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Thursday, April 2, 2026
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The Observer

Action Hero Fantasy Draft

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With the release of "Taken 2" this weekend and Liam Neeson's transformation into full-fledged action star, the recent release of "Expendables 2" and another Bond movie on the way, the Scene decided to take a look at some of our favorite heroes. And, because we could, we did a fantasy draft. First, Scene Editor Kevin Noonan explains the rules and regulations: "I don't make the rules, ma'am, I just think them up and write them down." - Eric Cartman 1. The objective of the draft is to create the ultimate team of action heroes, based on the following criteria: a. How would they fare in a street fight? b. How successful have their films been? c. Can they deliver lines that make you shake in your boots? d. How straight up and down cool are they? e. Or anything else, I don't really care. 2. There will be 5 rounds, with pick order determined randomly (I will determine pick order). The draft will follow a serpentine order, meaning the order of each round will proceed in reverse order of the previous one. 3. Each team will consist of one veteran star or former star, one current star, one future prospect, one female star and one utility player that can fit any role. 4. Picks must be for real action stars (sorry, Michael Cera), and if it's on the border (Michael Fassbender) you must be able to defend their legitimacy as action heroes ("Jane Eyre," Fassbender? Come on now). 5. Leonardo DiCaprio cannot be picked. I do not like him. With that said here's the draft order: 1. Troy Mathew 2. Sam Stryker 3. Chris Allen 4. Kevin Noonan KN: Troy, you're on the clock. Round 1 Pick 1 (Troy Mathew): Daniel Craig, current star TM: For the first overall draft pick, I select a current A-lister, Daniel Craig. He's replaced the ridiculous cheesiness of Pierce Brosnan and starred in solid entries to the Bond canon. KN: I'd call that a little bit of a surprise. Has he done anything outside of Bond? SS: After "Quantum of Solace" I'd say he needs to focus on making better Bond films, not aiding the Queen to enter the Opening Ceremonies of the Olympics. TM: "Girl With the Dragon Tattoo," y'all. CA: Sean Connery is shaking his head, somewhere. SS: And his martini. Pick 2 (Sam Stryker): Angelina Jolie, current star SS: Girl power! For my first pick, I am selecting Angelina Jolie. She kicks some solid butt and looks stellar doing it. She's starred in such high-octane action flicks as "Salt," "Wanted," "Mr. & Mrs. Smith," and the outrageous "Tomb Raider" movies. Not to mention the fact she's matched up with the likes of Gerard Butler, Clive Owen, Brad Pitt - all potential picks - and the aforementioned Daniel Craig in her action flicks. And hey, those lips... CA: Somewhere, Jennifer Aniston is shaking her head. KN: She could beat me up. TM: She's so frail! I was laughing during "Salt" as she flipped 200-pound men. SS: I believe the correct term is "trim," Troy. TM: I think her most deadly attack would be slicing people with her protruding bones. FRAIL. KN: That or home wrecking. SS: Or she could just adopt you. Pick 3 (Chris Allen): Arnold Schwarzenegger, veteran CA: I'm building my team around one basic factor-- muscle. Who better to start my team with than the godfather of girth himself, the master of mass, Arnold Schwarzenegger? Behind Arnold's bulging physique and gubernatorial credentials, my team will push your teams around. This is over. Or should I say, hasta la vista, baby. SS: Solid pick, but he does have a blemish on his career - anyone remember his role as "Mr. Freeze" in "Batman & Robin"? KN: Chris, if you're building your team purely on muscle, I can't wait to see who your female pick is. SS: Probably Brigitte Nielsen.  Pick 4 (Kevin Noonan): Joseph Gordon-Levitt, future prospect KN: I'm a Kansas City Royals fan, all I know is building for the future. I've got my eye on an exciting prospect that my team will one day be centered around (or I'll trade to the Yankees)--Joseph Gordon-Levitt. SS: You and Christopher Nolan both. I'm confused, are we supposed to hope he's the next Batman, or Robin? Or both? CA: Your No. 1 action star sang a sing-along with cartoon birds just a few years ago. In case you forgot. SS: You just made all three of the hipsters on campus really happy with your pick, Kevin. KN: Hate away, haters. He's a prospect; he's a little rough around the edges. TM: "500 Days of Summer" is the antithesis of action movie. Round 2 Pick 1 (Kevin Noonan): Will Smith, current star KN: I might have gone out on a little bit of a limb with my first pick, so I'm looking for a little more consistency with my second--Will Smith. SS: Welcome to Miami, Kevin. Or the Wild, Wild West. I'm lukewarm on this pick. He's done so much, yet so little with his career. This is like picking vanilla as your favorite flavor of ice cream. TM: So not jiggy with this pick. KN: Vanilla is my favorite flavor. Also, "Independence Day," I rest my case. CA: I like the pick. Will Smith would get absolutely squashed by my muscle men, though. Speaking of which, it's my pick. Pick 2 (Chris Allen): Hugh Jackman, current star CA: My current star has been all over the place in the past few years, from hosting the Oscars to generally tearing things up as Wolverine. He adds some more bulk to my team of muscular superheroes, and he's Australian. Hugh Jackman is my second pick. SS: He also has hosted the Tony's multiple times, so there is that. KN: I feel like Hugh Jackman would beat me up, then nurse me back to health and make me chicken noodle soup and sing me uplifting songs. Whatever though, I like it. SS: At least he brings some vocal ability to your team, Chris. TM: Solid pick, literally and figuratively. Pick 3 (Sam Stryker): Jennifer Lawrence, future prospect SS: I volunteer as tribute Jennifer Lawrence for my up-and-coming star pick. She bested the field in "The Hunger Games" and starred as the villainess Mystique in "X-Men: Origins." If you can hang with the District 2 Tributes and Magneto, you're good enough for my team. And boy, the things she can do with a bow and arrow. She even has an Oscar nomination.  