Author: Cory McClanahan

MLB Hall of Fame Class Of 2019

Closer Mariano Rivera, designated hitter Edgar Martinez and starting pitchers Roy Halladay and Mike Mussina will be the newest members of the Baseball Hall of Fame. Rivera became the first played to be unanimously voted into the Hall. The four were voted into the hall by the Baseball Writers Association of America on Tuesday. Of the four, Halladay and Mussina were first-round picks, though only Mussina was touted for stardom from the start of his career. Rivera signed for $3,000, was left unprotected in the 1993 expansion draft, struggled in his initial big league trial as a starter and is now not only a Hall of Famer, but the first player the Baseball Writers Association has ever unanimously elected. Martinez signed for $4,000, hit .173 in his first minor-league season, didn’t get the opportunity to become a full-time starter in the majors until he was 27, and is now a Hall of Famer. The late Halladay was a first-round pick, but was once so lost in the majors that he had to go all the back down to Class A to rebuild himself as a pitcher. He’s now a Hall of Famer. Mussina was an 11th-round pick out of Montoursville, Pennsylvania, in 1987, but went to Stanford University and then was a first-round pick of the Baltimore Orioles in 1990. Rivera, Martinez and Halladay will join Lee Smith and Harold Baines in a unique Hall of Fame class: two closers, two designated hitters and a pitcher with 203 wins, the fewest for a starting pitcher since the Veterans Committee elected Addie Joss in 1978 with 160 wins. It’s also a much-beloved trio: • Rivera, the greatest closer of all time with a record 652 saves over his 19-year career, helped the Yankees win five World Series titles, becoming one of the most iconic players in the storied history of the franchise. His postseason performance was even more remarkable than his regular-season dominance, finishing 8-1 with a 0.70 ERA over 96 appearances and 141 innings. He recorded 42 postseason saves – 14 of two innings. That’s more two-inning saves than all other relievers combined in the postseason while Rivera was active. • Martinez spent his entire career with the Mariners, staying in Seattle and becoming a franchise icon while other stars — Griffey, Randy Johnson, Alex Rodriguez — left. Martinez won two batting titles and hit .312 with 309 home runs over 18 seasons. He’s one of just six players who began their careers after World War II to retire with a .300 batting average, .400 on-base percentage and .500 slugging percentage. • Halladay finished 203-105 in his career with a 3.38 ERA, playing 12 seasons with the Blue Jays and the final four with the Phillies. He won two Cy Young Awards, one with each franchise, finished second two other times, threw a perfect game and tossed a no-hitter for the Phillies in the 2010 Division Series against the Reds. He was also one of the last great workhorses. During his 2003 to 2011 peak, he threw 61 complete games — 30 more than the No. 2 guy (CC Sabathia). • Musssina played 18 seasons, 10 with the Orioles and eight with the Yankees. He compiled a 270-153 record with a 3.68 ERA and 2,813 strikeouts. Mussina was a five-time All-Star and earned seven Gold Gloves. He never won a Cy Young Award, finishing second in 1999 behind Boston’s Pedro Martinez. More than anything, however, these three players are testament to hard work and perseverance — and even a little good fortune. The Yankees left Rivera, then a Class A player who had suffered an elbow injury, exposed in the 1993 expansion draft. The Marlins were reportedly set to take him, but the Rockies selected Brad Ausmus, meaning the Yankees couldn’t lose any more players. The Yankees also nearly traded Rivera to the Mariners after Rivera posted a 5.51 ERA as a rookie in 1995. Instead, they moved him to the bullpen and one day in 1997, while playing catch with Ramiro Mendoza, his ball suddenly started moving. He had found his famous cutter. Martinez spent most of three seasons in Triple-A, hitting .344 over 276 games. The Mariners wouldn’t give him a full-time job. When Darnell Coles made a bunch of errors at third base early in 1990, Martinez finally got the chance to play. He hit .302 that season and never stopped, topping .300 10 times, in part because of his great eye at the plate as he routinely finished with more walks than strikeouts. Halladay came up to Toronto as a prized prospect and had a 3.92 ERA as a rookie in 1999. Everything fell apart in 2000, however, and he had one of the worst seasons in major league history: 4-7 with a 10.64 ERA over 67.2 innings. The next season, he started back in the Florida State League, the Blue Jays hoping Halladay could fix things enough just so they could trade him. They sent him to Double-A to work with pitching Mel Queen and the two rebuilt his mechanics — starting the first session by not even letting Halladay throw a baseball. He was back in the big leagues in July and won his first Cy Young Award in 2003. While Yankees fans celebrate Rivera’s induction in July, they can also make plans for 2020: Derek Jeter hits the ballot next year. Source: ESPN

