Monday, April 11, 2022

Ed Ranks Songs on Toys in the Attic


I previously ranked Aerosmith albums in general. 

Now I will specifically rank Aerosmith's songs on the album "Toys in the Attic." 

Why? 

I dunno. I just haven't written one of these in a while. And "No More No More" came on the radio the other day and I thought to myself, "Hrm Ed, they NEVER play this on the radio." 

9. Uncle Salty: The story of a gross man named "Uncle Salty" (his name is Uncle Salty, so he's obviously gross) telling the singer of the song a story about a young orphan girl who became a prostitute and turns 3-penny tricks for sailors and cries at night. Wow. Depressing. 

8. Round and Round: Weird and funky, but also super over-produced with sound effects. Pass. 

7. Adam's Apple: Decent song with some cool rhymes and good wordplay. I mean right from the beginning we start with "Back when Cain was able." Still, a bunch of weird bible analogies in a song that I'm sure was all about sex. Aren't all Aerosmith songs about sex? 

6. You See Me Crying: I know, ranking this above some of the others DOES seem like a crime, doesn't it? If anything, this isn't a funky, groovy 70's Aerosmith song... it's more like a slow, piano-ey 70's Meatloaf song (I'd say RIP Meatloaf, but he was an antivaxer "independent thinker" in the end, so whatever).  However, I think it sort of was ahead of its time in that it almost acts like a prelude to the hair metal ballads that would come a decade later. I dunno. Personal opinion. You'll just have to live with this ranking. 

5. No More No More: Solid song. Hearing it, and thinking it was a weird song that didn't get much radio play, is what inspired the list. I thought to myself "Why play this? It's only like the 5th best song on the album." That initial thought was correct, as I am indeed ranking it at #5. No offense to this song though. The only reason I rank this song here in the middle is because the top 4 are real bangers. That's a term people use, right? Bangers? 

4. Big 10-Inch Record: I understand, and accept, that this song is stupid and juvenile. I recognize that it does not have the skill, technique and mastery of some of the songs above it. It's a cheesy dick joke song, in the category of AC/DC's Big Balls and Van Halen's Ice Cream Man. These songs aren't double entedres. They are basically single entendres. To those criticisms... I still say that 10-year-old me loves the stupidity of these types of songs.

3. Toys in the Attic: The eponymous song that named the record is the third best song on the album. On most band's albums, this type of song would and could easily be a top hit. But on this album, with who legendary songs, it never had a chance to shine like it could have. 

2. Walk this Way: When I was growing up, this would have probably been listed as Ed's #1 song of the album. I mean the drum beat itself is probably one of the most iconic in rock history. It's probably just a notch or two below the drum beat from Queen's "We Will Rock You" drum beat. But I was a child of the 80's, so when I'm thinking of Walk This Way, I'm really unduly influencing my opinion of it with the cover / remake of it from Run-DMC’s 1986 Raising Hell. That version blew up Walk This Way into something bigger than it had ever been before and made the beat as legendary as it became. If we're just talking about the 1975 Toys in the Attic album version itself... yeah... maybe it's just #2 on the album. 

1. Sweet Emotion: Great song. Often thought of as Aerosmith's "signature song." Debatable, but okay. It's up there, for sure. That statement might be correct. They obviously knew how good it was from the beginning because it was their first single from the album. And when it got huge, "Dream On" from their first album (now a few years old) even hit the charts again. This song was before the MTV video era, so Aerosmith re-released it again in 1991 with a music video and it charted yet again.  Not bad for a little diddy that was written mostly about Steven Tyler hating the shit out of Joe Perry's wife. 

Friday, May 28, 2021

Ed Ranks X-Men (TV series) Villains, Part 2

Remember when I ranked X-Men (TV show) villains three days ago? 

Well, this is Part 2, featuring the more memorable and better villains. Though honestly, some of them still sort of suck.

20. The Morlocks - Eyepatch girl Callisto (not to be confused with the MUCH BETTER Callisto at DC Comics) and her association of sewer freaks including Leech were pretty "meh" and boring villains in this show. It's sort of awesome that Storm comes up and basically kicks their asses and declares that she's the leader of them - only to never show up again for like 4 seasons when she's like "Oh yeah, I'm you're leader." If you want childhood cartoon nostalgia with mutants in the sewers, the Morlocks are not should be your first choice of who to turn to.

