Saturday, December 27, 2014

BAKERS FILE LAWSUIT TO ANNUL SEASON
Sharif says Dead Lombardi trophy should be 'returned to the vault'

Bakers PR maven Faith Popcorn and owner QCurl Sharif leave the courtroom after the team sued the Corsairs in 2013 over the hiring of Ray Ray Lewis. (File Photo)

By Man Ray Natural
The Mainline Dope

NASHVILLE—In the wake of a second NFFA championship game win in three years by the Downtown Corsairs, and in the aftermath of one of the league's more tumultuous seasons, 12th Avenue Bakers owners QCurl Sharif and Petro "Chocolate King" Poroshenko have filed a federal lawsuit in Nashville seeking an annulment of the entire season, and any player trades contained therein. It has been learned by The Dope that Sharif personally delivered the paperwork to federal judge Naomi Morningstar at her home on Christmas Day. Sources close to Sharif have revealed that he remained within the residence from the early morning hours until late afternoon, and was seen leaving the judge's Germantown home barefoot and wearing a black court robe that appeared to be too small for his ample carriage.

Details of the suit were not immediately known, but it has been learned that Sharif complained loudly to the commissioner's office throughout the season regarding corruption and collusion, including what Sharif considered to be unfair practices by the Corsairs, the Atlanta Smackdaddies, and the Black Dogs, among others. Sharif told reporters following the Bakers playoff loss to the Corsairs that he felt owner Mojo D had violated the 160-hour rule in which NFFA owners are barred from scouting, research, and team personnel moves that require a total of more than 160 online hours in a week.

"Hell, that hardly leaves a man time to wash his own personal tackle," Sharif said. "Maybe an hour of sleep each night. I don't pretend to speak for every owner, but word in The Treehouse and The Cherry Bomb is that things have gotten a little out of balance in the Death Star headquarters. When a man neglects his own garden, the harvest can be bitter."

Speaking by phone from his home on Christmas night, Sharif would not discuss the full reach of the lawsuit, but alluded to his partner Poroshenko's disappointment in the J.J. Watt trade as one reason behind the action, and commented briefly on other points.

"It's fair to say I went rogue on that trade," Sharif said. "I didn't consult the King — as league bylaws mandate in co-ownership situations — before pulling the trigger, and my friend felt that I was in no shape to have made a stable decision at that time. I was reeling from Bironas' death when Buddy Ryan called. We had dinner at his place -- I may as well have been in the Golden Triangle — and before I knew it, Kirk Cousins was a Baker, and Watt was not. In my defense, and as I explained to Big Chocky at the time, J.J. had not done much to that point and was playing out his contract. I had visions of landing the next Chosen One, and trading Manning. I still can't believe the chump wears The Blue.

"Petro has been riding my ass ever since, threatening to file suit on his own. He feels we might still have a claim on Watt due to my mental state at the time, and due to the fact that part of the trade involved a trunkload of China White. But, what really chapped me, and forced my hand with this thing, was the revelation that Mojo D and Lex were withholding league money so they could finance their own questionable, and I might say, alternative, lifestyles. Atlanta has been disengaged all year, and in fact, their lack of setting a lineup had an impact on league standings. You can run the numbers. And, the Corsairs are sitting on a mountain of cash — I've been to a couple of parties over there and I've seen it [the pile] behind his house. Shit, I had to do some blow and hire a sherpa to get to the top of that bitch. It's a total lack of respect for how the league does business. We pay to hate. No pay, no hate."

Many Baker fans had decried the trade of Watt, but they had been somewhat mollified by the team's run to the playoffs. When it became obvious that the Bakers lacked the punch to advance, Sharif and head coach Snoop Dogg came under intense criticism. Some media called for an investigation into Sharif's role in Bironas' death, and into former Baker PR maven Faith Popcorn's grave health condition. Popcorn is being cared for in Sharif's home and has not been seen in public since her return to the U.S. from Ukraine. And, it has been documented the owner was making the payments on the former star kicker and legendary coach's SUV.

"First, we would congratulate the Corsairs for their win on the field," Sharif said. "We understand how hard it is to raise that trophy. But, we would seek to have the whole season voided — as if it had never been played. The acrimony and underhandedness that has marked this season must be addressed. I don't like lawsuits, but let's be patient and let the process run its course. I think the trophy must be protected and returned to the vault. It's our last symbol of integrity."

When asked if it was true that Sharif had arranged for 100 Ukrainian women to work as "naked coffee tables" at his upcoming New Year's Eve party, he ended the conversation. The Mainline Dope has requested to view all documents filed with the court.