Like Jolie, she can match any man punch-for-punch, she's well-spoken and she looks fresh off the red carpet. Beauty, brawn and brains: the three b's make Jennifer Lawrence my next pick. May the odds be ever in my favor. KN: I'm bummed, this was my female pick for sure. CA: Miss Lawrence is a great pick, having also starred in some decidedly non-action movies like "Winter's Bone." But she's moving onto the A-list quickly. And she's beautiful. Good pick. Pick 4 (Troy Mathew): Uma Thurman, female star TM: Since the well is running dry for action stars without a y chromosome, I'm going to snag mine now. Man hands aside, Uma Thurman is my choice, having starred in Tarantino's hugely popular "Kill Bill" franchise. Although she is no longer particularly active in the Hollywood game, "Kill Bill" is a cult favorite and an all-around solid set of films. Uma, drive over to my team. SS: Exceptional pick. Uma Thurman is six feet of Quentin Tarantino-engineered sword-wielding craziness. She's one part Victoria's Secret model and one part ninja. KN: She scares the living daylights out of me. Good pick. TM: Her giant hands are more than capable of that. Next pick coming in a sec. Round 3 Pick 1 (Troy Mathew): Sylvester Stallone, veteran TM: For my old-timer choice, I select Sylvester Stallone. With his lopsided and strangely-botoxed face, he has the look of a Hollywood veteran, and is still relevant today, having recently starred in "The Expendables." Having starred in all the "Rocky" films as well as "Rambo," he's a solid choice for this point in the draft. CA: I think it is obvious you just stole a top pick on my muscle depth chart. Pick 2 (Sam Stryker): Sean Connery, veteran SS: Troy, I'm going to one-up you with my classic action star pick and I'm going to take the REAL James Bond. Nobody does it better than Sean Connery, the original. From the fast cars to the tuxedos to the gadgets to the gorgeous women, Connery not only set the bar for all subsequent Bonds. He established what it really means to be an action star. It isn't just about punching guys or shooting a gun. He always put country and Queen first. His bowtie was always perfectly tied, his martini always shaken, not stirred. Beyond Bond, Connery was deemed to be worthy of being Indiana Jones' dad. That's when you know you have made it in the action world. He's got the veteran skills to lead my team. CA: Shocking, positively shocking. Mr. Connery, as tough with his words as he is with his awesome train kicks in "From Russia, With Love." Pick 3 (Chris Allen): Liam Neeson, utility player CA: These have been some nice picks so far. Some notable stars, each with a great resume and respectable action abilities. But my next pick has a very particular set of skills. Skills he has acquired over a very long career. Skills that will make a nightmare for your teams. He trained Batman, voiced Aslan and was in Star Wars. He's going to find you, and he's going to kill you. Liam Neeson is the next action star ... taken. KN: Great pick, terrible pun. SS: And that just happened. Anyone who starred in "Love, Actually" is always a winner in my book. Pick 4 (Kevin Noonan): Clint Eastwood, veteran KN: I'm frankly shocked he's still on the board to be honest. Dirty Harry, himself--Clint Eastwood. Let's ignore his RNC chair stunt; the guy has been defining what it means to be an action star for five decades. Age hasn't stopped him either. "Gran Torino" is one of the toughest, coolest movies he's been in, and he did it at 78 years old. CA: Also the best director to be chosen thus far, by a wide, wide, wide margin. SS: Clint is like a bottle of fine wine. He's only gotten better with age. And I love wine. TM: He's crotchety personified and I like it. Nice selection. Round 4 Pick 1 (Kevin Noonan): Jessica Alba, female star KN: I've been struggling with my female star pick since Sam snagged Jennifer Lawrence so early in the draft, but then I remembered Golden Globe nominated actress Jessica Alba. I feel like she's been off the radar for a few years (other than the violently terrific "Machete") but she showed her action movie skills in "Sin City." Plus she's just so, so, sooooo ... talented. TM: She was in "Fantastic Four" too. She is certainly nice to look at, but isn't much besides that. CA: To be honest, she was pretty tough in "Sin City." Love the Alba pick. SS: Does she kick butt like some of the other available ladies out there? No, and I'm about to prove it with my next pick. Pick 2 (Chris Allen): Chris Hemsworth, future prospect CA: So let's see ... I need to fill my up-and-coming young guy role. I need to add some more muscle to my dream team, and I need someone who's shown the ability to wreak some havoc. My next pick is