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Changes for Season 19 (thread closed)

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This Post:
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208394.7 in reply to 208394.5
Date: 2/6/2012 11:54:47 PM
Overall Posts Rated:
194194
Thumbs up if you quickly read his team name after reading this quote :P

Plus, I love my team name.


Happy Season 19 :)

This Post:
11
208394.8 in reply to 208394.7
Date: 2/7/2012 12:16:21 AM
Overall Posts Rated:
5151
I've used the team name Harlan Hillbillies in a fantasy baseball league ever since 1991. I'm very proud of where I'm from.

I'm from a small town in Kentucky called Harlan Co. It's one of the most famous little towns in the USA. The movie Justified is based on Harlan Co.

But we are most well known as BLOODY HARLAN......... google it if you don't believe me......... because our coal miners went on strike and when people crossed the picket lines, the miners would kill them. It's a fact that some men went underground in the coal mines after crossing the picket line, and never came out. Nobody ever found out what happened to them. But we all know, they took them underground and buried them there. Or cut them up and fed them to the pigs.

If you want to see something amazing, go to YouTube.com and look up the movie trailer HARLAN CO. USA. The trailer is like 3 minutes long, and I gauratee you, you watch it, you'll want to see the movie. Well, the movie Harlan Co. USA is also on YouTube for free. You'll see men fire guns at each other, on film, for trying to cross the picket line. You'll also see women carrying guns. You'll also see how we lived here, not that long ago, without running water and indoor plumbing.

Would you believe that in 2001, I still lived in a home without running water and without a toilet? We used the bathroom in an outhouse. And this was only 10 years ago.

There's also a famous song by Brad Paisley called You'll Never Leave Harlan Alive.

Most people would not be proud to live where we do, or how we do, but life is so much simpler here. We don't have crime, because everyones owns a gun and will shoot you in a heartbeat. We leave our doors wide open at night. You don't worry about someone coming into your home, because people are not that brave.

If you ever want to see something truly amazing, just watch the trailer to the movie Harlan Co., USA.



This Post:
11
208394.9 in reply to 208394.8
Date: 2/7/2012 12:41:22 AM
Overall Posts Rated:
5151
For anyone who is interested, watch this 3 minute clip on YouTube.

I guarantee you, this is a world that most of you never knew existed.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iCiVMngILEI

This Post:
00
208394.10 in reply to 208394.9
Date: 2/7/2012 12:46:22 AM
Overall Posts Rated:
194194
Some really unique stuff there. I wouldn't have thought that there wouldn't be a place like this, but this is certainly a surprise :)

This Post:
00
208394.11 in reply to 208394.10
Date: 2/7/2012 1:18:09 AM
Overall Posts Rated:
5151
If you watched the video, you see those guys going into the coal mines. People really have no clue what it's really like. THey think it's just a hole you go in. They don't realize you go sometimes a mile or two underground. And it takes hours to get there and back outside. And when there is a rock fall or a cave in, many times they just seal it up and leave the bodies underground because there is no way to get them out. We've got mines that are sealed up with 20 or more bodies in it. I'm sure some times men are left underground who are alive. But there's just no way to get them out.

And in that video, you may wonder why people would live in those houses with no water and no heat. Well, when you worked for the mines, you didn't get paid cash. They gave you a house to live in and store credit at the company store. If you needed milk and bread, you bought it from the company store on your credit you got for working in the mines. You didn't get to go to any store you wanted, you had to go to just that one.

I'm only 41 years old, and I remember working from 5 a.m. until 7 or 8 p.m. in the mines for $150 a week. And that was a lot of money here in 1988. We're talking about $3 per hour plus your food and house was free.

This Post:
00
208394.12 in reply to 208394.11
Date: 2/8/2012 11:36:10 PM
Overall Posts Rated:
1010
No running water, but by golly theyll get you your internet....only in america

Message deleted
This Post:
00
208394.14 in reply to 208394.13
Date: 2/8/2012 11:47:34 PM
Overall Posts Rated:
5151
We finally got running water here in 2001............. we only got internet 4 or 5 months ago, and that was only through satelite. We still have no cable TV or any of that in our area. And I live only 12 miles from the biggest county in Kentucky.