Tuesday, December 23, 2014

CORSAIRS CHAMPS!
Luck Disappears, Pac-Man MVP

Corsairs GM Mojo D and Coach Ray-Ray Lewis enjoy a laugh at the media reception following the team's championship victory. Lewis tearfully thanked Mojo D and told reporters: "this is a special man - y'all have no idea."

By Soren Bernyn
FSN

Their best player had his worst game, but the Downtown Corsairs prevailed over the West Nashville Beelzebubbas to win the 2014 NFFA Championship game, 161.3 - 116.1. The league's top scorer, QB Andrew Luck, disappeared with a meager 6.9 points before being benched, but the rest of the team stepped up to fill the gap, particularly CB Pac-Man Jones, who was named the game's MVP for his unexpected 23-point outburst.

"Andy Luck got us to the big game, and the rest of this incredible, badass team got us the ring," Corsairs GM Mojo D gushed at a lavish media reception at The Palm on Tuesday. "Every one of these guys answered the bell all year long with everything they have, but Pac-Man Jones had to be the MVP of that game. He embodies the kind of no-holds-barred, thug-life work ethic we've cultivated all year."

A turbulent week preceded the game, but the league's dominant force claimed its ultimate prize: the NFFA Championship. The week included an assassination attempt on the NFFA's storied, spiritual guiding force - and current West Nashville Beelzebubbas adviser - Dr. Jorge Linardo, by a lone gunman; some reports stated it was a Corsairs fan. The latest update from Beelzebubbas is that Dr Linardo is recuperating at a secure location. Before those reports came in, Mojo D poured out a libation of Corsairs small-batch Nashville bourbon, and held a moment of silence for "Dr L - who gave us all a reason to be here."

The Corsairs were heavy favorites going into the game - the team led the league nearly all season in power rank, scoring, and top individual performers (Andrew Luck, Le'Veon Bell and Pac-Man are all #1 at their position), and the team wound up with a spotless 6-0 record against their woeful Linardo division opponents. "The thing we are still most proud of is our 90% efficiency rating," Coach Ray-Ray Lewis said. "It shows we drafted right, picked up free agents right, set the line-ups right - all season long! But you know, the big inspiration for us was little Asher - this game we play is nothing compared to his, and he's thriving, man! How could we do anything less?" *Asher is indeed thriving: over 7 pounds, living with his parents in Chattanooga. Many challenges ahead, but happy and healthy...

This championship is the Corsairs' second in three seasons, and represents Ray-Ray Lewis' second ring - the first came as a Corsairs player in 2012 (he was on IR much of the season, but was the heart and soul of the team), and he earned this one as coach in 2014. "This one is special - these are my damn boys. We built something remarkable here, but the 2015 season starts now. We are loaded with galaxy-class WRs, and we will start shopping them immediately to other NFFA franchises..."

At that point, Mojo D jumped in "...well, maybe not right away, Ray-Ray: let's keep this party going! Kick it, Jack!" At that point, Jack White and the Dead Weather launched into a hyper-decibel version of "Rather Be Lucky (Than Good [Any Day])," the Corsairs' theme song from 2012. The drinks flowed, the high-fives commenced, and another glorious NFFA season melted into a hazy, loud memory of a memory.




Sunday, December 14, 2014

Venus, Hamilton Share Nuptials
Wedding highlights ‘out of controlest’ Bacchanal ever

Bacchanal 2014: (clockwise from upper left)Co-emcee Don Cornelius, a reunited Led Zeppelin, Tony Joe White, John Coltrane, Prince and Little Jimmy Dickens.


By Ariel Mutha-Tafoya
FSN Sports


Like a Shakespearean comedy, this year’s Bacchanal to the Future began with drama, ended with a wedding and was filled with utter confusion in between, including what is believed to be the first reenactment of a Civil War battle involving zombies.

As is the case most years, this account of Bacchanal XI was pieced together from a combination of video footage, police reports and accounts of the participants and organizers, many of whom were not available to discuss the events until days after they occurred.

More than 130,000 fans filled NashVegas’ Centennial Park for the festival, whose motto this year changed from “Nothing Exceeds Like Excess” to “Bigger, Longer and Uncut,” in keeping with a format change that expanded the festival to three full days. Many had come expressly to see the reanimated co-grand marshals: Hunter S. Thompson, the high school journalism teacher of QCurl Sharif who in many ways inspired the event, and, making his first public appearance since his death a year ago, former South African president Nelson Mandela.

But these two luminaries were overshadowed by unscripted opening for the show Friday morning, when Julia Roberts and Hugo Chavez were set to serve in the traditional roles of Aphrodite and Charon. Instead, Bakers’ patron and sometimes booster Shiva the Destroyer of Worlds appeared with the actual Greek gods Charon and Aphrodite, who portrayed themselves in the restaging of the “birth of Venus” that has launched past Bacchanals.

