Items of note

Criticism of Stephon Marbury’s debut in China: He was too unselfish.

“If bees did that, I’d fall off my chair.”

Jose Reyes is running healthy, to the sweet sounds of cheesy stock-music metal. He’s also striking a tractor tire with a sledgehammer, which is massively important.

The snowman lady from the Daily News last week is back, but for some reason the online story doesn’t include the same picture as the print edition. Luckily, my phone has a camera. This one gives an explanation, though: It’s “her lucky snowman.” Note that this is not even the same car — she’s taken her snowman to the new car she got as a result of the original Daily News piece. Actually, now I kind of feel bad making fun of her. Well, whatever. Here it is:

Covering every angle of Rex Ryan’s finger

SNY.tv has you totally covered on The Great Rex Ryan Middle Finger Incident of 2010, and I’d be remiss if I covered a full day of middle-finger related items without linking to Mike Salfino’s excellent take on the matter:

You suffer with your fans and customers when you conduct yourself privately in a way that is opposite of your public persona. Think Tiger Woods. Rex’s public persona, though, is exactly that of a guy who will give it back to you if you get in his grill and hurl obscenities at him. He’s not selling himself as some moral disciplinarian. If Tom Coughlin did this, there would be hell to pay for him and the Giants. Plus, the Giants are selling class and pedigree — blue blood as much as Big Blue.

Mike determines — accurately, I think — that Rex is basically a Jets fan like the rest of us. A big, brash, New Jersey guy (a transplant, granted, but clearly with a New Jersey-guy attitude) that everyone expects and wants to flip the bird to Dolphins fans that taunt him.

Good.

So in conclusion, Rex Ryan is still awesome and flipping people off is still funny, and I’m not really sure why anybody would get broken up about it. Blah, blah, blah, he’s a public figure, he needs to concern himself with his appearance. Whatever. If he were concerned with his appearance, he probably wouldn’t eat 7000 calories a day. Rex Ryan’s got your public appearance right here, buddy.

From the Wikipedia: The finger

Hilariously, the finger — as in the middle finger, the bird, the flip-off — has its own Wikipedia page. And it’s your day, the finger.

From the Wikipedia: The finger.

You already knew that the finger is an obscene gesture created by showing the back of the hand while extending only the middle finger upwards, and that it often connotes the phrase, “up yours.”

What you probably didn’t know is that the tradition dates back to ancient Greece, and was known as — no joke — digitus impudicus, or “impudent finger” in Roman times.

The Wikipedia speculates that the use of the finger started as a threat, since the middle finger was an archer’s bow-plucking finger, and so extending the middle finger was really just the middle-ages version of the Gilbert Arenas trigger-thumb.

The entry also includes a rundown of similarly obscene hand gestures in other cultures, which is a handy thing to know if you’re traveling. For example, DO NOT flash the two-finger, back of the hand V-sign to people in most other English-speaking countries, because they do not think it means “peace.” This means you, Justin Bieber.

What the Wikipedia does not include, unfortunately, is a list of popular middle-finger delivery styles.

So I’ll provide a few on my own. If anyone wants to add these to the Wikipedia, you know, go to town.

1.) The “Right Here, Buddy”: This is the method Rex Ryan chose, and probably the most widely used variety of the middle finger. It is by nature dismissive, as if to suggest that the provider has something to lord over its recipient. In Ryan’s case, it almost certainly came in response to some heckling, as if to say, “I got your fat joke right here, buddy. I just coached a team to the AFC Championship, and I’m about to eat more bacon than you can possibly conceive.”

2.) The Maniacal Double: This is my favorite, especially while driving. I think in New York the finger gets bandied about so liberally that it almost loses its meaning, so I like to bring it back by adding a little flair. Next time someone cuts you off or does some bad-driving move that prompts your road rage, drive up next to them, widen your eyes as far as they’ll go, and wave both middle fingers around in the air at them. The driver will almost certainly be terrified enough to think twice next time he or she is about to do something stupid and/or dangerous on the road.

NOTE: It is crucial that your tires be properly aligned before you attempt the Maniacal Double. And yes, I know that it is hypocritical to respond to a dangerous or dumb instance of driving with something at least as dangerous and dumb. But wait ’til you see the look on that guy’s face.

3.) The Clever Guy: This category includes all middle-finger techniques popular in late elementary school, including holding up the index, middle and ring fingers and instructing recipients to “read between the lines” and pretending your hand has a little crank attached to it and using your off hand to ratchet up the middle finger. These methods were hilarious in elementary school, but have lost their luster with time. Avoid these methods.

4.) The Emphatic Thrust-Bird: OK, I just made that name up (which I guess makes sense, since I’m making all these up). But sometimes you really, really need to give someone the finger, and you’re concerned that the regular old finger just isn’t strong enough. That’s what this is for. It’s actually a combination of two-to-three obscene gestures, depending on your definition of obscenity, and it really drives home how emphatically you want to let the recipient know how you feel.

Here’s what you do: Keep both feet planted with your weight distributed evenly and knees slightly bent. With your left hand, slap your right bicep as you swing your right hand up, simultaneously extending your middle finger. This combines the classic French bras d’honneur — recognizable from Spaceballs, of course — with the time-honored middle finger. As you’re doing it, ever so slightly thrust your pelvis forward. That’ll show ’em.