a real-life Norse god in the flesh, Chris Hemsworth. Hemsworth showed an absolute mean streak as the star of "Thor" and backed that up in "The Avengers." And he's so, so much cooler than his brother. SS: True that. Already he gets bonus points for not being engaged to Hannah Montana. Excuse me, Miley Cyrus. KN: I like this pick. As both the god of thunder and Captain Kirk's dad, he's got a strong pedigree of action stardom. Pick 3 (Sam Stryker): Halle Berry, female star SS: As if my team needed an additional shot of estrogen my next pick is the bodacious Halle Berry. She's done it all: Catwoman, X-Men and Bond girl. Really, what more could you ask of her? She's also an Oscar-winning actress. She wins fights, men's hearts AND Academy Awards. Oh, and she completes secret agent missions in a bikini. Try that one, Hugh Jackman. KN: I could ask her to go back in time and not do "Catwoman." That movie was almost unforgivable in my book. SS: Bad things happen to good people. Even to Halle Berry. KN: Only because of Anne Hathaway in "The Dark Knight Rises," I'll forgive her. Pick 4 (Troy Mathew): Jamie Foxx, future prospect TM: While this up-and-comer pick is not an obvious choice, he's a great addition to my team. He's already proven his acting chops with solid roles in "Ray" and "Collateral." Yes, Jamie Foxx. He's starring in the upcoming Tarantino flick, "Django Unchained." The movie, also known as "Inglorious Basterds" with slave owners instead of Nazis, is sure to be fantastic. Also, he already has a famous catch phrase from the starring role. The 'D' is silent, and his future in action movies is bright. SS: He's a borderline pick in my book. Good, but not great. He's the type of player who might get away from the Royals, but wouldn't be worthy of the Yankees' checkbook. KN: I disagree Sam; I like this pick. Obviously it's a prospect pick, but Foxx has proven a decent actor, and "Collateral" was one of his best performances and showed he can do action with the best of them. Plus, if anybody can make somebody an action star, it's Tarantino. I think after "Django" comes out this will look like a great pick. SS: "Collateral" was a great role, but basically he was dealing with a crazy Tom Cruise for two hours. Katie Holmes did it for six years, and no one has picked her yet. CA: Foxx gets major bonus points for making incredibly off-color jokes in front of professional athletes at the ESPYS. Round 5 Pick 1 (Troy Mathew): Christian Bale, utility player TM: There's been a lot of talk about the Batman franchise, but I'm choosing the source of the indiscernible growl itself. Christian Bale is my next choice, given his career-defining, starring role in Nolan's trilogy. Also, considering his performances in "Terminator Salvation," "3:10 to Yuma," and "American Psycho," he's too good not to take. He does it all - method acting, action flicks and pretentious Oscar-worthy films. He's got a warehouse of deadly gadgets, uncontrollable real-life rage and a spot on my fantasy team. CA: Christian has fluctuated from 130 pounds to 210 pounds for what seems like half a dozen times. I would absolutely love to see him train to lose 80 pounds for a role. Pick 2 (Sam Stryker): Tom Cruise, utility player SS: My final wild card pick goes to Tom Cruise. And boy, is he a wild card. If chairs are Clint Eastwood's kryptonite, then keep Cruise away from couches. But he's starred in the "Mission Impossible" films, "War of the Worlds" and "Top Gun." Yes, he is certifiably insane and he believes in an alien God or something like that (yay, Scientology!) But guess what? Even pushing 50 years of age, this guy is still a bona-fide action star. KN: My father might disown me for saying this, but I love Tom Cruise. I love his movies, I love his his wild, screaming rant at Jack Nicholson in "A Few Good Men." I don't care if he goes full-tilt Mel Gibson on us later in life, I like the pick. TM: Anyone who had a role in producing queen of the universe Suri Cruise is good in my book, and his use of "glib" is just another plus. CA: Just like a roller coaster, my team has a height requirement, a mark that Cruise would not reach. Not even close. Pick 3 (Chris Allen): Gina Carano, female star CA: So I guess I need a girl on my muscle team. This is an easy pick and a bit of a sleeper. MMA star Gina Carano defines the modern butt-kicking female. She'll be starring in the next "Fast and the Furious" film and also is the lead in a film that is being called the female version of "The Expendables". You might remember her turning ordinary Janes into roadkill on "American Gladiators". Look for her star to blow up in the next couple years. KN: I'm all about this pick; I was real close to picking Gina. She's got the "talent" of Jessica Alba and the fierceness to grapple with any of these action stars. Pick 4 (Kevin Noonan): Nicolas Cage, utility player KN: Last pick in the draft, so who's Mr. Irrelevant? I want to pick Bruce Willis, because "Die Hard" is my favorite Christmas movie of all time, but I can't bestow that title on Officer John McClain. He'd show up at my door in a wife-beater tee and make fun of me before blasting me away. And so, with the last pick in the draft--Nicolas Cage. Because screw it, why not? SS: Either way, a winning pick. But I love the choice of Nic Cage. Who can forget the "National Treasure" movies? They got me through my awkward middle school years, braces and all. KN: And I'd like to nominate "Con Air" for greatest movie ever in ever.  