See how cool he looks here? Well, he didn't look like this in the show.

19. Silver Samurai -
You'd think the awesome villain Silver Samurai would be used in a plot that was more than just "local biker gang shaking down rural Japanese laborers for small amounts of money," but that's all you get from this episode. Cool villain... but not in this show where he's bascially an A-Team episode villain. You didn't need to bring in a mutant with adamantium claws to defeat him. Mr. T and Howling Mad Murdock could have probably done it.

18. Arkon - Space He-Man who too-easily convinces Storm to marry him, and Storm is for some reason extremely stupid and unobservant about the fact that this idiot is evil and raids other planets for slaves. So stupid that it takes a two-part episode for the X-Men to help her realize that she's a strong, independent Black woman and she don't need no man.

17. Shadow King -  Shadow King appears twice in the show, most notably in the "Storm goes to Africa" episode (that's not the name of it, but there is clearly just one "Storm goes to Africa" episode, so if you remember this show, you know what I mean). He's depicted completely different in the show than he is in the comics, but I guess he's okay here. Just okay. Villain of the week who takes over Storm and uses her powers. Some backstory with Xavier banishing him. Cool beans.

16. Nimrod - Nimrod is not being ranked as part of the Sentinels (even though Master Mold is) because Nimrod is lame. Nimrod looks stupid. He looks like a bad, stiff 80's toy that had no flexibility or joints that could be moved. Nimrod is boring as hell. Sorry to the one Nimrod fan out there.

15. Omega Red - Another character sort of suddenly introduced, and then we don't get backstory until later, with Wolverine flashbacks fighting him back in the day. All his appearances in this show scream out early/mid 90's, from that vague era in history where all the villains were ex-Soviets who were sad that their empire died... but were always balanced with "good Russians" to show that they're not all bad. In the case of Omega Red, we almost always get Colossus in his episodes as a counterpoint. If I can be honest, let's just all admit that Omega Red is shitty in every iteration. Comics, cartoon, whatever.

14. Bolivar Trask - The famed Sentinel-creating villain whose robotic servants cause havoc on the X-Men. Oddly, he's featured less prominently in this show than his douchey assistant, Gyrich, is featured. Although he and the creation of the Sentinels is very important for the first few episodes of the show, Trask basically vanishes for the rest of the series (save for a few Season 4 appearances where he, again, features less than Gryich).

13. The Inner Circle -
Because a Saturday morning children's cartoon was too afraid to use the term "Hellfire Club" with "hell" in it, they're called The Inner Circle, which is honestly a perfectly fine name for them too. They are  Sebastian Shaw, Jason Wyngarde, Emma Frost, Donald Pierce, and Harry Leland. And honestly, I couldn't really some of the boring white guy villains apart in this episode. Which one has the mind control? Which one is the pirate? Which one is Thomas Jefferson? After a while I stopped caring

Ah, becoming a robot FOR REVENGE!

12. Lady Deathstrike (and the Reavers) -
The number of "villains from Wolverine's past" in this show are very high, and in this case, Lady Deathstrike is also an ex-girlfriend. Here, she joined the Reavers and became a cyborg in order to avenge the death of her father Professor Oyama who she believed was killed during Logan's rampage at the Weapon X headquarters. Of course, in the end it winds up that Logan was actually blameless or something like that. Well, I suppose that works out in the end!

11. Sauron - FUCK YEAH! Dinosaur villains are awesome. The Season 2 "Savage Land" story arc, which was basically a single episode that they cut into a bunch of pieces and then tacked on to other episodes, slow-rolled out the appearance of this villain witha name that is stolen from another much better villain with the same name. But whatever. DINOSAUR. In this version he's created by Mister Sinister's experiments. So that's something I guess.

10. The Juggernaut - Yes, we all know that the "I'm the Juggernaut, bitch!" dub was a funny meme when we were all younger and were more easily amused by internet videos when there were only four of them. But I'm not ranking The Juggernaut because of the meme, I'm ranking how he appears in these episodes. Quite honestly, he's just okay and the whole "Professor X's brother" thing was never handled that well. But then again, the Juggernaut episodes were also some of the episodes that Disney+ ran completely out of order, so that might have hurt how effective the story of Juggernaut was in the show. I know there was an episode clearly set right after he's initially defeated, but it aired like 2 seasons after it was written.

