I once saw a cartoon where a wife calls down the stairs to her husband, "Aren't you coming up to bed?"
And the husband answers, while typing away intently: "In a minute. Someone is wrong on the Internet."
I had to make a correction to something on the Internet - it wasn't in someone's "Comment," it was in a video telling the story of O.J. Simpson's life.
And it was unusual, because it was about sports - that is a subject where I don't have very much knowledge - people would probably expect me to be the one making the mistake about sports, not the one correcting the mistake.
But the video narrator told about Willie Mays meeting with O.J. Simpson when O.J. was a teenager getting in trouble, being a juvenile delinquent - Mays counseled the future running back, telling him, You can have a career in sports, you have talent, don't get in trouble with the law.
And the narrator, speaking with some U.K. accent - Welsh? Scottish? The north of England? - I don't know... said Willie Mays was a football player, a "center for the San Francisco 49ers."
Even I know that's not right! LOL.
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a reader comment under a Willie Mays biography video on You Tube:
----------------------- I saw Mays play a lot when I was a kid in the 60s at Candlestick He was undoubtedly the greatest player I have ever seen, and I've seen many over the years.
The smartest, too. He knew the strengths and weaknesses of every player like an encyclopedia. He would position the outfielders from pitch to pitch, he knew how to steal the signs from the opposing team.
He ran the bases like a demon in a manner calculated to intimidate and disrupt the other team, and caused many defensive errors in the opposition.
I saw him make unbelievable throws from the deepest parts of the outfield and run down fly balls no one else could possibly have caught....greatest all-around player ever, bar none. -------------------------
The part where "he knew the strengths and weaknesses of every player" reminds me of Lyndon Johnson (U.S. President 1963 - 1968) - he was described as knowing every member of the U.S Senate, their backgrounds, preferences, priorities, enthusiasms, temptations.... He learned to know them so that he could cajole their votes.
When Willie Mays wanted to speak to someone, instead of addressing them by name, he had a habit of going, "Say, hey!" - earning him the nickname of "the Say-hey kid."
He appeared on an episode of Bewitched, which I caught in morning re-runs several times, in fourth or fifth grade. Samantha says, "Say, hey! - Willie!"
The famous baseball player in the photograph below, is flanked by actors Agnes Moorehead ("Endora") and the always humorously sarcastic Paul Lynde ("Uncle Arthur").