The Observer

Campus Cafes by Claire

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Once you pass through the grand, expansive entrance of O'Shaughnessy Hall, you find yourself in the long white hallways, constantly colored with hundreds of posters advertising Arts and Letters events, inviting you to take Latin or go to an art exhibit. Across from the small walk-in art gallery you'll find the '50s style cafe Waddick's, a welcome break from the hustle and bustle of classes and a place to just sit and soak in the thoughtful, scholarly vibe of the liberal arts.



The Observer

Things to do in Chicago

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The Art Institute has the largest collection of French impressionist paintings in the world. The exhibit itself is worth a trip to Chicago. The museum is beautifully built and the permanent collections, from medieval armor to the Thorne miniature rooms, could keep an art fan busy all day. One of the newer exhibits features photography and film from New York in the 1920s and 1950s - think Paul Strand and Weegee. The museum is on Michigan Avenue, just a few blocks from Soldier Field.


The Observer

Wingin' It: Wild Style Wings

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Born from the remnants of a former Buffalo Wild Wings in downtown South Bend, Wild Style Wings is one of the newer establishments in the area. While the logo is fairly similar to its predecessor, the food itself was miles ahead of the chain that claims it can send football games to overtime in its commercials. Both in terms of sauces and the quality of chicken, Wild Style Wings is my favorite wing place near campus. Few people can one say they've had truly phenomenal wings, but after going to Wild Style Wings, I can say that I have.


The Observer

Music for everyday: A retrospective glance at two indie classics

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Let's face it. For our generation, music is a big deal. Forty years ago, music was a tool for both social change and dancing, but it remained in a glass box. For the youth of 2012, music is a living essential. Popular music has invaded our ears, our alarm clocks, our cell phone ringtones, our movies, our sports and our parties. We listen while we walk, run, read and sleep. While it is an indication of identity, it also recreates it. We learn from our music as much as we relate to it.