9. Dark Phoenix - Jean Gray comes back alive and turns evil as Dark Phoenix. One of the most iconic plots ever, right? I guess in the comics, but every single adaption had trouble pulling it off. In the cartoon they certainly did it better than the movies, but still... the "Inner Circle" story here left me unsatisfied. Dark Phoenix adaptions are doomed for failure.

I mean a tad flamboyant.
8.  Mister Sinister - Another villain who I remember being GREAT in childhood, but when I watched him again it was sort of a big "meh" and didn’t live up to the memory of him being as super cool as I thought he was. Oddly enough, the only Mister Sinister episode that I really liked and stuck with me was the 19th century flashback / origin episode with Xavier's beardy great granddad or whatever. That was a good episode. The rest though? Didn't do much for me on the re-watch.

7. Henry Peter Gyrich - A douchebag who works with/for the "Mutant Control Agency" (at first) and is generally just an anti-mutant douchenozzle after that. Honestly, I had forgotten that he and Graydon Creed were different characters... because they basically play the same role in this show. He should have played second fiddle to more important anti-mutant characters like Bolivar Trask, but for some reason he was actually featured more prominently in this cartoon than his boss, Trask, was. Gryich, who is typically totally unmemorable in comics and film, actually has his moment in the spotlight during this show.

6. Graydon Creed / Friends of Humanity - Guy who hates Mutants and leads the Friends of Humanity, which is a protesting hate group that stands around, usually holding signs and hating minorities. So basically they're Republicans. HA! SUCK IT! This counts as social commentary. Seriously, re-watching this show following the 2020 election and in the wake of Trump idiots storming the Capitol was oddly scary and made me go, "yeah, these villains actually exist." As I note when talking about Gyrich, my memory from childhood actually conflated Creed and Gyrich as the same character/villain and only through re-watching did I remember that they were different bland white guys who hated mutants. Of the two, Creed is more interesting in the end beause the eventual "Creed hates mutants because he IS a mutant" plot twist where he is the son of Sabretooth and Mystique. Mystique is everyone's mom on this show.

5. Mystique - Remember how awesome Mystique was in this show? Well, that memory is MOSTLY NOSTALGIA because she's in this show a lot less than you’d think. She's introduced suddenly and without much explanation at first, then we go huge chunks of time without seeing her again before we're presented with some "she's Rogue's mommy" stories that don't make much sense in context of what's shown on the screen. Really, you have to know about and have already read the comics to really understand what's going on with her in this show. Then skip a few more seasons ahead to late in the series and she becomes super annoyingly Christian Nightcrawler's mom too. Oh, and Graydon Creed's mom. By the end of the show, I think she was everyone's mom. She's okay, but under-utilized. Other than for random mommy issue twists.

4. Sabretooth - Yeah, Sabretooth is pretty good in this show, and frequently shows up as Wolverine's arch enemy. He might even show up more than Magneto. As was somewhat common with this show, Sabretooth is introduced cold without any origin story and we're just supposed to pretend like we know all about him and his history. Fortunately, as the show goes on, we learn more and more stuff about him which provides depth to his character. He even becomes somewhat relatable-to at times.

Just trying to make Sentinel babies from his toilet

3. The Sentinels (including Master Mold) -
The Sentinels are great villains and a great way to start off the show as the first villains. This show didn't kid around with filler episodes much in the beginning, and dove straight into amazing comic plotlines like Days of Future Past early in its run. I could hypothetically break out Master Mold (the Sentinel Mommy that pops out Sentinels from its Robo-Vagina) from other Sentinels and rank him by himself... but why bother? He's more like "Boss Sentinel" anyway, when he turns on Trask and others. Sentinels are great. Yay Sentinels.

2. Magneto - Look, Magneto was straight up badass amazing on this show. The voice actor who did his lines, the late great David Hemblen, was freaking AMAZING. He did such a great job that most of my memories of this show were of the awesome Magneto episodes. Re-watching it again, there were far less Magneto episodes than I remembered. In fact, there are tons of stretches of time where there is no Magneto at all. While some other characters were oddly over-featured in the show, Magneto was definitely under-featured for essentially being THE X-Men villain. There are also a few episodes late in the show where Magneto is clearly voiced by a different voice actor and it's totally fucking weird to watch those episodes with the wrong voice. Pretty much every episode Magneto is in, he plays at least a somewhat sympathetic role where he's not outright villainous and simply has a different and more aggressive way of countering human racism than Professor X does.