“After we had to bump her for Marilyn Monroe last year, Julia had been really looking forward at last to playing Aphrodite,” said festival co-host Mos Ded on Saturday afternoon. “And we already have Pam Grier lined up for 2015. But what are you gonna do?

“And I can’t say it didn’t make for a hell of an open. Something special invariably happens when Shiva is in the house. I thought we were heading sideways there for a minute when Aphrodite made that crack about the Parthenon looking like a cheap Chinese Gucci knockoff, but it all got smoothed out.”

With the Greek immortals joining in, emcee Haven Hamilton opened the Bacchanal with the recitation of the Pledge of Allegiance. Then, asking the crowd to observe two minutes of silence, Hamilton dedicated the festival to Evelyn Rotier, the park-area restaurateur who died the week before — and whose son, Charlie, has been a fixture at past Bacchanals, occasionally dispensing free “medical supplies” via slingshot from the Parthenon roof.

“She was like a surrogate mother to me and Mos Ded” a tearful Sharif told Vice President Joe Biden later in the VIP lounge. “She gave us jobs as dishwashers after our first arrest, which was the result of a misunderstanding by the police. And when one of the cooks bullied me, she shot him in the leg and then fired him. I owe an awful lot to that woman.”

When the silence ended, Charlie Rotier, speaking from a megaphone atop the Parthenon, announced that the first 50,000 attendees who had received sequentially numbered festival wristbands when they came through the main gate would receive a free Rotier’s cheeseburger on French bread, made possible by a gift from the JorgĂ© and Melinda Linardo Foundation.

With the crowd still roaring, Hamilton introduced the Bacchanal’s new co-emcee, a reanimated Don Cornelius, who lit the festival’s ceremonial torch that burns throughout the weekend and shouted, “Are you ready to get on with the get-on?”

Cornelius introduced the artist formerly known as The Artist Formerly Known as Prince, who made his Bacchanal debut thanks to a nifty assist from Cambridge owner Dave the Animal, one of the original members of Morris Day and the Time. Near the end of his 90-minute set, Prince dedicated one of his biggest hits to DTA, saying, “In 15 years Animal will party like it’s 1999” — a reference to DTA’s backward travel through the space-time continuum.

Cornelius then quieted the masses before leading them in the “Hands Up, Don’t Shoot” demonstration that lasted several minutes as a show of support for the troubled citizens in Ferguson, Missouri. The moving demonstration of unity noticeably created tension for the Metro Police and National Guard units assigned to keep a semblance of order within the area covering the park and surrounding city blocks. In a shocking point of emphasis, country star Tanya Tucker, dressed as a peace officer, stepped onstage and shot Cornelius in the back as his arms were raised. Following a few intense moments, the big former host of Soul Train raised himself up from the floor, revealing it to have been an act.  He and Tucker embraced and engaged in a long kiss, signifying the festival’s universal theme of love.

“I remember the night in LA when she really shot me — after huffing a few rails off my back,” Cornelius said to the relieved crowd. “She and Glen had been fighting. She would have come after me with anything. If the gun hadn’t been handy, she’d have grabbed whatever was close. I’ve always said ‘guns don’t kill people—people kill people. And, in some cases, people kill themselves. Oh yeah, it’s all coming back to me now.’”

Amid the music — Friday’s lineup included Bacchanal perennials Steely Dan, Warren Zevon, Freddy Fender, the Butthole Surfers and Little Jimmy Dickens — one of the highlights of the first day involved the kind of Hollywood spectacle for which the festival has become renowned. To commemorate the sesquicentennial of the Battle of Franklin, organizers unleashed 5,000 zombies from Sharif’s Bobberhead Lodge, all dressed in Confederate butternut uniforms, who stormed into the park from Dog Park Hill west of the Parthenon. The undead soldiers, led by a reanimated veteran of Franklin, States Rights Gist, were met by several thousand festival-goers who paid $20 each for the opportunity to fire reproduction Sharpe’s carbines and field artillery into the advancing Rebel zombie line. Upon a pre-arranged signal, the Confederates retreated, leaving roughly half their forces dead or re-dying on the field.

“We had both production lines at Hohenwald going three shifts for weeks to get this done,” said a tired but exuberant Sharif afterward. “And with a live-fire event like this, you can imagine the permitting and insurance were hell. But I think it was worth it. Before he re-died, General Gist told me it had been his great honor to come back – kind of like his ‘Field of Dreams.’”

After the “battle tribute,” in a break with tradition, Levon Helm led the crowd in singing “The Night They Drove Ole Dixie Down,” which has closed the Bacchanal every year since it began. “It just seemed right to do it this way,” said Sharif, who accompanied Helm, Robbie Robertson and Garth Hudson on jew’s harp until he was overcome by emotion during the final chorus and left the stage.

