Daniel J. Flynn

Daniel J. Flynn - Page 42

Articles by Daniel J. Flynn

Kidd Fires Into Players. When Does Ownership Fire Kidd?

Old players and a young coach is no way to win an NBA championship. The Brooklyn Nets have learned this the hard way–on the court and at the bank. Coach Jason Kidd reportedly ripped into his players after their Christmas

Let the Bidding Begin: MLB Teams Seek Japanese Phenom

Major League Baseball’s thirty teams have the opportunity to bid for the services of a player not now or ever on any MLB roster: a durable starting pitcher coming off a no-loss season. Masahiro Tanaka may prove to be the

Let the Bidding Begin: MLB Teams Seek Japanese Phenom

Belichick: Rules Limiting Practices Endanger Players

Injuries have forced New England Patriots head coach Bill Belichick to do more with less this season. He’s not happy about it. “I’m in favor of total preparation for the players for the season,” Belichick remarked in a conference call

Belichick: Rules Limiting Practices Endanger Players

Five NFL Teams In Search of a Gift-Wrapped Wildcard

Five NFL franchises need a competing squad to wrap them a Christmas present to prevent a wrap on their 2013 campaign. In the spirit of season, Miami, Baltimore, San Diego, Pittsburgh, and Arizona all need gifts to continue to play.

Five NFL Teams In Search of a Gift-Wrapped Wildcard

Study: Brain Function Improves Over Youth Football Season

A pilot study on youth football players indicates that a season of competition resulted in no impairment to brain function. The scientists affiliated with Sanford Research and the University of South Dakota actually found substantial postseason improvements on tests gauging

Study: Brain Function Improves Over Youth Football Season

LaGarrette Blount Channels Ray Lewis

The New England Patriots dominated the Baltimore Ravens on the national stage in CBS’s featured game Sunday afternoon, scoring two defensive touchdowns and shutting down last season’s Super Bowl MVP. Numerous storylines emerged from the beatdown. New England landed their tenth division

LaGarrette Blount Channels Ray Lewis

Before GQ's Writer Got Duck Dynasty's Phil, He Got Me

Reading the patriarch of cable television’s most-watched reality program spouting forth in Drew Megara’s piece enraged some and enthused others. It gave me a sense of déjà vu. I had not only read the article before, I had been in it—back in October

Before GQ's Writer Got Duck Dynasty's Phil, He Got Me

North Korea Escapee Writes Letter to Dennis Rodman

Shin Dong-Hyuk is the only person born in a North Korean political prison camp to escape to the West. His memoir, Escape from Camp 14: One Man’s Remarkable Odyssey from North Korea to Freedom in the West, ostensibly reads as the

North Korea Escapee Writes Letter to Dennis Rodman

Football at Fenway Park

Notre Dame released their football schedule for the 2014, 2015, and 2016 seasons, revealing that the team will play Catholic school rival Boston College at Fenway Park on November 21, 2015. The Fighting Irish will also visit Lucas Oil Stadium this

Football at Fenway Park

Power Forward Meets the Power Trip

Dennis Rodman landed in Pyongyang, North Korea, Thursday on the second visit of his “basketball diplomacy” tour. The high-profile trip comes a week after Kim Jong-un executed his uncle, Jang Song Thaek. Many foreign observers interpret such rash behavioral exhibitions as possible camouflage

Power Forward Meets the Power Trip

Markets Win, Gov't Tags Along: FCC to Rectify NFL Blackout Problem

“If we ever start valuing the TV audience more than the paying public,” NFL Commissioner Bert Bell explained on the eve of the 1958 Colts-Giants championship game, “we’ll be in trouble.” Nevertheless, 45 million viewers tuned in to the NFL’s

Markets Win, Gov't Tags Along: FCC to Rectify NFL Blackout Problem

NBA Goes 'He Hate Me' on Jerseys

Hoops monikers, older than the NBA as “Mr. Basketball” George Mikan proves, will become a formalized part of gear this season as the Miami Heat and Brooklyn Nets place nicknames on the backs of jerseys for two games played between

NBA Goes 'He Hate Me' on Jerseys

Exhumation of Belcher's Body More Publicity Stunt than Research

Whoever said “success has many parents but failure’s an orphan” had never heard of Jovan Belcher. Long before ghoulish doctors convinced the murderer’s family to exhume his corpse to search for signs of the neurodegenerative disease chronic traumatic encephalopathy (CTE),