1. Apocalypse

Time to purge the world of the corrupt and weak. LORD LIVE THE ETERNAL ONE!

Apocalypse was GREAT in this show, and this is clearly the most iconic version of Apocalypse that ever existed. Like with the amazing voice actor who played Magneto, much of Apocalypse's awesomeness was just the amazing voice skills of John Fucking Colicos (Count Baltar in Battlestar Galactica, Kor in DS9, Mikkos Cassadine in General Hospital, etc). His episodes were great, all his time travel stuff was great. And you know what? I'm gonna go ahead and rank him ahead of Magneto. And this has nothing to do with Oscar Isaac playing him later, which I figured I'd just mention because Oscar Isaac. The series also was supposed to originally end with an "Apocalypse being finally defeated" episode, until they decided to add on another season. That just further shows that he was THE villain of the show. Right?

Tuesday, May 25, 2021

Ed Ranks X-Men (TV series) Villains, Part 1

Are you feeling nostalgia yet?

I started writing this one AGES ago and then got angry because I lost a bunch of it and didn’t want to rewrite it.

Anyway, long story short: a few months ago I got a year of “free” Disney+… “free” being a very relative term considering how much I’m paying Verizon a month in cable bills to get this “free” service for a year. WHATEVER besides the point.

Some people would use access to the vast catalogue of Disney+ to watch Star Wars, Marvel Cinematic Universe movies, classic Disney films, and all that other crap? Me. NOPE. Straight to the 1990s “X-Men” Cartoon.

Some TV shows, when watched decades later, don’t stand the test of time. This one ABSOLUTELY DID and is still so good.

Anyway, by my count there are 42ish “villains” (or “antagonists” really, as my list features some people who are good or neutral characters in other episodes that for some reason or another are antagonists or opposing the X-Men here).  None of this reflects the continuity outside of the TV show or how cool the characters are in the comics or movies. This is 100% based on this awesome 90’s cartoon.

With 42 of them, you can bet your ass I’m going to break this into two parts.

So here are 42 through 21 – e.g. the suckier villains. 



42. Mojo - Mojo fucking sucks. I couldn't watch these episodes at all. I started watching the first one and got through about 3 minutes of it before I skipped it. Then there wound up being a second episode. Skipped that shit too.

Nobody likes you Morph, but at least you're not Mojo.

41. Morph -
Morph was a lame character who I'm glad instantly died at the beginning of the show, and I am sad that they actually brought him back later (both as a villain, and as a man seeking redemption). There is no reason to have Morph villein episodes. Any Morph episode would have been better as a Mystique episode, who had the same shapeshifting power but wasn't a giggling, unlikable twat.

40. D'Ken - the Phoenix Saga had, like, 37 villains introduced in it. D'Ken was another one of those villains. I don’t care.

39. Trevor Fitzroy and Bantam - Turncoat mutants who work for Master Mold / The Sentinels and want to travel back in time and kill professor X. Honestly leads to an AWESOME two part episode with an alternate reality that included a married version of Wolverine and Storm. More time travel. More Bishop and Shard. More Magneto. Good episode. But Fitzroy and Bantam themselves? They were just sucky lackeys.

Mediocrity!

38. Children of the Shadow -
A mutants-only anti-human cult that operate out of a small western down out in the desert. Cyclops is looking for his missing friend and needs to investigate them. Whatever. They are like the bizzaro opposite version of the Friends of Humanity. A FOH vs COS fight would have been epic, but it never happened. Just this filler Cyclops episode.

37. High Evolutionary - If you think you remember High Evolutionary from this cartoon, you're probably just remembering the version of him that was on the Spider-Man series, not this one. On this show, he features in one episode that's barely memorable and the only memorable parts are the parts with Magneto. This might have been one of the episodes where Magneto had the wrong voice too. anyway, he's forgettable from a forgettable episode.