In another departure from previous years, Saturday’s festivities began promptly at 8 am, and the bleary-eyed revelers who arrived early or stayed all night were greeted with a surprise — an unannounced performance by Led Zeppelin. With a bit of special effects staging courtesy of Shiva, Robert Plant descended to the Parthenon stage from what one reviewer described as a “cosmic escalator,” as Jimmy Page played the opening chords of “Stairway to Heaven.” Later in their two-hour set, the band were joined by NFFA founder JorgĂ© Linardo on “Houses of the Holy” and “Going to Kashmir.” Then Sharif provided soulful blues harmonica on “When the Levee Breaks,” and the band followed with “Black Dog,” which Plant dedicated to Jim McMahon, who had to be awakened by
Goodrow on air guitar during Led Zep's encore.
Justin Timberlake after he apparently fell asleep in the VIP Lounge, where Thompson and a reanimated Ed Bradley had been holding court all night. Halfway through Zeppelin’s encore, “Dazed and Confused,” an obviously intoxicated Dave “Goodrow” Goodridge, who had been named by Ded as “Master of the Vomitorium,” wandered onstage, attempting to play air guitar before exiting with the band with hands aloft amid the crowd’s cheering.


Saturday’s chariot race, which has become a crowd favorite since the Bakers and Beelzebubbas made a civic gift of the Centennial Park Hippodrome in 2008, featured General John Bell Hood driving “Rebel Hell” for the Bakers and Marty Stuart holding the reins of the Bubbas’ “Mandolin Wind” ride. Rounding out the field were two winners from an earlier qualifying heat: the Black Dogs’ “Chariot of Fur,” helmed by East Nashville mayor Todd Snider, and the Corsairs’ “Hot Rod LinkedIn,” whose driver, George Frayne IV, earlier in the afternoon had made a triumphant return to the Bacchanal main stage as Commander Cody with his Lost Planet Airmen. General George Washington Leonard, accompanied onto the track by his current girlfriend, Scarlett Johansson, served as flagman.

At the request of Bubbas radio announcer Art Bell, who broadcast continuously from Centennial Park during the nearly 56 hours of the festival — some of his live interviews with Bacchanal participants could be heard via speakers throughout the park — before the starting flag dropped race attendees observed one minute of silence for Rob Bironas, the winningest coach in Bakers history, who died tragically in a mystery-shrouded car crash at the beginning of the season. On the gray afternoon, the festival’s Singapore-based technology team projected holographic video images of Bironas into the sky, allowing the dark clouds to serve as a screen and creating a haunting, larger-than-death effect.

During the race itself, while attempting to control his team of horses with one arm (his other limb was lost at Gettysburg), and reportedly dosed heavily with artisan-crafted Corsair laudanum, Hood lost control while running strongly in second place, overturning his chariot and enabling Stuart to coast down the final straightway for the Bubbas’ second consecutive win at the Hippodrome. Hood, whose left leg was severed in the crash, insisted on having a tourniquet applied while his chariot was being righted. The general then finished the race before receiving medical attention from the Bakers team physician, Dr. Timothy Leary, and being rushed back to the Hohenwald compound for regenerative treatment.

“You saw a real warrior out there,” Sharif told Bell an exclusive post-race interview that aired live on Unserious Satellite Radio. “I think we found more than a driver today. J.B. might be our new linebackers coach. And, the laudanum connection doesn’t hurt.” Sharif also indicated that, if the parties could come together on a contract, a reanimated Bironas might return next year as the permanent charioteer for Team Baker.

The race’s other casualty was Cam Newton, who crashed the Animals’ Methlon ZLC (Zero Liability Corporation) chariot in a preliminary race. Newton, who suffered an injury to his lower back, has been cut from the Cambridge team.

Snider, meanwhile, blamed his third-place finish not on Hood’s wreck but on “some last-minute inspirational vaping that turned out to be performance-de-enhancing. Folks in the Nasty understand that we represented.”

Saturday afternoon involved another Bacchanal innovation: an unprecedented procession of “one-hit wonder” acts performing their one hits: Archie Bell & the Drells, Mungo Jerry, Norman Greenbaum, Brewer & Shipley, Zager & Evans, Carl Douglas, Tommy Tutone, The Surfaris, Nena, the Jim Carroll Band, the Neon Philharmonic, Mark Dinning, the Big Bopper and Sir Mix-a-Lot, among others.

Later in the day a reanimated Lowell George and Little Feat elated the crowd in their Bacchanal debut, followed by Howlin Wolf, the Red Hot Chili Peppers, Tony Joe White, the proto-punk giants Black Flag and John Coltrane, before the evening’s headliner, Willie Nelson, took the stage.