The Observer

Small Talks with Big People

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Editor's Note: Scene Editor Kevin Noonan sat down with '02 Notre Dame alumnus and humor writer Ted Fox, whose new book "You Know Who's Awesome? Not You." is on shelves now. Check his website www.tedfoxisawesome.com to find where it's sold. Kevin Noonan: I'd say it's probably a good guess, not to diminish your accomplishments so far, that most university students probably don't know who you are. Ted Fox: I'd say that's very accurate. KN: So I'll give you the opportunity now to introduce yourself to the student body. TF: Well, thank you first of all for having me in Scene. My name is Ted Fox, I'm a 2002 Notre Dame graduate; I lived in Morrissey Manor all four years. I'm also an alum of the Observer - I was a columnist for four years in the sports section. My column was titled "Fox Sports ... Almost," which was the brainchild of the editor calling me at like 10:30 on a Sunday night going, "Okay well, we need a title for the column now." And I was like, "Well when do you need it?" and he said "Well we need it for tomorrow, you've got five minutes to come up with something." After I graduated I worked at ESPN for a little while, and then I came back to Notre Dame in 2004 to work as a writer/editor for the College of Arts and Letters, developed a passion for wanting to be a humor writer professionally and that really became my focus. I moved over to the provost office in 2010, and I've been there a couple years now. I write for them: speeches, website stuff, things like that. I work for them part-time, and they've been great about letting me focus on my humor writing career, which gave rise to this, I always tell people it's my second book, it's the first that's actually been published, but "You Know Who's Awesome? Not you." It's based off a Twitter feed that I write and hopefully is kind of a gateway for me to get into eventually the only thing that I do would be humor writing. KN: The Twitter feed that you've got, @KnowWhosAwesome, where did that start? TF: The genesis of it actually was, and Notre Dame students, you will be able to relate to this once you graduate and you go out into the world, I was on the way back from a wedding of one of my Notre Dame roommates. That and football games are like the pseudo-reunions after you graduate. So this was a wedding out in Pennsylvania I think, and when my wife and I were driving back we were at a McDonald's, because all road trips end up at McDonald's at some point. We were stuck in line for like 10 minutes and the woman who finally got to the front of the line was sitting there looking at the menu like, "What am I going to order?" and I'm in the back of the line thinking "How many times have you been to McDonald's? There is nothing to think about. There's like three options." So I was so annoyed I got on my phone before we left saying something like, "You know who's awesome, people who are in line for 10 minutes at McDonald's and can't make up their mind." A week later at the Pancake House over on Ironwood I had another kind of obnoxious experience with fellow diners, wrote a second "You know who's awesome?" But for me these were funny blog posts; I never was going to think about it again. In the process of trying to get the first book I mentioned published, and part of what you need to do if you don't want to be self-published but actually have a publisher is get a literary agent. In the process of trying to get a literary agent, I struck up a friendship with a woman who said, "I don't think I could publish that first thing you wrote," because, much like Notre Dame students, no one knows who Ted Fox is, "but would you be willing to take this idea that you came up with, "You Know Who's Awesome?," turn that into a Twitter feed and then once we build that up, I will try to sell a book based off that." KN: Has it been successful so far? TF: It's hard to say because I don't have anything to compare it against. It's certainly not in danger of hopping on the New York Times Best Seller list anytime soon. I think on Amazon right now I'm like the top 500,000 out of 8,000,000 books. KN: Well that's pretty good. TF: But the thing that's crazy is that you can drop down to like 1.2 million, you sell one book on Amazon and you go back up to like 150,000, which tells you how many bad books are on Amazon. I've been pleased with it so far, and I think for a first book I think it's doing well. I'm working on a second book right now that's not related to this one, but I certainly hope I get to write a second "You Know Who's Awesome?" and that will be determined by how well this one sells. KN: And it's funny, which is the important thing, right? TF: I appreciate you saying that. If you said, "Well I'll do a story on you but I really didn't think this book was very funny," then I'd be in trouble because, I