Gender: Male
Status: Married
Age: 39
Sign: Libra
City: San Diego
State: California
Country: US
Signup Date: 2/23/2005
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Wednesday, February 13, 2008
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Setting my own goals seems to help me be achieve a better balance. I wonder if this is true for everyone... Here are my goals for this year. 1. Get a 16% raise in my dayjob. 2. Personally close 2 home sale transactions. 3. Finish my real estate and mortgage websites 4. Partner with another broker or hire a sales manager. 5. Real Estate educational goals. ePro, ABR, ABRM Property Management ed. Intro to Commercial Become Expert in Top Producer, Relay, Winforms, DocuSign
6. backside 180 on the pipe. 7. Get better at photography. 8. Take insurance licensing prep courses. 9. Golf more. 10. Go to the racetrack. 11. Lose 15 lbs. That's about all I can think of right now. I'm sure there will be more.
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Thursday, November 29, 2007
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As of today, I'm a California Licensed Real Estate Broker 
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Monday, July 09, 2007
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I finally finished it (with the help of a guide) and it only took me like 20 years. To all you freaks that can finish it without cheating - It's even more of a "holy crap".
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Friday, May 25, 2007
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 For the past year I've wanted to go to Magic Mountain before it closes. I finally got the chance to go yesterday. Firsts off, if you're planning on going you should buy tickets online, because at the door you pay almost twice the amount. I never rode so many coasters in one day as I did yesterday. Magic Mountain is all about coasters. There are things to do with your kids, but I'd recommend family trips to the amusement park to be reserved for Disneyland, California Adventure, SeaWorld, etc. If you want to ride roller coasters until you puke, Wally World is right up your alley. There were 3 coasters that had modest lines: Riddler's Revenge, Tatsu, and X. X was my favorite ride of the day. (On a side note, we accidentally cut in line on this one - the line was kinda confusing as there is one line on bottom that leads to another on top, but we just saw people entering the line and going immediately to the shorter line on top. Don't get caught doing this as you'll have to answer to a bunch of John Candy wannabes. LOL.) Riddler's Revenge and Tatsu were also pretty crazy coasters. Many of the rides didn't have lines at all. We rode Superman two times consecutively. Superman is awesome, especially if you don't hold on to anything at all; it's like you're flying, man! Anyways, ya, Superman 2 times in a row - it was like an episode of the TeleTubbies. We went up, came back down, yelled "again, again"..and the guy was like, 3, 2...up. Goliath - no line. Ninja, no line. Freefall, no line. Batman, no line. Viper, a small line. I'll always remember Magic Mountain for the old school coasters. Revolution and Collosus. We had a chance to ride Revolution. That coaster seriously hurts, as in physically hurts your bones (Freefall was a close 2nd in terms of rides that give bruises). I wonder how I could stand that when I was 14 years old. We were running to make the last call (7pm) showing of Collosus, but they closed 3 minutes early ---- We ended the day, 3 minutes later, by riding Scream, which has the most loops out of any of the coasters. I made the mistake of closing my eyes for the first half of the ride - big mistake. I would have loved to ride Collosus for the last time...Magic Mountain, thanks for the memories. 
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Wednesday, May 09, 2007
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 We totally didn't win these  I did win this new golf bag, however (In a ticket raffle...don't think I'm good or anything)....kick ass!  Al had fun.  GJ had fun  Gary definately had fun  We finished +3 which for this tournament was good enough for $40 worth of miniature golf lessons at boomers - or otherwise, last place. Can't wait to do it again :P
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Friday, May 04, 2007
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Thursday, April 05, 2007
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Well... I didn't, my friend Diana didn't invite me. But she said that she would invite me next time...great, how nice of her :)

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Wednesday, February 28, 2007
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Today Alecs was having difficulties with opening his mom's birdcage (why in the world she thought a birdcage would make a cool house decoration is beyond me). He said, "Dad, I can't open this cage. Can you open it for me?" I told him to try his hardest. After 30 seconds the cage door opened. I said "See, don't ever use the words I CANT. You always have to try harder if you can't do it the first time."
He said, "ok dad.. next time I'll say I cannot. It's a longer word".
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Thursday, January 25, 2007
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After years of having opportunities to meet one of my idols, with years of chickening out at the last second, I finally got to meet Jerry Coleman! I met him at a banking function across the street from my work. He even said some funny things to me, but I can't remember anything except for how dumb I must have sounded.
It brings to mind the scene in "That Thing you Do"... where the star of the movie was meeting his idol for the first time. "You ARE my biggest fan"... said the guy to his idol. Well, I wasn't much better than that as I said "I've been a good fan of your for many years, ...wait... I meant to say a great fan...uhh... ya".
Dude, I've met several famous people over the years (Tony Gwynn, Bip Robersts, Larry from Channel 8, etc)...I've never felt like such a dumb little kid as I did today. It would have been nice to remember the funny stuff that he said to me, and I know he did because people were laughing (hopefully not at me).
In keeping it real - I asked him if he minded me taking a picture like I always do, of myself and him, with me holding the camera. He said that would be a cool way to do it. YES!