DJ Sourmilk (@djsourmilk) soyft (@hello_dee) Mix

This is a new mix series I wanted to start this year making personal mixes for some of my followers. For those familiar with my “someofmyfavoritethings” mixes, this is basically YOUR version of that. This playlist was emailed over by @hello_dee on IG, enjoy! Feel free to send over 25-30 of your favorite song titles to [email protected] and feel free to make it as random as possible. I’ll try to get as many as I can.

2019 Oscar Nominations

The 2019 Oscar nominations have revealed today and the 91st Academy Awards will take place February 24th at the Dolby Theatre in Los Angeles. Here the list of nominations. Best Picture BlacKkKlansman Black Panther Bohemian Rhapsody The Favourite Green Book Roma A Star Is Born Vice Best Actress Yalitza Aparicio (Roma) Glenn Close (The Wife) Olivia Colman (The Favourite) Lady Gaga (A Star Is Born) Melissa McCarthy (Can You Ever Forgive Me?) Best Actor Christian Bale (Vice) Bradley Cooper (A Star Is Born) Willem Dafoe (At Eternity’s Gate) Rami Malek (Bohemian Rhapsody) Viggo Mortensen (Green Book) Best Actress in a Supporting Role Amy Adams (Vice) Marina de Tavira (Roma) Regina King (If Beale Street Could Talk) Emma Stone (The Favourite) Rachel Weisz (The Favourite) Best Actor in a Supporting Role Mahershala Ali (Green Book) Adam Driver (BlacKkKlansman) Sam Elliott (A Star Is Born) Richard E. Grant (Can You Ever Forgive Me?) Sam Rockwell (Vice) Best Director Alfonso Cuaron (Roma) Yorgos Lanthimos (The Favourite) Spike Lee (BlacKkKlansman) Adam McKay (Vice) Pawel Pawlikowski (Cold War) Best Costume Design The Ballad of Buster Scruggs (Mary Zophres) Black Panther (Ruth E. Carter) The Favourite (Sandy Powell) Mary Poppins Returns (Sandy Powell) Mary Queen of Scots (Alexandra Byrne) Best Sound Editing Black Panther Bohemian Rhapsody First Man A Quiet Place Roma Best Sound Mixing Black Panther Bohemian Rhapsody First Man Roma A Star Is Born Best Animated Short Animal Behaviour Bao Late Afternoon One Small Step Weekends Best Live-Action Short Detainment Fauve Marguerite Mother Skin Best Film Editing BlacKkKlansman (Barry Alexander Brown) Bohemian Rhapsody (John Ottman) The Favourite (Yorgos Mavropsaridis) Green Book (Patrick J. Don Vito) Vice (Hank Corwin) Best Original Score Black Panther (Ludwig Goransson) BlacKkKlansman (Terence Blanchard) If Beale Street Could Talk (Nicholas Britell) Isle of Dogs (Alexandre Desplat) Mary Poppins Returns (Marc Shaiman) Best Documentary Feature Free Solo Hale County This Morning, This Evening Minding the Gap Of Fathers and Sons RBG Best Documentary Short Subject Black Sheep End Game Lifeboat A Night at the Garden Period. End of Sentence. Best Foreign-Language Film Capernaum (Lebanon) Cold War (Poland) Never Look Away (Germany) Roma (Mexico) Shoplifters (Japan) Best Production Design Black Panther (Hannah Beachler and Jay Hart) The Favourite (Fiona Crombie and Alice Felton) First Man (Nathan Crowley and Kathy Lucas) Mary Poppins Returns (John Myhre and Gordon Sim) Roma (Eugenio Caballero and Barbara Enriquez) Best Visual Effects Avengers: Infinity War Christopher Robin First Man Ready Player One Solo: A Star Wars Story Best Cinematography The Favourite (Robbie Ryan) Never Look Away (Caleb Deschanel) Roma (Alfonso Cuaron) A Star Is Born (Matty Libatique) Cold War (Lukasz Zal) Best Makeup and Hairstyling Border Mary Queen of Scots Vice Best Animated Feature Incredibles 2 Isle of Dogs Mirai Ralph Breaks the Internet Spider-Man: Into the Spider-Verse Best Adapted Screenplay A Star Is Born (Bradley Cooper, Will Fetters and Eric Roth) The Ballad of Buster Scruggs (Joel Coen and Ethan Coen) BlacKkKlansman (Spike Lee, David Rabinowitz, Charlie Wachtel and Kevin Willmott) If Beale Street Could Talk (Barry Jenkins) Can You Ever Forgive Me? (Nicole Holofcener and Jeff Whitty) Best Original Screenplay The Favourite (Deborah Davis and Tony McNamara) First Reformed (Paul Schrader) Green Book (Brian Hayes Currie, Peter Farrelly and Nick Vallelonga) Roma (Alfonso Cuaron) Vice (Adam McKay) Best Original Song “All the Stars,” Black Panther, written by Kendrick Lamar, Al Shux, Sounwave, SZA and Anthony Tiffith (Performed by Kendrick Lamar and SZA) “I’ll Fight,” RBG, written by Diane Warren (Performed by Jennifer Hudson) “The Place Where Lost Things Go,” Mary Poppins Returns, written by Marc Shaiman and Scott Wittman (Performed by Emily Blunt) “Shallow,” A Star Is Born, written by Lady Gaga, Mark Ronson, Anthony Rossomando and Andrew Wyatt (Performed by Bradley Cooper and Lady Gaga) “When a Cowboy Trades His Spurs for Wings,” The Ballad of Buster Scruggs, written by Dave Rawlings and Gillian Welch (Performed by Tim Blake Nelson and Willie Watson)