mean the book that I'm working on now is what I tell people is like a book-book, like a real book with chapters and everything. A book based on a Twitter feed, if it's not funny there's not a whole lot else to hang your hat on. So I appreciate you saying that. KN: And then the book you're working on now, "Project 33," what can you tell me about that? TF: So I turned 33 two weeks ago, and so the book is based around the idea of, and this is potentially a little offensively put, this is my "Jesus Year," in that a lot of historians speculate that Jesus was 33 when he died. As a humor writer, it also turns out that Chris Farley and John Belushi also died when they were 33. So over the course of the next year, I have a list of, it's like a 33-year-old male humor writer's version of "Eat, Pray, Love." I don't like abandon my life and go live in Europe, I actually just do things that I've always wanted to do like, beat the "Legend of Zelda" on my original Nintendo because I never got around to doing it, or break 90 for 18 holes of golf or drive cross country, things like that. So I'm in the course of doing these 33 things during my 33rd year, and also at that point then kind of reflecting on what I have or haven't accomplished at this age, and things that I'm dealing with or struggling with. My agent described that as it's not a humor book, it can be funny but it has to have that like life deeply examined kind of thing that you hope a lot of people can relate to. "You Know Who's Awesome?" on the other hand, the target audience for that, and one of the reasons I was so excited that you guys wanted to interview me is that it's really 18-35, it really targeted that college age, those kids are kind of my target demographic. I had a Notre Dame senior one time tweet back at me [saying my tweets are funny], and I actually put that in my proposal, like, okay I don't have that many followers yet, but people who are the right age think it's very funny. They're very different kinds of books, but I enjoy working on both of them. I'm hoping to have a sequel for "You Know Who's Awesome?" and I've already written half of it. KN: Who would you say are your comedic influences? I see a lot of Seinfeld references on your Twitter. TF: Yeah, I would say 1a, 1b and 1c would all be Jerry Seinfeld, and then by extension Larry David. I'm kind of a Seinfeld, Conan, Larry David, "Family Guy" kind of a mix in there. And I don't consciously try to emulate Jimmy Fallon, but I do think my humor tends to be a little more good-hearted. I'm not a mean comic, and I make fun of myself a lot too. That to me is very Jimmy Fallon. I try to be clever while not being mean-spirited, because I don't like mean comics, so I try to make fun of myself a lot. KN: So, big question, if this was a job interview they'd ask you this (not that I'd know)- 10 years from now, where do find yourself? TF: As much as I love my alma mater and the folks in the provost's office and Dr. Burish is one of my best supporters on the campus, I don't see myself working at the University anymore, I see myself writing books full-time for a living, writing funny books. Obviously, with what I'm trying to do with that "Project 33" book, getting beyond just that Twitter kind of book. Like I said I'm trying to do a sequel to that, and I'm planning to for it as if I will get to do a sequel. But really I want to write books that make people laugh. Those are my two passions: writing and making people laugh, and hopefully giving people joy that way because it's something that I really enjoy doing. And if it became something more than that, if I had opportunities in television or if I had an opportunity with a screenplay, to me that would just be like icing on the cake. What I want to be able to do, it's not about fame and fortune, I'm quickly discovering. KN: All right, last question. You were a sports writer here, you worked for ESPN for a while, you're a big Boston fan, what is the deal with the Red Sox? TF: It's so creepy, because we got our dog last, like August 21. We named the dog "Buckner," because the idea was, you know what, [forget] the curse, it's over. The Sox were nine games up in first place, so we named the dog Buckner, I put the video on my blog with the puppy, I'm wearing my Yaz jersey, and I say "[Forget] the curse, we named this dog Buckner, it's over." They go like 6-20 that September, miss the playoffs, and then this year happened. KN: So it's your fault. TF: It is, it absolutely is. And you can tell that I'm a Red Sox fan who did not grow up in New England, because no self-respecting New Englander under any circumstance would ever name their dog Buckner. Any Red Sox fans reading this on campus, please don't kick my [butt], and I am really sorry. I don't know what we're going to, we can't change the dog's name. In retrospect, I think we may have angered the baseball gods with that one. 