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Cool stuff about Jerry Coleman...
Playing career
Born in San Jose, California, Coleman spent his entire playing career with the New York Yankees. He played 6 years in their minor league system before reaching the big club in 1949. Coleman hit .275 in his first year and led all second basemen in fielding percentage en route to finishing 3rd in rookie of the year balloting.
Coleman avoided a sophomore jinx by earning a selection to the All-Star team in 1950. He then shined in the World Series with brilliant defense, earning him the BBWAA's Babe Ruth Award as the series' most valuable player.
Nicknamed "The Colonel", a rank he attained in the military (http://www.highironillustrations.com/rogues/jerry_coleman.html), Coleman was also a Marine aviator and left baseball briefly to serve in the Korean War, and before getting into the sport, served during World War II. He was involved in many flying missions, and received numerous honors and medals during his time in the military, and has been honored in recent years for his call to duty -- even more so following the events of September 11, 2001.
Coleman's career declined after injuring himself the following season, relegating him to a bench role. He was forced to retire after the 1957 season, but he left on a good note; hitting .364 in a World Series loss against the Milwaukee Braves.
[edit] Broadcasting career
In 1960, Coleman became a broadcaster for the CBS Radio Network and in 1963 began a seven-year run calling New York Yankees' games on WCBS Radio and WPIX-TV. Coleman's WPIX call of ex-teammate Mickey Mantle's 500th career home run in 1967 was brief and from the heart:
- Here's the payoff pitch... This is IT! There it goes! It's out of here!
After broadcasting for the California Angels for two years, in 1972 Coleman became lead radio announcer for the San Diego Padres, a position he has held every year since but 1980, when the Padres hired him to manage (predating a trend of broadcasters-turned-managers that started in the late 1990s). He also called national regular-season and postseason broadcasts for the CBS Radio Network from the mid-1970s to the 1990s.
Coleman is also famous for his pet phrases "Oh Doctor!", "You can hang a star on that baby!", "And the beat goes on", and "The natives are getting restless".
During an interview in the height of the steroids scandal in 2005, Coleman stated "if I'm emperor, the first time 50 games, the second time 100 games and the third strike you're out", referring to how baseball should suspend players for being caught taking steroids. After the 2005 World Series, Major League Baseball put a similar policy in effect.
He is known as the "Master of the Malaprop" for making sometimes embarrassing mistakes on the microphone [1], but he is nonetheless popular. In 2005, he was given the Ford C. Frick Award of the National Baseball Hall of Fame for broadcasting excellence.
Coleman, who will turn 82 in September, is believed to be the oldest active play-by-play announcer in the Major Leagues.
[edit] "Colemanisms"
Among his malaprops:
- "On the mound for the Padres is Randy Jones, the lefthander with the Karl Marx hairdo." (With his curly blond hair, Jones resembled the comedian Harpo Marx).
- "Winfield goes back to the wall. He hits his head on the wall -- and it rolls off! It's rolling all the way back to second base! This is a terrible thing for the Padres."
- "Rich Folkers is throwing up in the bullpen."
- "I've made a couple of mistakes I'd like to do over."
- "Gaylord Perry and Willie McCovey should know each other like a book. They've been ex-teammates for years now."
- "McCovey swings and misses, and it's fouled back."
- "Hi folks, I'm Gerry Gross!" (Coleman is not the only broadcaster to mistakenly introduce himself with his partner's name.)
- "Hi, folks, I'm Jerry Reuss. No, I'm not, I'm Jerry Coleman."
- "If Pete Rose brings the Reds in first, they ought to bronze him and put him in cement."
- "It's off the leg and into the left field of Doug Rader."
- "It's a base hit on the error by Roberts."
- "Right now Andy Larkin is pitching just like young Andy Larkin."
- "Bob Davis has his hair differently this year, short with curls like Randy Jones wears. I think you call it a Frisbee."
- At Royals Stadium, later renamed Kauffman Stadium, in Kansas City, Missouri: "The sky is so clear today you can see all the way to Missouri." (Broadcast partner John Rooney later told Coleman that he was in Missouri.)
- "They throw Winfield out at second, but he's safe."
- "They've taken the foot off Johnny Grubb. Uh, they've taken the shoe off Johnny Grubb."
- "Grubb goes back, back... He's under the warning track and makes the play."
- "Johnny Grubb slides into second with a standup double." (Several broadcasters have done this one.)
- "Jesus Alou is in the on-deck circus." (He meant "on-deck circle.")
- "Kent Abbott is in the on-deck circuit."
- "There is someone warming up in the Giants' bullpen, but he's obscured by his number."
- "All the Padres need is a fly ball in the air."
- "Davis fouls out to third in fair territory."
- "There's a shot up the alley. Oh, it's just foul." (He meant "a shot down the line.")
- Upon hearing of Glenn Beckert's planned retirement: "Well, I hope before Glenn goes, he'll come up here so we can give him a big hug and a kiss, because that's the kind of guy he is."
- "And it's a long drive down the line to center field."
- "That's the fourth extra base hit for the Padres -- two doubles and a triple."
- "Houston has its largest crowd of the night here this evening."