Exhumation of Belcher's Body More Publicity Stunt than Research

STONEWALL: Celebrity CTE Doctors Bunker Down

The doctor at the center of the conflict of interest controversy surrounding TauMark tells Breitbart Sports that he has renounced his stake in the mysterious company, which made widely-reported claims about diagnosing the degenerative brain disease chronic traumatic encephalopathy (CTE)

STONEWALL: Celebrity CTE Doctors Bunker Down

PBS Documentary on NFL Concussions More Sensationalistic than Journalistic

Tuesday night’s “League of Denial” PBS documentary appears more sensationalistic Inside Edition than staid Frontline. Atop a montage of pornographic gridiron violence in its promotional trailer, Will Lyman, PBS’s voice of God, intones: “Frontline investigates what the NFL knew and

PBS Documentary on NFL Concussions More Sensationalistic than Journalistic

'A Dimension Not Only of Sight and Sound, But of Mind'

Fifty years ago this month the smartest television show of all time first aired. As a writer, I am a sucker for good writing. “The Twilight Zone,” as Michael Anton recently wrote in his commemoration at National Review Online, is

Captain Lou Albano, RIP

When Captain Lou Albano entered the ranks of professional wrestlers in 1953 their “sport” ranked somewhere above pornography and below football betting cards in cultural respectability. When he departed more than three decades later, professional wrestling was a global phenomenon

Mamas, Papas and Daughters: Acid is a Helluva Drug

I hate getting a song stuck in my head. This is especially true when the song is “I Saw Her Again Last Night” and the reason it’s stuck there is because I just heard the news that Papa John Phillips

No John Hughes, No 1980s

Without John Hughes, would there have been a 1980s? The filmmaker and screenwriter died of a heart attack while walking Thursday in Manhattan. For the uninitiated, he wrote National Lampoon’s Vacation, Sixteen Candles, The Breakfast Club, Pretty in Pink, Weird

When Megastars Die, We Get Old

You are realizing your age today if you grew up in the 1970s or ’80s. Farrah Fawcett, whose iconic image was as ubiquitous on the bedroom walls of American teenage boys as Kim Il Sung’s was in the homes of

Margot Tenenbaum Would Not Approve

Should the Motion Picture Association of America retroactively slap an “R” rating upon To Have and Have Not (1944)? After all, the classic film famously depicts silver-screen debutante Lauren Bacall and future husband Humphrey Bogart–gasp!–smoking. The American Medical Association Alliance

A Harvey Milk Holiday?

Inspired in part by the Academy Award-winning Milk, California’s senate has passed a bill making slain San Francisco city supervisor Harvey Milk’s May 22 birthday a Golden State holiday. But the celluloid hero portrayed by Sean Penn bears little resemblance

When Keeping It Real Gets Real

What does it say about the state of popular music that aspiring acts turn to petty crime rather than singing lessons to establish their musical bonafides? Stephen Gilmore allegedly robbed the Super Stop Food Store last Friday night in Gainesville,

Just Smile and Answer 'World Peace' Next Time

Why would Perez Hilton be invited to judge a beauty contest? That, rather than the fact that Miss California answers the gay marriage question as the voters of her state did, is the real scandal of last weekend’s Miss USA

Kumar Goes to the White House II

Kal Penn’s character killed himself on “House.” Kal Penn didn’t commit career suicide by accepting a job in the Obama administration. Penn is merely taking Tinseltown’s love of politics to another level. While it’s not unprecedented for the stars of

Politics Plays Hell With Your Poetry

“This class struggle plays hell with your poetry,” John Reed, celebrated in Warren Beatty’s Reds, confessed to friends after jumping from the lighthearted literary Left of Greenwich Village into the world of hardcore Communists. Bono may be thinking the same

The Taxpayers Prize Patrol

Stage Right explains, “There is a problem with the American Theatre.” But American street theatre, if judging from the The Taxpayers Clearing House Prize Patrol, offers no similar cause for concern. No budget? No problem. Conscript Senators Chuck Schumer and

Spicoli's Rant

Though seeing Sean Penn deliver a “best actor” Academy Awards acceptance speech that was more taunt against political enemies than expression of gratitude toward industry friends made me click off, reading Ben Shapiro’s transcription of Penn’s graceless tirade clicked on

Jack Valenti's Sex Life

Before Jack Valenti became president of the Motion Picture Association, he was an aide to President Lyndon Johnson–who investigated his underling’s sex life. The Washington Post report revealing the matter excuses Johnson’s snooping and blames–who else?–J. Edgar Hoover. In my

Don't Drink the Kool Aid on Harvey Milk

How could Gus Van Sant have made a movie about Harvey Milk without casting an actor to play Jim Jones? The biggest story out of San Francisco in November 1978 was not the murder of Mayor George Moscone and City