The Observer

Make the most of the bye weekend

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So it's a bye weekend - no pep rally to go to, no tailgating, no game, not even Notre Dame football to follow on TV. Here are some ideas to make the best of the one weekend this semester that isn't eaten up by football: Check out South Bend: It's actually got fun stuff to do! If you've already been to the South Bend Chocolate factory, the College Football Hall of Fame, University Park Mall and all the downtown restaurants and clubs, this weekend there's also the FlipsidePotawatomi Zoo Trip on Sunday, leaving at noon from library circle and Community Energy Day concludes Energy Week with trolley, car and bike tours to the greenest places in South Bend from 9:30 a.m. to 2:30 p.m. Go see a show: Whether it's music, theater or comedy, there are professional and student performances on campus for you. Comedian Aaron Kominos-Smith is at Legends on Friday and contemporary Christian musician Matt Maher is there on Saturday, with both performances at 10 p.m. ND Theater NOW will be at DPAC for an entire week, with performances at 7:30 p.m. Friday and Saturday and 2:30 p.m. Sunday. For more music, Third Coast Percussion is performing at DPAC on Sunday at 2 p.m. Cheer on another ND team: Did you know we have teams besides football? Really good ones? Cross Country's last home meet is Friday at 2 p.m. at Burke Memorial Golf Course, and women's volleyball plays Marquette on Saturday at 2 p.m. and Syracuse on Sunday at 2 p.m. at the Purcell Pavilion. See a movie: Both SUB and DPAC have movies almost every week. This weekend's film include "The Hunger Games" on Friday at 8 p.m. and 10:30 p.m. and Saturday at 9:30 p.m. and "Beasts of the Southern Wild" at 6:30 p.m. and 9:30 p.m. on Friday and Saturday at DPAC. The performing arts center is also playing "Star Wars: Uncut" as its midnight movie Saturday night and continuing the films of HayaoMiyazaki with "My Neighbor Tortoro" Saturday at 3 p.m. and "Castle in the Sky" Sunday at 3 p.m. Help a Worthy Cause: Sign up to local cancer education and awareness with the Domer Run, a fun run that can either be a 6-mile run, 3-mile run or 2-mile family walk, starting at Legends at 9 a.m. Saturday. Keep on walking into Sunday with the Project Hope Suicide Prevention Walk, which raises money for mental health facilities in South Bend, starting at 12:30 p.m. at the Rockne Memorial Center Do something that is "So ND": Crazy-themed events like a pirate- or Kentucky Derby-themed dance that only happen at Notre Dame are going down with no football game to stop them. Signature, alliterative dances include the Fisher Funk and the Howard Hoedown, plus events like Mr. ND and the Keough Chariot Race. And what's more Notre Dame than Legends Nightclub? Friday is Total Request Latino and Saturday is Retro Nightclub, both starting at midnight. Go outside: It's supposed to be sunny and in the 70s all week: enjoy it while you can before the permacloud moves in (if you don't know what that is yet, you will). Wear all your warm weather clothes now before they get packed away for months in the darkness of storage. Throw around a football or baseball, be really collegiate and toss around the Frisbee or be really Fisher and play spikeball. Be chill: Who says you have to leave your dorm to have a good time? Take the chance to actually watch some college football. Gameday is normally so consuming you never watch any other team; size up the competition for the rest of the year. Or sleep all day because you can, and because you might not get any sleep for days once midterms start, so it's totally justified. Get ahead on studying for midterms/catch up on your homework: Nah, just kidding. Let's don't and say we did.  