36. Bella Donna & X-Ternal - These two were used in a Gambit backstory episode where his former fiance tricks him to going back to bayou country because his brother is kidnapped and also because she wants to force him to marry her. There we learn all about strange fucking redneck bayou cults. Okay. I'm glad we only had to put up with these characters in one episode and then basically never mention them again.

35. Cameron Hodge - Ultra-forgettable Cameron Hodge first shows up as Beast's lawywer before becoming a villainous servant of the anti-mutant, pro-slavery government of Genosha. After that, he straight up vanishes for four seasons before reappearing after you forgot who he was. When he shows up again, he is basically a half-robot who has betrayed mankind to work for the Phalanx. It would have been more effective if there weren't four years of episodes between his appearances though, so I wasn't like "Dafuq is this guy again?"

34. Gladiator - I guess Gladiator counts as a sometimes villain (or at least "antagonist") in this show too, after initially being portrayed as a good guy.

33. Alpha Flight - One of another set of "Wolverine Backstory" villains, though technicaly a Canadian superhero team. But since this is an AMERICAN SHOW WITH BALD EAGLES AND FREEDOM, you just know that the Canadian heroes are therefore DEVIOUS VILLAINS. Or, you know, misguided or something. Anyway, Alpha Flight as villains totally suck, but at least these episodes are good in that they serve to help the viewer learn about Wolverine's past, Dr. Cornelius' adamantium injections, "Weapon X", and all that great shit.

32. Iceman & X-Factor -
Another "flashback"-ey episode where we learn that there was a guy called "Iceman" who was an "original" X-Man before he left because daddy issues with Xavier. He and the X-Factor team are introduced as antagonists, only for them to redeem themselves and not be evil after all. Which happened a million times on this show by the time this episode aired.

31. Erik the Red (and Black Tom Cassidy) -
If Daredevil wore red S&M bondage gear with an exposed midriff, he would just be Erik the Red. Honestly, this crap Shi'ar villain who sort of introduces us to the space characters that we'll be meeting as part of the upcoming Phoenix Saga is mostly forgettable. His biggest claim to fame is, yes, being prominently featured in the infamous Juggernaut fan dub. I'll just include Black Tom Cassidy as a sub-villain here too, underserving of his own ranking, because he's just a dude hired by Erik.

30. Red Skull - Yep, there was a Wolverine flashback episode where he was with Captain America, fighting the Red Skull in WWII. Did you forget that? Because I did.

29. Zebediah Killgrave - The Purple Man shows up in another episode that was run completely out of order. It aired in Season 5, but is clearly set after Jean Grey dies at the end of the Phoenix Saga but before she returns to life. So when you watch that episode you're like "wait... did she die AGAIN?" No. They just can't run episodes in order. Anyway. Killgrave. Pretty not memorable. I just wanted him to be David Tenant and he wasn't.

28. Lilandra - Lilandra is mostly in the show to be an ally and Dr. X's space girlfriend, but also when Jean turns into Dark Phoenix, Lilandra thinks it's a pretty good idea to kill her (because it honestly is a pretty good idea to kill her), and thus she's temporarily an antagonist in the show too for, like, two episodes or something. Not a bad character, just a bad Antagonist because it’s not like we believed she was really going to kill Phoenix or anything.

27. The Starjammers – Like Lilandra, they're not "villains" in the show, per-se, but they are introduced in The Phoenix Saga, Part IV as antagonists, led by Corsair. After their initial appearance, they'll eventually show up again, but mainly just so Corsair can reveal that he's Scott Summers' daddy.  This show wound up having a HUGE number of parent reveal episodes. It's like an episode of Maury.

26. The Colony - A version of the Brood from the comics that is changed up A LOT and here they want to make Rogue their queen. They appear once, and I barely remember the episode. Space insects. Whatever. After a while, every villain just started being from space.

Totally stone Megatron, right?

25. Garokk -
Garokk is a rock which looks vaguely like Megatron's face. He is an evil rock. Yep. Evil rock. We worked with the evil sorceress Zaladane (unranked here, so just consider her as a Garokk sub-villain) and Sauron. That's about all I have to say about rocky.

24. The Phalanx - In the comics there were actually two separate (but related) robo-alien species that went around trying to conquer/assimilate other species - the Phalanx and the Technarchy. The cartoon streamlined the two into just The Phalanx, which was a good call. Still, by the time they show up in season 5 with their ability to change shape to impersonate other people we've already had 400 other "shapeshifter" plotlines and 400 other alien invasion plotlines.