- "Montreal leads Atlanta by three, 5-1."
- "The first pitch to Tucker Ashford is grounded into left field. No, wait a minute. It's ball one. Low and outside."
- On George Hendrick: "That's Hendrick's 19th home run. One more and he reaches double figures."
- "Well, it looks like the All-Star balloting is about over, especially in the National and American Leagues."
- "The Padres, after winning the first game of the doubleheader, are ahead here in the top of the fifth and hoping for a split."
- "Eric Show will be 0 for 10 if that pop fly ever comes down."
- "At the end of six innings of play, it's Montreal 5, Expos 3."
- "Tony Taylor was one of the first acquisitions that the Phillies made when they reconstructed their team. They got him from Philadelphia." (Well, Taylor did return to the Phillies a few years after being traded away.)
- "Mike Caldwell, the Padres' right-handed southpaw, will pitch tonight." ("Southpaw" is a term for lefthanders.)
- "Those amateur umpires are certainly flexing their fangs tonight."
- "The ex-left-hander Dave Roberts will be going for Houston."
- "Hector Torrez, how can you communicate with Enzo Hernandez when he speaks Spanish and you speak Mexican?"
- "I sure hope you're staying alive for the upcoming Dodgers series."
- "National League umpires wear inside chest protesters." (He meant they wear their chest protectors inside their uniforms, as opposed to outside them like American League umpires did at the time."
- "The Phillies beat the Cubs today in a doubleheader. That puts another keg in the Cubs' coffin." (He meant "another nail.")
- "Reggie Smith of the Dodgers and Gary Matthews of the homers hit Braves in that game."
- "And Kansas City is at Chicago tonight, or is it Chicago at Kansas City? Well, no matter as Kansas City leads in the eighth 4 to 4."
- "Ron Guidry is not very big, maybe 140 pounds, but he has an arm like a lion." (He meant "a heart like a lion," though Guidry was an excellent pitcher.)
- "The way he's swinging the bat, he won't get a hit until the 20th century." (He meant the 21st.)
- "Pete Rose has three-thousand hits and 3,014 overall."
- "If Rose's streak was still intact, with that single to left, the fans would be throwing babies out of the upper deck." (He meant "throwing stars.")
- "There's two heads to every coin." (He meant "two sides.")
- "Billy Almon has all of his in-laws and outlaws here this afternoon."
- "Over the course of a season, a miscue will cost you more than a good play."
- "He can be lethal death."
- "Sometimes, big trees grow out of acorns. I think I heard that from a squirrel."
- "Whenever you get an inflamed tendon, you've got a problem. OK, here's the next pitch to Gene Tendon." (He meant Gene Tenace.)
- On a home run by Willie Stargell: "Last night's homer was Stargell's 399th career home run, leaving him one shy of 500."
- "You didn't have to say it was gone. It was gone before it got outta here. It was going that fast."
- "He may not be hurt as much as he really is."
- "At the end, excitement maintained its hysteria."
- "Tony Gwynn, the fat batter behind Finley, is waiting." (He meant "the next batter behind Steve Finley. Then again, Gwynn did put on a lot of weight during his playing career.)
- "Larry Lintz steals second standing up. He slid, but he didn't have to."
- "The Cards lead the Dodgers 4-2 after one inning and that one hasn't even started."
- "The last time Pena faced the Padres, the Dodgers scratched for a run to tie the game and then went on to win 4-0."
- "That home run ties it up, 1-0."
- "Randy Moffitt is 6' 3". Last year he was 6' 6"." (Coleman probably meant to refer to his record, six wins and three losses, rather than to his height.)
- "I challenge anyone, even with a radar machine, to hit that slider."
- "What a great hitch to pit!"
- "Trailing 5-1, the Padres added an insurance run in the eighth inning."
- "The Padres are really swinging some hot hats tonight!"
- "Gene Richards swings, the ball bounces foul and hits him in the head. No harm done."
- "When you lose your hands, you can't play baseball."
- "Ozzie Smith just made another play that I've never seen anyone else make before, and I've seen him make it more often than anyone else ever has."
- "Sunday is Senior Citizens' Day. And if you want to become a senior citizen, just call the Padre ticket office."
- "Rick Miller hit only one home run last year, and that's like hitting none."
- "I've never seen a game like this. Every game this year has been like this."
- On a home run by Dave Parker: "Parker's grand slam is the same as going 4 for 4, even though he went 1 for 4."
- On coach Steve Boros: "Boros is not with the team today because he's attending his daughter's funeral. Oh, wait, it's her wedding."
- "I like to use big words so people will think I know what I'm talking about."
- "They should line 'em up and shoot 'em" - referring to the suspects of the Oklahoma City bombing in 1995 during a pre-season game.
- Referring to a Cleveland Indians fan banging a loud drum during the game: "Well, he ought to go home and find somebody else to bang."
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Sunday, January 21, 2007
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Scotty and I went to Bear Mountain today. I bruised some ribs during a 360 degree face plant. I saw my old friend Henry Yamamoto there, was nice catching up with him. Here's a pic before the run.
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Scotty in his stupid underwear
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Henry
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