
The Phoenix Metropolitan area has had one helluva sports season. How about these for big events: the Super Bowl, NBA All-Star game, and NCAA Tournament West Regional games.
Cameras for MTV's Cribs toured the Gloucester County house of Jimmy Rollins, and the Phillies shortstop seems proudest of his king-size bed.Other great places to "make the magic happen" include centerfield at Citizens Bank Park, Cole Hamels' couch and the back of a Volkswagen.Which vibrates.
"That's a great place to make the magic happen," he says, grinning and sounding like a most valuable playa.
And that last bullet point is really the problem with all major conference tourneys. (To be fair, many of the small mid-majors' top seed has home court throughout).
If a team already has won its conference outright, and then has to prove its dominance again in a conference tourney, at least there should be an advantage of being the No. 1. (This is sort of moot in the Pac-10, since UCLA has won the regular season title like 27 years in a row (more like three) and the Bruins virtually get home games at Staples, anyway.)
So, ugh, yeah. Fuck conference tournaments. (Sorta, kinda). All we need now is for the Huskies to take out Cal, UCLA, and two more teams and go to the NCAA Tournament. Then we'd consider blowing Pac-10 commissioner, Tom Hansen.
So I have this new idea for a pilot. I can't take full credit for it because there is a brilliant, brilliant mind here at the TV station. But here goes:TV execs or agents reading can direct offers here.The show is called "Donkey Lighthouse."
A boat of donkeys being transported by a crew of men has crashed on a deserted island. The only thing on this island is a lighthouse. The crew is killed in the crash but the donkeys survive -- they will be the main characters.
The goal of the donkeys is to get rescued from this island. Big problem: the light in the lighthouse has burned out! No boats know the island exists, thus the donkeys can't get saved.
But in Episode Three there is a big breakthrough -- they discover a closet full of new bulbs. They can be rescued! But -- and we're banking that the audience has some familiarity with donkeys -- our characters don't have an opposable thumb. The light bulb can't be screwed in! They can't be rescued!
Romances are sure to develop, but this is really the story of survival and the fleeting hope of being rescued. How far will their determination take them? Can obstacles be overcome? Will they be saved?