23. Cortez - When Magneto makes a space colony so that the mutants can live in peace in space, of course this douchebag Fabian Cortez messes things up so Magneto can't have nice things. I guess Cortez is an effective villain because I hate him a lot. But I also hate him a lot because he's a shitty and underdeveloped character who was a dickhole for no reason. Eventually he winds up as Apocolypse's bitch.

22. Avalanche, Pyro, and Blob
- Look, these "Brotherhood of Evil Mutants" D-lister villains don't deserve separate entries, and basically they should all be lumped together. They're not even, like, real villains on their own. They're idiot henchmen basically.

21. Proteus - Professor X's earth girlfriend, Moira MacTaggert (not to be confused with his space girlfriend, Lilandra... this dude was a multi-girlfriend mac daddy) always had a "weird" relationship with X, and one of the reasons why was because she had a secret son, Proteus, who was a giant fuckup who was locked up on Muir Island for his whole life. He escapes to go try to find his father, who is also a giant fuckup and shitty Scottish "family values" politician who doesn't practice what he preaches because he abandoned his fuckup son. Professor X is able to eventually defeat him with his amazing power to calm down the angsty teenager children of his girlfriends. Yep, that is another Professor power.


Next time? THE TOP 20!

Monday, January 4, 2021

Ed Ranks the Worst 2020 Shit that had Nothing to Do with COVID-19

Technically Australia, but symbolically the entire world.
Hey, remember this blog? Yeah. I stopped updating it a while ago. But don't worry... I didn't die of COVID! I just got super lazy! But now I'm back, and maybe I'll post more often than once every four months.

Oh, and speaking of COVID -- or NOT speaking of COVID -- 2020 was a shithole of a year. Now that it's 2021, let's look back on the top 8 things that happened in 2020 that were ALSO complete shit, and had nothing to do with the biggest piece of shit of 2020. 

8. Megxit

I mean, this one wasn't that bad unless you're the type of person who really gets emotional about drama related to the British Royal Family. Which appears to be most people, based on the ratings of The Crown. But whatever, this wasn't that bad. That hot mixed chick from Suits didn't divorce Prince Harry, but she and Prince Harry divorced their family. Whatever. Last place. Not that terrible. Life will go on. The concept of monarchy and royal families is pretty much on the way out anyway and it's time to put the nails in the coffin.

7. Beirut Blew Up 

Remember that? Yeah. A substantial part of a city blew up because a large number of government bureaucrats disregarded repeated warnings from officials that maybe having a shitload of Ammonium Nitrated from seized Russian cargo vessel sitting around in a warehouse in the Middle East was perhaps a bad idea. But then again... who had ever heard of Ammonium Nitrate ever blowing up before other than people who paid attention to EVERY SINGLE STORY ABOUT IEDs FOR THE LAST THREE DECADES?

6. World War III... Almost

Remember how the United States and Iran almost started a World War in January? Ah, those were such simpler times! 

5. All the Koalas were on Fire

Yeah, this one was pretty terrible too.

4. RBG, Chadwick Bosman, Alex Trebek, Eddie Van Halen, Sean Connery, Kobe, Terry Jones, Little Richard, Ian Holm, Dianna Rigg, That Guy who Played "Squiggy" on Laverne and Shirley, My Cat Squiggy, etc. etc. etc.

James Bond, Pussy Galore, and Tracy Bond...
all the same year? Fuck.
Look, everyone who was ever born will also one day die. Everyone dies. So people, including famous people, dying... is inevitable. And despite all the people who died of COVID, a lot of big names also died in 2020 of things that had nothing to do with COVID. Still, even ignoring COVID, it seems like 2020's death toll was especially more gruesome than other years. Fucking hell man. That "in memorium" thing they run during awards shows would probably last 2 1/2 hours itself if they named everyone. 

3. POTUS Not Kicked Out of Office

For only the third time in US history, the President of the United States was impeached. Alas, also for the third time in history the impeachment failed and POTUS wasn't kicked out of office. Lame. Still, he lost the election eventually anyway, so fuck that guy and I hope he dies in prison.

2. Murder Hornets

Murder Hornets. Need I say more? 