“Believe it or not,” said the Bubbas’ Chuck Barris, who handles most of the artist bookings each year, “Willie has never played a Bacchanal before now because he said it wasn’t’ different enough from most of his own shows. Whatever – we’re just glad he finally came. This was a big get for us.”

As the highlight of his two-hour set, Nelson paid tribute to old friend Waylon Jennings with emotional renditions of “Luckenbach, Texas (Back to the Basics of Love)” and “I Don’t Think Hank Done It This Way.”  During Nelson’s encore, the crowd rose as one to its feet after “Blue Eyes Cryin’ in the Rain,” when Iraqi President and Bacchanal veteran Saddam Hussein appeared onstage and joined Willie for a rousing, 10-minute version of “Whiskey River.”

Sunday morning saw the arrival of a procession led by U.S. President and Friend of the Bakers Barack Obama, accompanied by Sharif, Mandela, Marty Stuart, Pops Staples and the Staple Singers, who asked the crowd to join them in “It’s a Long Walk to D.C.” Behind them were 5,000 marchers who had walked with them to the Parthenon from the old Tennessee State Prison. Along the route they stopped outside the fortified perimeter of Club Gitmo, where volunteers from the Bubbas’ Women’s Auxiliary dispensed bottled water and energy bars. After the group’s arrival and before joining Bakers investor Petro “Chocolate King” Poroshenko in the VIP Lounge, Obama remained onstage with the Staples, providing the background “Help me, help me’s” during the chorus of “I’ll Take You There.”

Among Sunday’s other highlights:

• The first performance of the reformed Wu-Tang Clan, which also included several songs from Ghostface Killah’s new solo project.
• Bacchanal favorites Dr. John and the Meters, who performed this year with a reanimated Professor Longhair
• Nashville rappers Dr. Krunkenstein performing the songs from their new LP, “White Noise,” whose timely “500 Watts” is reportedly being slotted as a single for college radio by the band’s label, Nastyville Records.
• The original cast of “The Rocky Horror Picture Show,” whose performance of “Let’s Do the Time Warp (Again)” sent the crowd into such a frenzy that the show had to be halted for 15 minutes.
• A reanimated Tupac Shakur and Suge Knight, who announced a “unity tour” around the cause of “killing cops”
• A 12-foot chocolate statue of Athena, a gift of Poroshenko, on a platform surrounded by an ankle-deep pool of melted chocolate; attendees were allowed to approach and ritually lick the statue after removing their socks, shoes and pants. Mo and Cash Money, daughters of NFFA Commissioner William D. Money, frolicked conspicuously in the chocolate pool as Sea Hogs owner Tirik O’Bobber looked on, wearing only an ankle-length fur coat, hat and platform shoes he bought from Walt Frazier.
• The Village People, joined by Goodrow and former Green coach Stuart Smalley, whose appearances together are fast becoming a Bacchanal tradition.
• The reunion of Kinky Friedman and the original lineup of the Texas Jewboys
• Polka kings Brave Combo, which stirred the crowd at the Dionysus Stage — which prominently included Black Dogs assistant coach Stumpy Legg — to dance as the band played all the sings in order from its seminal “Polkatharsis” LP.
• Bell’s live video remote — the video was taken down within 24 hours by YouTube — from aboard George Clinton’s “Mothership,” which, according to Bell, took him to the cloaking-device-shielded planet of Lovetron just beyond the solar system’s asteroid belt on Saturday night and returned him in time to interview Obama on Sunday morning. A spokeswoman for YouTube refused to comment, saying only that the video was suppressed on the orders of the Defense Intelligence Agency and the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms.

For many, a highlight of the festival each year is the “Artists’ Tribute” segment on Sunday afternoon, when a select group of performers serenade Sharif in word and song. This year, Sir Paul McCartney, who also played at Sharif’s funeral six months earlier, was joined by Paul Schaefer and The Late Show band for a rousing version of “Back in the USSR,” a nod to the still not fully explained months that Sharif was officially missing near the Ukrainian-Russian frontier and erroneously declared dead. Then Dr. Linardo, with a Chinese-made AK-47 hanging from a strap around his neck, strummed the weapon like a guitar while he and McCartney sang “Happiness Is a Warm Gun.”

Nelson, who spent Saturday night at Sharif’s West End Treehouse, returned on Sunday to perform “You Were Always on My Mind,” which he dedicated to Bakers PR maven Faith Popcorn, who has not been seen in public since her reported arrival from Kiev in September. Many, including Sharif, wept openly as Dolly Parton sang “I Will Always Love You,” which she dedicated to Bakers mascot Mr. TD, whom she described as “my weekly companion for checkers, ice cream and Turner Classic Movies.” Music City insiders have long speculated that the two had been married at one time.

