Sunday, October 14, 2007

Charging to the finish line

It wasn't easy when
I wrote "I Remember Dale Earnhardt" in 2001. Current Cup drivers and all but one Cup owner (Bill Davis) would not talk to me. They said they were concerned with licensing — Earnhardt's widow, Teresa, wasn't getting a huge chunk of the pie. So I called or emailed one team after another and got a no or a no reply.


The book was good. All of the stories were genuine and heartfelt, but most of them were too nice. A few people talked about Earnhardt's often ruthless tactics, but no one could REALLY tell what it was like to race Earnhardt or to know him.


I had wanted for years to update the book. I really wanted to talk to Terry Labonte, get him to talk about winning at Bristol in '95 with a front end crumpled by a last-lap bump from Earnhardt. Or the 1999 Bristol race, when Terry was leading on the last lap, and Earnhardt "rattled his cage" all the way into the wall.


Then in August 2007, I got an email from Cumberland House, the publishing house for "I Remember Dale Earnhardt." Publisher Ron Pitkin wanted to update the book; would I be interested? Just send a quick proposal, and we'll go from there.


I did, and I quickly contacted Richard Childress Racing (Earnhardt's old team) and every Cup team that had a car owner or driver who raced against Earnhardt. Then I did the same with Busch Series and Craftsman Truck Series teams. I called and left messages. One woman told me that the guy I was pursuing was out of the country; wouldn't say where. Most teams ignored me. Kyle Petty's PR guy called and said Kyle was concerned with licensing. But he called. Jeff Gordon's assistant said Jeff isn't doing books right now.


Several people I know wouldn't call back. I called one former driver several times, and I actually got him. He said he was busy but for me to call back in a half hour. I did, expecting an interview, and he said he didn't want to talk about Earnhardt. Had nothing good to say.


I had a hard time in '01, but it was harder this time. I'd already talked to a bunch of track presidents, PR guys, fans, hometown folk and such. All wonderful, but I wanted gritty stories and, most of all, drivers.


I wasn't bashful. The first guy I contacted was NASCAR publicist Jim Hunter, the former president of Darlington Raceway. I called Mike Curb, a former car owner. I called Mike Helton, the president of NASCAR. I tried Steve Park, who raced for Earnhardt. And I called Brett Bodine, a former driver I met in 1987 and now an employee at NASCAR's R&D center. I got Hunter, and our conversation carried me mentally back to the '90s, when I was at the Charleston (S.C.) Post and Courier, an important paper to Hunter and Darlington Raceway. Jim was warm and real. Didn't get a callback from Curb, Helton, Park and Bodine, but all you can do is try.


I did luck out and get Ron Hornaday, who also drove for Earnhardt. Dick Trickle called me back. So did Geoff Bodine (Earnhardt's chief rival in the '80s), David Pearson, Larry McReynolds (Earnhardt's crew chief when he won the 1998 Daytona 500), current Cup driver Ken Schrader, and other former drivers like Dave Marcis (Dale's great friend), Jerry Nadeau and Randy LaJoie. All were terrific. Bodine fleshed out the rivalry, and Dick told me that Earnhardt didn't hassle him because of the age difference between the two men. You don't wreck your daddy. (Actually, Dick was only 12 years older than Dale.)


I did some networking and found Gary Hargett, Earnhardt's car owner in Late Model Sportsman in the '70s. Gary said that Earnhardt hadn't changed. He was always an asshole; then he became a rich asshole. Gary told some stories, and he helped breathe some life — not myth — into the Earnhardt legend.


I found Jay Wells, whom Earnhardt nicknamed the Troll (the story is explained in the book). I talked to Bob Misenheimer, then the mayor of Kannapolis, N.C., Earnhardt's hometown. And I called Dr. Joe Mattioli, the boss at Pocono Raceway, a man I've known to be human, humane and funny.


Just so you know, the book won't be "I Remember Dale Earnhardt" this time, even though some of the text is the same. A few years ago, I wrote a story about Earnhardt's kindnesses to children with the hopes of sending it to newspapers as a promotional tool. I named it Earnhardt, the Angel in Black. I chose that title because of Earnhardt's nickname — the Man in Black — and it harkened back to Earnhardt's favorite race track, Darlington, nicknamed the Lady in Black. I sent the story to Cumberland House's editor, John Mitchell, and John showed it to Ron Pitkin, the publisher. Ron fell in love with Angel in Black, and the book eventually became "Angel in Black: Remembering Dale Earnhardt Sr."


It came out in the spring of 2008.


I wish I could have gotten Richard Childress, Mike Helton and a bunch of current Cup drivers, but what can you do? You keep the engine running, keep it in gear and charge to the finish.


Like Earnhardt.