1. Cops Keep Murdering Black People for No Fucking Reason

Although technically this could also be on the "worst shit that happened" lists for 2019, 2018, 2017, 2016... etc. to whenever the concept of police forces was invented.  

Monday, August 10, 2020

Ed Ranks the Side Effects of Lisinopril

I think this drug just called you a "HO."
According to this website, Lisinopril is the most prescribed medication in the United States (barely beating out Atorvastatin).  What is Lisinopril? Why, it's an ACE inhibitors, used to treat high blood pressure, which works by relaxing blood vessels so blood can flow more easily.

These are it's side effects (taken from the scary horror show that is WebMD), ranked. Not by how common they are or anything. Just from most awful to least awful. I'm sure some of these side effects are pretty rare. Or, I, like, hope so. Since I'm on it.

17. Trouble Breathing - This sounds really, really bad. 

16. Nausea / Vomiting that Doesn't Stop - If this was just nausea or vomiting, I guess I could accept that as a pretty normal side effect. But the side effect specifically said nausea or vomiting THAT DOES NOT STOP. Yikes.

15. Slow/Irregular Heartbeat - If I took medicine and it gave me a slow or irregular heart beat, I woudl freak the fuck out. I don't know about you. 

14. Itching or Swelling (especially of the face/tongue/throat) - Itching or swelling once again sound like pretty normal things. On an arm or foot or something. But swelling and itching of the tongue or throat? Holy crap. No thank you.

13. Stomach/Abdominal Pain - As someone who has had food poisoning, I know this is never fun. 

12. "Severe" Dizziness - I'm not sure how "severe" dizziness is different than normal dizziness, but dizziness is listed as a side effect twice, with the second time it being listed as "severe" and potentially as a symptom of a "serious allergic reaction."

11. Yellowing Eyes/Skin - Jaundice does not sound like a good side effect. It sounds like something you should get on the Oregon Trail.

10. Dark Urine - Whenever I have beets, I forget I had beets. Then I pee and I'm like "HOLY SHIT, I'M DYING! BLOOD PEE! BLOOD PEE!" Then I remember I had beets and I'm like, "oh wait, this is just beets." All is fine after. If I don't have beets and I see my pee come out all strange... now I'll know it could be the good ol' Lisinopril.

Hell yeah! CANDY!
9. Fainting - Honestly, I could actually go for a nice nap every once and a while! Although I suppose it's better to go to sleep in an actual bed rather than faint in the middle of the day from a bad reaction to a medication. 

8. Rash - No thanks. 

7. Change in the Amount of Urine - This side effect actually started out with the extremely scary-sounding "Kidney Problems." That sounds really bad. But I couldn't rank something so general. Eventually, it did offer up one example of what such a kidney problem could be, giving the example of a change in the amount of urine. All in all, that doesn't sound that bad.

6. Muscle Weakness - I mean I sort of feel like this all the time. Can I blame the drug? 

5. Headache - Yeah, headaches suck. But they are much better than, you know, trouble breathing and shit. 

4.  Dizziness - This is the very first side effect listed. Does that mean it is the most common? Maybe. At least it's no "severe" dizziness.

3. Lightheadedness - Also a beer side effect, and I have no problem prescribing myself that. 

2. Loss of Appetite - Side-effect? More like "awesome dieting routine!" Forget the Atkins and South Beach diets. The Lisinopril diet is where it's at.

1. Tiredness - Awesome side effect. People take drugs to specifically fall asleep, which is but a mere side effect of this. Of all side effects, "tiredness" is more like a bonus than anything else. Sleeping a few more hours will help pass the meaninglessness that is existence. Am I right?

Thursday, August 6, 2020

Ed Ranks US Hotdog Variations

Sonorna Dogs will be ranked. I promise you that!
Hey, it's summer! Let's talk about the perfect summer food... hotdogs! Well, actually hotdogs are the perfect food any time of the year. Hooray for tubed meat.