At the end of the tribute, Taylor Swift appeared in what was intended as a gesture of reconciliation between her and Sharif, whom she attempted to assassinate two years ago on that very stage. Just as she approached the Bakers owner to hug him, Kanye West emerged from backstage, grabbed Swift and used the stage elevator to lower the two of them beneath the proscenium and out of the audience’s view. For an awkward 15 seconds, screams could be heard by those standing nearby until Hamilton took the microphone and announced, “Don’t worry, folks, it’s all part of the show. Who’s ready for some bluegrass!”

To longtime Bacchanal observers, however, it was not clear whether Swift’s abduction was scripted. Neither Swift nor West has been seen in public since the event. “I’m sure she’ll turn up. People here always do, eventually,” said Bakers fan Powers Boothe, who said he witnessed the affray from a video monitor in the Viva Shiva tent.

“To tell you the truth, I thought it was a pretty damned inspired bit of staging. They had this whole Demeter-Persephone underworld thing going on, which couldn’t be truer to the Bacchanal, plus a saucy hint of Mandingo. Plus, you couldn’t help but view this as a big ‘fuck you’ to Miley Cyrus, you know what I mean? I thought it was specfuckingtacular.”

Sharif could not be reached for comment for nearly a full week after the festival. Sources said he and a small group of guests, who may have included Vice President Biden and Fox News’ Megyn Kelly, were holed up in Sharif’s Treehouse celebrating the Bakers’ win over the Bubbas, which clinched a playoff spot for the franchise that many had written off as an irredeemable disaster just a year ago. Sharif reportedly told Biden and Kelly, as reported later on Fox News, that the Bakers’ season had been “a triumph of love over death; of heart over fear; of cocaine over ecstasy.”

Sharif’s abrupt departure left him unavailable for the climactic surprise of the festival — a hastily organized marriage ceremony on Sunday afternoon between Hamilton and Aphrodite.

Observers said Hamilton immediately fell under the goddess’ spell and proposed on Saturday night. Actor Gavin McLeod, summoned specially for the day and wearing his captain’s uniform from “The Love Boat,” officiated. Also summoned for an encore from the “One-Hit Wonder” segment were The Shocking Blue, who sang, as Shiva escorted Aphrodite down the aisle, “A goddess on a mountain top / Was burning like a silver flame / The summit of beauty and love / And Venus was her name.” Thousands in the crowd, who had earlier consumed mushrooms that fell from the sky, shouted out the chorus: “She’s got it / Yeah, baby, she’s got it / I’m your Venus, I’m your fire / At your desire!”

A beaming Vice President Biden stood in for Sharif as best man, and Julia Roberts served as maid of honor. As co-grand marshal, it fell to Thompson to bear the cup of ambrosia, the nectar of the gods that confers immortality, for the ceremonial drink between bride and groom. After McLeod spoke the words, “I now pronounce you man and Venus,” Shiva ascended above the Parthenon and then drew the new couple and Thompson into the air with him before they all disappeared.

A reanimated Slim Pickens, who attended as a special guest of his nephew, Mos Ded, watched it all from his seat in one of the VIP luxury boxes nearby. “I’ve seen London, I’ve seen France, I’ve been to umpteen goat ropings, two world’s fairs and a snake roundup, but this was the got-damnedest thing I’ve ever been around,” he said afterward. That was some unholy matrimony.”

“I don’t think we’ve ever had a wedding here before,” Ded reflected later. “At least not one that was consensual. And this thing may have set the bar so high that we can never really do another one. I’m not even sure we can do another Bacchanal after this.”

Around sunset on Sunday, all the performers joined on one stage to close the show. In a welcome return to normalcy, Sly & the Family Stone performed one of the co-official theme songs of the Bacchanal, “Thank You (Falettinme Be Mice Elf Agin.” Then, together, everyone sang REM’s “It’s the End of the World (as We Know It)” and “Will the Circle Be Unbroken?” before Ded thanked everyone for coming and Cornelius dismissed the crowd with “Pax vobiscum, drive safely, and keep the flame burning fiercely in your hearts.”

Saturday, December 13, 2014

2014 NFFA postseason awards
WATT THE F**K?
Top defender voted Player of the Year

East Nashville DE J.J. Watt was named 2014 Player of the Year by NFFA owners.
By R.E. Porter
Associated Web Press

East Nashville defensive end J.J. Watt has been making news on-and-off the field the entire 2014 season, so it probably should come as no surprise the Black Dog star was voted 2014 Player of the Year by the league's owners. But when the announcement came late last night, it was surprising nonetheless.

