost loves before we lost our innocence, our ability to dream, and our faith in the unknown.

Instead we spend a lifetime being beaten down, educated I guess they call it, tricked, fooled, disappointed, and occasionally, well, we might even find a moment to get happy.

That is not to say everyone is that way but now that I am much older and wiser I have noticed there are fewer and fewer happy people.


She is right you know, the Pretender.  I am not compatible with humans.  Hell, half the time my damn dog even loses its loyalty.  Every time I try to relate to anyone, I just seem to blow it.  Guess the only thing compatible with me is my cactus, and lately some of them have even taken to dying.

She once asked me if I ever considered suicide.  You would after what I had seen.  However, I said no.  Therefore, she rephrased the question.  Maybe I should consider suicide.  That is why I decided to end it.

My termination seems to be the only way to protect the human race from further contamination by me.  What did she call me?  Oh yeah, the Devil Incarnate, better known as the Prince of Darkness.

Once wrote a book that talked about the Prince.  Guess she finally figured anyone that knew as much about the Prince as I wrote about must be speaking from first hand experience.  She might be right I reckon.


Makes sense that the Prince would know all the details of Jesus’ life.  He was there tempting him in the desert, trying to seduce him with riches, power and women.  Finally, when he gave up on Jesus, he was there nailing him to the cross.

That could explain what I saw.  All the time I thought I was the reincarnation of Joshua, the friend and scribe of Jesus.  Never crossed my mind I might just be the Prince of Darkness.  It took the Pretender to wake me up.  Her insights take all the fun out of the end of the world.

Therefore, this must serve as my final will and testament.  Consider it my great escape.  This sorry world has hit such a subterranean level of degradation that anywhere can only be better.  It is the final plane ride to Neverland.


Some might call this a “Living Will” or something like that, but how could a living will be serving the dead?  Never did figure that one out.

That might have been my problem, always trying to figure things out.  My persistent questioning of anybody and everybody got me in more trouble than I could ever imagine.  That and telling stories.  When I was a kid, my grandfather and a bunch of other old men used to tell me stories, for hours.

They made me laugh.  They made me cry.  They even scared the shit out of me.  However, they always made me feel.  Nothing else ever did I guess, except those old stories.  It was a gift.  Made people feel good.  Made some like me feel for about the only time.

So there I was, just a kid, and already burdened by twin curses.  Curses, by the way, that would haunt me the rest of my life.  Figuring things out and telling stories.  Yes, maybe she was right; maybe I was the son of Satan.

You see there is no other logical explanation on why this Iowa Hayseed set out on his Quixote-like adventure through life as reflected in this story. 

I had a couple of advantages over my brothers to offset the many disadvantages and most important was my obsessive compulsion to read and write, something they found overly demanding with little downside reward.


Thus, I was the gatekeeper for all the knowledge of the universe found in books and I could communicate what I learned to others through the ability to write.

For quite different reasons they both settled on me being rather odd, although Bosco did find my adventures far more interesting and challenging than the Archangel did.

In my fantasy world, getting dirty was normal, getting in trouble was noteworthy, and getting someone mad was worth a merit badge.

For the most part our childhood memories consisted of observing the Biblical life style of the Archangel and causing as much chaos and confusion as possible for a couple of Afterthoughts.


Except for the scripted interaction from the parents in which the Archangel was to bestow on us his favor, we lived separate lives.  We were so separate in fact, that neither the Archangel nor we remember being friends or hanging out throughout childhood.

I did with my brothers what the laws of God and nature required, but that was the extent of it.  Beyond that I created a new world of boundless creative endeavors, the aggressive pursuit of knowledge, and the ability to instantly leap into the Land of Oz, Wonderland, Camelot or even the Alamo and still escape.

By kindergarten, my highly disciplined path began by joining the Public Library Book Reading Club where I won many honors reading the most books each month.  It was the first of my activities intended to separate me from my siblings, as the thought of joining a library book club terrified both.

My pursuit of information taught me what the kids in Russia, China, and Europe learned long ago; do not overlook our grandparents as a source of information and knowledge.


Interestingly, my grandparents on both the Putnam and Campbell sides found my curiosity to be charming and spent a lot of time sharing their knowledge with me and I shall forever be grateful.  I was far more comfortable in the company of adults than other kids were.

By the time third grade came, I found kids to be quite naive as they were clueless about world affairs, politics, or history.  Yet every weekend Grandfather Campbell would test me on current events that week expecting me to have read Time and Life magazines before I saw him for Sunday brunch.  Of course, he did not know I also read Popular Science, National Geographic, and Boys Life.