Middle fingers of yesteryear: John Franco

For some reason, I was absolutely sure John Franco had flipped off the Shea Stadium crowd at one point or another — or maybe on multiple occasions — but I can’t find any documentation of it online.

All I can dig up is this story about Franco straining a tendon in his middle finger. I’ll just assume that happened when he was really viciously showing someone the ol’ state bird of New York, as Kevin Nealon once put it.

“I got your blown save right here!”

Anyway, though without the Internet’s support I cannot be 100-percent sure that Johnny has ever actually employed the gesture, I don’t imagine he’d object to being classified as one of the city’s great all-time middle-finger guys. He is, after all, a quintessential New Yorker.

Would anyone be that surprised to be cut off by a Camaro on Staten Island, only to spot John Franco behind the wheel, flipping you off? I wouldn’t, and I wouldn’t even mind. John Franco’s earned that right. Lord knows I’ve given him the same treatment after some of those blown saves.

Great middle fingers caught on video

Note: The following videos are unsafe for work, if you somehow work someplace where you’d get fired for watching videos of people getting flipped off.

This is the greatest moment in math-teacher history. Every high-school math teacher secretly reveres Edward James Olmos:

Also, great Lou Diamond Phillips work in that scene. And in every scene. My buddy Scott’s email address is LouDiamondPhillips@ — well, I won’t say which because I don’t want him getting spammed, but it’s one of the major email providers. And I think it’s hilarious to consider Lou Diamond Phillips trying to register for email, and being like, “oh, what the f@#$?” and then having to sign up as LouDiamondPhillips2.

Here’s a great moment in sports-franchise owner history:

Rex Ryan eating a dolphin

I got no response from my PETA-baiting last week, so maybe this will help. This image comes courtesy of Pavan, and I believe it speaks for itself:

Note: TedQuarters does not officially endorse eating dolphins because I live in fear of the dolphin uprising.

Middle fingers of yesteryear: Jack McDowell

Former Cy Young Award winner and alternative rock guitarist Jack McDowell’s one year in Yankee pinstripes was marked by 15 wins, 157 strikeouts and one extended middle finger.

His was the disillusioned, Kurt Cobain variety of the gesture, the depressed grunge-rocker wildly and ineffectively firing back at a world he felt could never truly understand him.

But it was a cathartic middle finger, it turned out:

“That incident actually helped set things straight between me and the fans, to let people know where I was coming from. I truly believe that once all the BS was put aside and everybody was done trying to make more out of that than it was, that’s what came out of it.”

In 17 starts that season before giving fans the finger, McDowell went 7-6 with a 4.87 ERA. In 13 starts afterward, he went 8-4 with a 2.81 ERA.

Makes you wonder why the guy didn’t flip off fans a month or two earlier.

Much later, a band called The Baseball Project featuring R.E.M.’s Peter Buck wrote a song about McDowell called “The Yankee Flipper,” and confessed that part of McDowell’s frustration could have been due to a long night of drinking with members of the band.

Today, McDowell writes a blog about the White Sox for ChicagoNow.com.

Rex Ryan extends middle finger of awesomeness

So Rex Ryan gave the finger to a bunch of Dolphins fans yesterday at a MMA event outside Miami. This made the back cover of the Daily News, Post and Newsday, because we’re apparently supposed to be all broken up and sanctimonious about it.

What I don’t get is exactly which Jets fan that loves Rex Ryan will suddenly stop loving Rex Ryan because he flipped off some Dolphins fans. Look at that guy. Look at that finger. What a hero.

Rumors that he wasn’t trying to offend anyone but merely admiring how much his finger resembled a sausage are still unconfirmed.

Anyway, as a salute to Rex Ryan and his one-finger salute, and in tribute to me learning that it’s apparently cool to show unblurred pictures of people giving the finger in respectable news outlets like the New York Post, today all of the content on TedQuarters will focus on the middle finger.

For now, enjoy the Best of Rex, courtesy of our SNY.tv video crew. No middle fingers, sadly, but some pretty great moments regardless:

Items of note

Joel Sherman writes about phonetic phenom Jack Zduriencik, the one that got away in the Mets’ front office.

After reading just about the saddest scene imaginable in Joe Posnanski’s the Soul of Baseball, it’s really good to hear about Willie Mays smiling.

Apparently Pitt is heading to the Big 10. Should make the college hoops season a lot less difficult.

Johnny Damon sounds a little bit desperate.

Melvin Mora is joining the Rockies.

Weekend items of note

You’ll have to excuse the lack of posts this weekend. Usually I like to at least get one thing written, but I’m a bit busy with some other projects — most notably my ongoing attempt to smoke a 19-pound turkey — so here are some links to check out:

Anthony McCarron at the Daily News catches up with Mike Hessman, recent Met signee and the active Minor League home run leader. Good read.

Jane Jarvis, the Mets’ longtime organist, passed away this week. Barry Wittenstein wrote an awesome feature about her life a couple years ago.

The Mets signed Frank Catalanotto to a Minor League deal. Cool. His skills are clearly on the wane, but he’s always gotten on base at a reasonable clip, and he’s a nice hedge for Chris Carter as a lefty-hitting corner infielder/outfielder to stash in Triple-A.

Apparently cheerleaders also make the Pro Bowl.