Watt is the first defensive player in league history to win the award, receiving votes from five of the league's eight coaches. Downtown Corsairs QB Andrew Luck, East Nashville QB Aaron Rodgers and Village Green RB Marshawn Lynch rounded out the voting with one vote apiece.

Watt, who averaged more than 13 points per game to lead all defensive players, was part of a six-player trade between the Black Dogs and 12th Avenue Bakers early in the season. Longtime league observers couldn't believe the Bakers had given up Watt and called the deal "the worst trade in NFFA history." After adding the giant defender, the Black Dogs went on a tear, winning eight of their next nine games on their way to the Jorge division title. Watt was also the only unanimous selection to the 2014 All-NFFA team.

In another surprise, the owners voted late Bakers coach Rob Bironas as 2014 Coach of the Year. Bironas was killed in a car accident in week three and the team dedicated the season to their fallen coach as they made the playoffs for the first time since 2009. Bironas received four votes to edge Black Dogs coach Jim McMahon (three votes) for the award. In addition, Corsairs coach Ray Ray Lewis got one vote.

East Nashville GM Buddy Ryan was voted Executive of the Year, receiving five of eight votes. Ryan not only engineered the trade that brought Watt to the team, he pulled off a predraft trade with the West Nashville Beelzebubbas to get the third overall pick, which he used to draft QB Aaron Rodgers. Cambridge Animals GM Wilder the Animal, Fidalgo Island Sea Hogs owner Tirik Obobber and Corsairs owner Mojo D received one vote apiece to round out the voting.

The 2014 All-NFFA team was also announced and the top vote-getters were Watt with eight votes, West Nashville RB DeMarco Murray and Fidalgo Island WR Jordy Nelson with seven votes each, and West Nashville LB Luke Kuechluy with six. The Black Dogs placed five players on the team, followed by the Animals with three, and the Corsairs, Beelzebubbas, Bakers and Sea Hogs with two apiece. The Village Green and Atlanta Smack Daddies were not represented on this year's All-NFFA team, but had several players among those who received honorable mention.

Here is the complete list of postseason honors:

2014 Player of the Year: J.J. Watt, East Nashville Black Dogs
2014 Coach of the Year: Rob Bironas, 12th Avenue Bakers
2014 Executive of the Year: Buddy Ryan, East Nashville Black Dogs

2014 All-NFFA Team (vote totals in parenthesis)
QB Aaron Rodgers, East Nashville Black Dogs (4)
RB DeMarco Murray, West Nashville Beelzebubbas (7)
RB Le'Veon Bell, Downtown Corsairs (3) 
WR Jordy Nelson, Fidalgo Island Sea Hogs (7)
WR Antonio Brown, East Nashville Black Dogs (5)
WR Demaryius Thomas, Downtown Corsairs (4)
TE Rob Gronkowski, Cambridge Animals (5)
PK Stephen Gostkowski, 12th Avenue Bakers (5)
DL J.J. Watt, East Nashville Black Dogs (8)
DL Rob Ninkovich, 12th Avenue Bakers (3)
LB Luke Kuechly, West Nashville Beelzebubbas (6)
LB D'Quell Jackson, East Nashville Black Dogs (3) 
DB Harrison Smith, Fidalgo Island Sea Hogs (4)
DB Charles Woodson, East Nashville Black Dogs (3)
KR (tie) Devin Hester, Cambridge Animals (2); Julian Edelman, Cambridge Animals (2)

Honorable Mention: QB Andrew Luck, Downtown Corsairs (3); RB Marshawn Lynch, Village Green (2); RB Jamaal Charles, Cambridge Animals (2); WR Julio Jones, Village Green (2); WR Emmanuel Sanders, East Nashville Black Dogs (2); WR Devin Hester, Cambridge Animals (2); TE Julius Thomas, Atlanta Smack Daddies (2); DL Robert Quinn, Downtown Corsairs (2); LB LaVonte David, Atlanta Smack Daddies (2); LB Daryl Smith, 12th Avenue Bakers (2); DB Adam Jones, Downtown Corsairs (2); DB Rashad Johnson, 12th Avenue Bakers (2); DB Eric Weddle, Cambridge Animals (2).

The complete voting results can be viewed here.

Tuesday, December 9, 2014

Playoff seedings set
CORSAIRS EARN
NO. 1 SEED

Sea Hogs have first pick in 2015 draft

Downtown Corsairs coach Ray Ray Lewis and East Nashville Black Dogs coach Jim McMahon led their teams to division titles and league-leading 11-3 records.


By R.E. Porter
Associated Web Press

The Downtown Corsairs and East Nashville Black Dogs finished with identical 11-3 regular-season records, but thanks to the second tiebreaker, the Corsairs secured the No. 1 seed in the 2014 championship playoffs.