If you were I, how would you feel about having the four strikes against you at birth?  As you can see, my life was not just the four strikes against me but the fascinating DNA issues and the myriad of other factors dumped on me at birth and for a long time to come after.

I was born with a bull's eye on my back.

Before my mouth even opened, confusion and torment already threatened my existence.  Back when I was still in the womb I'm sure I sensed the foreboding and when I was jerked out into the world the first thing I saw was a woman doctor, quite uncommon back in those post-war days.


Then there was my religion.  Of course, I already mentioned I was really a misplaced Rothschild kid due to the screw up back at HQ.  That left me a Jewish-Catholic.

In my reality show family back in Iowa the ancient battles between my maternal and paternal ancestors were renewed, the battles where my non-Catholic father's English family helped drive my Catholic mother's Scottish family from their birthright, titles, castles, and money.

Now fast forward to my birth.  My father was a recent convert to Catholicism and when it comes to embracing religion, there is nothing like a new convert for enthusiasm and a bad case of religious fervor.

That meant instead of going to church once a week for Sunday services, my fanatical father decided he needed to go to church every day, probably to make up for all those years he had not seen the light.  Therefore, he dragged us kids along for the ride.

Whatever he expected from the hyper-Catholic activity, it did not seem to help us in God's favor.  No matter how hard I prayed, I was never going to hit the game winning home run or score a date with the beautiful rich girl.

Unfortunately, my dad's family never got over the traitor, my dad, who would forgo the eternal security of being non-Catholic to switch sides and join the dreaded mackerel snappers.


When we would visit the rest, of the Putnam family, I always searched around for any signs of cross-burning or voodoo dolls, knowing the deep-seated conflict between these surrogate families for the English and Scottish/Irish causes.

Oddly, both sides of the family accepted me, perhaps because I reminded them often of my true Jewish heritage, which thus made me much less of a card carrying Catholic threat.

Now the fact they seemed to accept me thus cast suspicion on my motives by my mother's Campbell side of the family who seemed to think I had been spiritually hijacked by those dastardly Putnam's and was probably already indoctrinated into the Masonic 50th degree secret society.

I did nothing to discourage the rampant rumors and innuendo, choosing to remain silent.  I am a great believer in the Tip O'Neill philosophy about saying little, "it is better people don't know what you know, than to know what you don't know."


On the other hand, I could always strike terror into the hearts of those Putnam's by threatening to join their Moose Club Lodge or Masonic Order, also secret societies I suspected of having a rather negative view of Catholics. They never had the heart to tell me I was ineligible.

Throughout my life, I was a most curious person about everything, which was another of my many demonic virtues according to my mother, and especially according to those priests and nuns.

Speaking of which, in spite of the Putnam pressure against it I actually joined a Catholic secret society, the Knights of the Alter, God's army for Pete's sake.  Okay, okay, so I was just an alter boy, but I was armed to the teeth with bells and smoke bombs, oh yeah incense I mean.

It was during my early Dark Ages, when the memory of my true Rothschild heritage was beginning to slip away in the chaos of growing up.  It was in the latter part of grade school.  At the time, I actually harbored the thought of becoming a priest, which I soon rejected based on observing those of the faith I personally experienced.

Then I figured I should not waste all those pious years of training to be a priest and I decided to be a religious brother, but there were far too many rules for such a simple life.  My idea of saving the world was not learning how to weed a garden.  I was thinking of being more like Thomas Aquinas or St. Augustine, theologians, not gardeners.

Therefore, my last grasp at retaining a link to all that Catholic education and training was to become a religious hermit because by this time having a conversation with me in a cave would be far more intellectually stimulating than remaining in my environment.

What ever happened to those glorious dreams of thinking I could save the world?



A fabulous world of classical literature, ancient Greek mythology, empires, kingdoms, warlords, and dragons drew me in.  So I am stuck with brothers who hated to read and abhorred the very thought of writing.  Intellectual stimulation to them was sticking your finger in a light socket.

By now, I had experienced the mysterious Catholic world of Baptism, First Communion, Confirmation, and Exorcism; I was ready to try something new.  It was time to experience rowing, croquet and polo instead of kick the can, cowboys and Indians.

By the time I reached the end of grade school, it was obvious I had greatly miscalculated my potential and possibilities.  I needed a fresh start.

Pity the child who knows no better, who taught himself everything.  Pity the child in the shadows, who taught himself how to think.  Pity the poor boy you never noticed, nobody really cares.  Pity the child you cannot see, in his world nothing is fair. 
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