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EMAIL: tgilli52@gmail.com  TWITTER: EDITORatWORK



BLOG ENTRIES FROM THE AUTO RACING JOURNAL
(a book of great stories about the Intimidator)
(the book of great NASCAR stories)

Saturday, August 4, 2007

The BEST of STAR TREK

 


Leonard Nimoy comments on the episode "City on the Edge of Forever"

For decades, fans have said that "The City on the Edge of Forever" is the best Star Trek episode ever, and I've always agreed. Harlan Ellison's screenplay had drama, romance and pathos, and it stood out among TOS stories. So did "Space Seed," in which Ricardo Montalban learns to hate Kirk.

RELATED: Links to Star Trek web sites

"The Trouble With Tribbles" stands out, as do "Amok Time" and "Journey to Babel" and "Balance of Terror", but how many TOS episodes really shine? Not many.

Several Next Generation episodes stand out. "Measure of a Man," in which Data goes on trial, Riker prosecutes and Picard defends, is extraordinary. Is it as good as "The City..."? I've always thought so. The Locutus episodes were terrific, as good as anything else on Star Trek. And I enjoyed the next episode, when Picard visits the in-laws. It wasn't sci-fi; it was human.


In one Deep Space Nine episode, Major Kira encounters a Cardassian who looks like the one who butchered thousands, maybe millions, of Bajorans. Naturally, she hates him. Then she learns that he was a clerk who had plastic surgery to make him look like the evil Cardassian. She still thinks little of him. But the more she knows him, the more important he is to her. When he's assassinated, she mourns him.


In another DS9 episode, Sisko is sent into a sort of limbo. Jake's sure he's alive, and he wastes his life looking for his father. By the time Sisko shifts back into real time/space, Jake is older than he is. The scene between two grown men, Avery Brooks as Sisko and Tony Todd as Jake (Todd played Worf's brother on ST:TNG), is powerful. When I saw it, I thought it was the best Star Trek episode I'd ever seen. It may have been.


I just found a DS9 episode called "Ties of Blood and Water" in which Major Kira Nerys has a visit from a Cardassian who is like a father to her. He is dying and wants to give her all of his secrets. The Cardassians, led by Gul Dukat, want him back, but they don't get him. Kukat gives her information about Ghemor's work during the war, and she tries to stay away. But she recalls her own father, who died alone while she was off fighting. She finally went to stay with Ghemor during his final time. Her reaction was heart-wrenching, and the ending was perfect. I didn't remember that 5th-season episode until I saw it again, but it was wonderful.

I recently watched a Voyager rerun in which 700 years have passed, and some Delta Quadrant race believes that the crew of Voyager was evil. They blame Janeway and her crew for their second-class status. The doctor's program is found, and he is protrayed as a butcher. It takes most of the episode, but the caretaker of the Voyager history begins to believe that the doctor is telling the truth — Voyager's crew didn't do the foul deeds. At the end, the doctor realizes that Voyager's place in history isn't as important as the present. He becomes a powerful symbol of hope on the planet, and eventually he borrows a small ship and goes looking for earth.


There IS one Enterprise episode that stands out. It's "Twilight", the one where the captain has been injured and has lost his long-term memory. T'Pol is taking care of him, and she constantly has to remind him what's happened, over and over... Is that as good as the best of Trek? Maybe. I thought so when I first saw it.

I've watched Star Trek for more than 51 years. I wonder when the NEXT great Star Trek episode will air. Or if it will.


UPDATE: I just found a Voyager episode I'd never seen before. Voyager finds a 21st-century space module inside a subspace anomaly. Seven of Nine goes in the Delta Flyer mission despite her reservations, and she grows a bit as she learns about history while getting the Flyer out of the anomaly.

Phil Morris plays the astronaut caught inside the anomaly. He says his lone regret is not finding out who won the World Series in 2032. As they're about to launch his coffin into space, Seven says, "The Yankees, in six games."

Perfect ending.

P.S.: One last thought: It's funny how Seven is big in Star Trek lore. Seven of Nine is the Borg babe in Voyager, and the late Robert Lansing was far-out agent Gary Seven in "Assignment: Earth." And TNG, DS9 and Voyager all lasted seven seasons each for rerun purposes. They were rolling Sevens.

ANOTHER THOUGHT: I haven't seen Star Trek: Discovery. One, I won't pay for CBS All Access. Two, the clips I've seen are too dark. Three, lots of people online say that Discovery ISN'T Star Trek at heart. So I'm staying away.


MORE: I did try Discovery and Picard; didn't like either. 

STILL MORE: Above, I said I may never see a new great Star Trek episode. In May 2022, I saw the first episode of Strange New Worlds, and it qualifies as one of the great Treks. And after the first seven episodes Anson Mount's Christopher Pike may be my favorite captain.

His hair is a little hard to deal with, though.

RELATED: Links to Star Trek web sites


EMAIL: tgilli52@gmail.com  TWITTER: EDITORatWORK


BLOG ENTRIES FROM THE AUTO RACING JOURNAL
(a book of great stories about the Intimidator)
(the book of great NASCAR stories)

The TROUBLE with TRIBBLES

The Ending Scene From The Trouble with Tribbles The TROUBLE with TRIBBLES Star Trek -- The Barfight MORE Star Trek - A New Generation Every ...