The Observer

No Doubt shines in return

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They're back. Eleven years, one appearance on "Gossip Girl," two solo albums and four fragrances by lead singer Gwen Stefani since their last release, No Doubt has triumphantly returned with "Push and Shove," their sixth studio album. A throwback to our middle-school days, the return of the band is both tantalizing and worrisome. Could the band possibly live up to lofty expectations? A listener could operate under two assumptions before listening to No Doubt's latest effort. Either the band had so much pent-up creative energy that they were bound to release their strongest album yet, or after more than a decade away from the studio, No Doubt would be as rusty as the Tin Man from "The Wizard of Oz." Surprisingly, neither of these seems to be true. "Push and Shove" took a monumental two years to record, and comes with high expectations. If you can imagine an area where the band neither fails to deliver nor exceeds these expectations, this is where "Push and Shove" belongs. No one is going to mistake the album for the band's magnum opus, but at the same time, it is no "Chinese Democracy," the disastrous and long-awaited release from Guns 'n' Roses. All in all, every one of the album's 11 tracks feel like they fit in with No Doubt's catalog. After more than two decades as a band, would you want anything different? No Doubt has sold more than 33 million records worldwide, won several Grammys and set a record when their single "Don't Speak" spent 16-consecutive weeks at the top of the Billboard Hot 100 charts. At this point in their careers, no one in the band needs to prove anything, nor do they need to "reinvent" their sound or image like Madonna seemingly does every other week. As their last album attests, No Doubt "rocks steady" and their fans wouldn't have it any other way. "Settle Down," the first single released earlier in the summer, is the standout track off "Push and Shove." Featuring Stefani's signature luscious vocals, electric-reggae sound and dancehall-inspired beats, "Settle Down" is signature No Doubt - fun, flirty and the perfect summer jam. The first time you listen, you are reminded the band never fully departed the music scene, because they own the track - no other musical act could produce a similar hit. Lyrically, the song also sets the tone for the rest of the album. Stefani croons about adjusting to unfamiliar circumstances, but that she will be able to adjust and "settle down." Despite their 11-year hiatus, the band is indeed fine, and hopefully will stick around for a little longer. The second single and title track "Push and Shove" is an initial disappointment, but upon further listen is one of the album's stronger cuts. Featuring Busy Signal and Major Lazer, the song digs even deeper into the band's ska roots. Perhaps because bassist Tony Kanal said the song was to No Doubt what "Bohemian Rhapsody" was to Queen, the track came with lofty expectations. Once you walk away from that ambitious statement, one can fully appreciate what "Push and Shove" means to the album - it's a very modern take on No Doubt's unique sound. Undoubtedly musical trends have wildly warped in the past 11 years, but the song still sounds fresh and radio-ready, while also sounding like the No Doubt of yore. Other standouts from the album include the next single, "Looking Hot," along with "One More Summer" and "Heaven." "Looking Hot" displays one of Stefani's strongest vocal traits, the ability to use her pipes as the ultimate emotive communicator. Listening to Stefani sing, it's impossible to not connect with what she is feeling. The song also features some awesome guitar synths. "One More Summer" is classic California rock, exactly the type of song you'd be listening to on the California Freeway with the top of your convertible down, sun shining down and wind whipping through your hair. "Heaven" is a bouncy, '80s-style track that makes you want to put on your legwarmers and windbreaker. It is bubbly, flirty and the bottled-blonde Stefani once again reigns supreme on the track. While our middle school days are long gone, you wouldn't know it listening to No Doubt's latest release. "Push and Shove" doesn't break the mold, but it doesn't need to. At this point in the game, No Doubt has established themselves as the leaders in ska-punk-reggae-California rock - whatever you want to call it - and "Push and Shove" is more of the same. What more could you ask for?