Happy Martin Luther King Jr Day

On Martin Luther King Jr day we remember the civil rights leader’s most famous speech, and King’s remarkable legacy. He was born on January 15, 1929, in Atlanta. He gave the “I Have a Dream” speech on Aug. 28, 1963 to 250,000 people who marched to the Lincoln Memorial in Washington D.C. In 1983.

R. Kelly Dropped by Sony Music

Sony Music has decided to dissolve its working relationship with R. Kelly, Variety has learned. No external announcement of the move is planned in the immediate future, says a source, who added that the company took its time to wade through the issues “responsibly” and avoid legal ramifications. R. Kelly was removed from the RCA Records website, which lists the label’s signed artists, shortly after 10 a.m. PT on Friday, Jan. 18. Kelly’s back catalog will remain with RCA/Sony. Kelly’s last release with the label was a Christmas-themed album in 2016, although he has released several songs independently since that time, presumably with Sony’s consent, and Tweeted earlier this year that he has a new album on the way. Source: Variety

Ariana Grande (@ArianaGrande) – 7 Rings

Ariana Grande decides to unleash her brand new music video for her latest single called 7 Rings.

Dom Kennedy (@DOPEITSDOM) feat Jay 305 (@@TheJay305) – Late Night aka Incomparable

Dom Kennedy links up with Jay 305 for his brand new visual called Late Night aka Incomparable.

Elle Varner (@ellevarner) feat Wale (@Wale) – Pour Me

Soul R&B singer Elle Varner is making her comeback with the release of her brand new single called Pour Me featuring MMG own Wale.