The first tiebreaker is head-to-head competition, and the Corsairs and Black Dogs split their two regular season matchups. The second tiebreaker is total points scored in the regular season, and that's where Downtown had the edge over East Nashville: The Corsairs scored 2524.5 points, while the Dogs totaled 2448.9 points.

With the third-best record, the 8-6 West Nashville Beelzebubbas earned the third seed, while the 7-7 12th Avenue Bakers are the No. 4 seed.

In the opening round of the playoffs this weekend, the Corsairs will host the Bakers at The Roofie and the Black Dogs will host the Beelzebubbas at The Dawg House for the second straight week.

The seeding for the consolation playoffs is also set: The 6-8 Cambridge Animals are seeded first, the 5-9 Atlanta Smack Daddies have the second seed, the 5-9 Village Green are the third seed, and the 3-11 Fidalgo Island Sea Hogs are seeded fourth.  In the opening round, the Animals host the Sea Hogs at Methlon Stadium, while the Smack Daddies host the Green in the ATL.

Fidalgo Island will have the first pick in the 2015 NFFA draft, while the Green will pick second by virtue of losing the points tiebreaker to the Daddies, who will have the third pick. The Animals will have the fourth pick. Picks 5-8 will be determined by the outcome of the championship playoffs.

Wednesday, December 3, 2014

'BAKERS ARE SCARY NOW'
12th Avenue clinches final playoff
berth with win over West Nashville

Calvin Johnson and his new 12th Avenue Bakers teammates are flexing their muscles on the brink of the 2014 NFFA playoffs.

By R.E. Porter
Associated Web Press

That sound you heard coming from the 12 South area late Sunday evening was Baker nation letting out a collective sigh of relief as their beloved 12th Avenue squad clinched the final berth in the 2014 NFFA championship playoffs.

The Baker's win over West Nashville ended a four-year playoff drought during which the team posted an overall regular-season record of 15-41. But that's old news according to East Nashville coach Jim McMahon. "The Bakers are scary now," he said at his weekly media circus this morning.

McMahon's 10-3 Black Dogs team was a beneficiary of the Bakers' win — with the Beelzebubbas' loss, the Dogs clinched their ninth division title in the 10 years McMahon has been at the team's helm.

What has made the 7-6 Bakers scary is the blockbuster trade the team pulled off with Fidalgo Island literally minutes before the trading period deadline, a deal that sent running back Justin Forsett and wide receiver Calvin Johnson to the Bakes, much-needed weapons to complement quarterback Peyton He-Hate-Me. In their first game wearing Bakers blue, they not only combined for 38.9 points, their presence seemed to inspire the entire team, as several other players registered season highs, most notably wide receiver DeAndre Hopkins with 35.8 points.

The Bakers will be making the third playoff appearance in the franchise's 13-year history, joining the Black Dogs, the 8-5 Beelzebubbas and the 10-3 Downtown Corsairs, champions of the Linardo division for the second straight season, in the chase for the 2014 NFFA crown. Longtime league observers feel this is the Bakers best chance ever to claim their first NFFA championship and the coveted Dead Lombardi trophy.

Although seeding is not yet final, we do know the Black Dogs and Corsairs will have the top two seeds while the Bakers and Beelzebubbas will have the third and fourth seeds. If the Dogs and Corsairs win this weekend, they both will finish with identical 11-3 records, but the Corsairs will likely grab the No. 1 seed by winning the second tiebreaker, total regular-season points. The Beelzebubbas face the Black Dogs this week, and a win by the 'Bubbas will give them the No. 3 seed, regardless if the Bakers win in their contest against the Cambridge Animals. If the Bakers win and the 'Bubbas lose, both teams will finish with identical 8-6 records, and it will come down to the points tiebreaker, which currently slightly favors West Nashville.

Meanwhile, the results this weekend for the league's four other teams will determine the draft order for the first four picks in the 2015 NFFA draft. Unless the 3-11 Fidalgo Island Sea Hogs can knock off the Corsairs in their finalĂ©, and the 4-10 Village Green lose to the Smack Daddies, the Sea Hogs will finish with the league's worst record and claim the first pick in next year's draft. Even if that happens, the Hogs would have to outpoint the Green by more than 50 points on the final weekend for the Green to get the first pick. The 5-8 Daddies and the 5-8 Animals are vying for the third and fourth picks. If one of those teams wins and the other loses, the loser will have the third pick next year and the winner will have the fourth. If they both win or they both lose, the points tiebreaker will come into play, and that favors the Animals. 

The remaining draft picks will be determined by the results of the championship playoffs.