We have the strangest septic system I've ever seen. We do not have septic tanks. We do not have city sewer. Instead, it's called a Lagoon, and you basically dig a pond a few hundred feet from your home and when you flush your toilet, it runs out into this pond-like body of water. There's something in the ground that catches the solids and just lets the fluids run out the other end. Still, very nasty if you ask me.

This Post:
00
208394.15 in reply to 208394.14
Date: 2/9/2012 2:17:59 PM
Overall Posts Rated:
406406
Dayum.

From: Mr J

This Post:
22
208394.16 in reply to 208394.14
Date: 2/15/2012 6:20:26 AM
Overall Posts Rated:
441441
Watched the trailer...will definately hunt the video down and watch it.

For some reason it reminds me of a song I used to hear a lot as a kid but have no idea who sang it...but he's American. "Big John" I believe the song was called...a beuatifully short song about a miner, who 'was a giant of a man' who eventually sacrificed himself to save the other trapped miners. Wish I knew who sang it...in fact, I'll google it and see if I can. Anyway, I digress. I'm almost your vinatge, CLegend33, at 37 years old and my upbrinbging in Perth, Western Australia, is tame compared to where you're from. Hell, I know salt-of-the-earth Aussies who worked as hard as you refer to...but 30 years ago not 10!

Anyway, thanks for sharing with us a part of your background; this is one of the greatest things about the internet, and in particular, BB. So many stories... :-)


EDIT: Well, it took all of 8 seconds to find the song and artist: "Big Bad John" originally performed and composed by Jimmy Dean in 1961 then later by none other than the man, Johnny Cash! And now I'm going to listen to it. Awesome.

Last edited by Mr J at 2/15/2012 6:24:03 AM

From: CLegend33

To: Mr J
This Post:
22
208394.17 in reply to 208394.16
Date: 2/15/2012 6:49:16 AM
Overall Posts Rated:
5151
The song you speak of is in fact Big John by Jimmy Dean. Yes, the same Jimmy Dean that made the sausage.

The song Big John was supposably at least part true about a man that everyone thought was a terrible, mean person, who gave his life to save the miners that were trapped.

If you're going to listen to that song, you've got to listen to part two to the same song. I think part two is called Cajun Queen. It's the story about Big John's woman from New Orleans hearing about him being buried in the mines, so she comes to town and goes down to rescue him from the mines. And when she gets there, she finds him alive. To find the exact name of part two to the song, you'll have to google that, too, most likely. But I think it's called Cajun Queen.

Since we bring this up about Big John being trapped in the mines and instead of them going in to rescue him, they just fill in the entry to the mines and bury him in there. You would not believe how common that is, for them to believe there are people maybe alive underground but there is no way to get to them, so they fill in the entry to the mines and leave them under there to die. It may sound like 1920's stuff, it's not, it still happens today. The most famous one I remember was maybe 25 years ago, there were 37 miners trapped (nobody knows if they were dead or alive), but while trying to get them more and more rock falls were killing the rescuers, so they decided it was too dangerous to keep going, and that the men were probably dead, so they just filled in the mines and left them there. It was later proven to be a fact that the 37 were probably alive when they filled in the entry to the mines.

While it is a dangerous job, really, more people are killed in car accidents on the way to work in the mines each year than they are killed in the mines. I worked underground for a few years, and I never saw an injury that brought blood. I think we had a broken finger or hand one time, but the man never missed one minute of work. But on my final day of work underground, about a mile away another mines had an explosion, and when they brought the bodies out, they brought them out an arm here, a leg there, and there were some bodies that they only found small pieces of. That's the day my momma stopped allowing me to go to work even though I was 22 years old :)


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