There is no way I'm going to ever put "all" the American hotdog variations up on here. There are waaaay too many. Even when narrowing down a list of all of the "most famous" variations, people can't agree on what some of the actual variations are. So, a couple of philosophical statements on hotdogs from me:
  • Take something as simple as a "Coney Island" hotdog. Think it comes from Coney Island? Well, maybe it does, but several people will probably get into a stupid fight arguing that it "really" came from Indiana instead, or Michigan. And then there are other "Coney Island" varieties specifically from Detroit (rather than Michigan in general), Flint, Jackson, Kalamazoo, Minnesota, Ohio, Texas, etc.  When we get into something stupid like those disagreements, just ignore it. Basically, they're all just goddamn chili dogs anyway.  And that's how I'll rank them.
  • Take also, for example, something allegedly called an "Italian Hot Dog" popular in New Jersey. In fact, this means nothing and nearly every place that sells such a thing does it completely differently, with different ingredients and preparations. Some say it's on "pizza bread," others say it's on an Italian sandwich bun. Some deep fry it. Others don't. The toppings are typically things like fried onions and bell peppers (like what would go on an Italian beef sandwich), but not necessarily only those. Some throw French fries or other fried potatoes on it. Others' don't. To be honest, it's not actually "a thing," but instead a loose collection of Jersey-fied, bastardized ideas about making something "Italian." And speaking of shitty New Jersey things, a "Ripper" isn't a unique hotdog "style" either, though some lists will include it. It's just a hotdog, thrown in a fryer (like it's not supposed to be because it's in a casing), so it "rips" apart and gets all sorts of crinkles in it. Big freakin deal!
  • I'm not going "hyper local" on any of this. A variation can be a variation if it's notable and famous enough to be well-known. Just because some small chain or one location has its own "style," perhaps with copycats or competitors in the area who make the same thing, doesn't mean it's a notable variation. Having someone's food blog mention it (or citing a a Wikipedia article) doesn't necessarily make it notable enough for me either.  Does your local city have it's own "super awesome" variety? I don't care. 
  • Also, a particular type of meat doesn't make a hotdog make something a notable variety either. Some people will talk about "Alaska Dogs" or "Reindeer Dogs" from Alaska. But an Alaska variety isn't special because it sometimes uses reindeer (or actually caribou) meat in its dogs. You'll need more than that to make it a "variation" without adding some special, unique ingredients, toppings and preparations to the process.
  • A scrambled dog is not a hotdog, it is an abomination before God. Let us never speak of it again.  

I was initially going to rank US "regional" hotdog styles, but the fact that so many different regions claim identical things are "theirs" complicates things. Some of these will indeed be regional, and have regional names, but not all. Anyway, I'll rank 20 of these tubed meats and call it a day.

20. Denver Dog - Barely making the notability cut, a dog with red onions, green chili sauce, sour cream, and sliced jalapeños. Almost a Seattle-Style Dog, but not quite. Honestly, if 20 wasn't a nice, even number, I might have left this one out. I'm not hating on the ingredients, which sound fine, but this is almost a Seattle Dog and fails to make the cut with many who talk about regional dog styles.

19. Maine Red Snapper - Another one that barely counts, but it seems to be famous enough for many to talk about it and include it, so I guess I will. The hotdog's casing is red, so it looks really red. People also talk about how there is a nice "snap" to it, as if that is special. Practically any hotdog or sausage with a natural casings don't also have a snap to them (including others on this list). In the end, this is less of a style and more of a "we added red food coloring."

18. "Baltimore" Bologna - I'll begrudgingly add this to the list, because for some reason it does seem that the SUPPOSED practice of wrapping hotdogs in Bologna does seem to have become notable enough for people to frequently talk about it. I can tell you though, normal people in Maryland don't eat this on any sort of regular basis in the same way that a Chicagoan actually eats a Chicago dog. What is it? It's all in the name. Someone wraps bologna (which is basically already just a flat hotdog) around a wiener. Sometimes a pickle is involved too.  Some people also claim a "Crab Mac & Cheese" hotdog is also a "Baltimore" or "Maryland" regional style, but it is 100% fucking NOT. It's a gimmick at Camden Yards, which other people copied and is not something that normal human beings consume other than for gimmicky purposes. Hey, and speaking of gimmicky baseball park hotdogs...

Oh look. It's longer than the bun. Must be a kookie variation!
17. Dodger Dog - I debated as to whether this one counted or not. I guess I'll let it in. It's really just a looooong, plain hotdog on a bun. Nothing too original or ground breaking. All things considered, this is fairly boring. Yeah, you can put the standard tippings on it. Of all the "ballpark" hotdogs, this is the most famous. And don't think that just because the Dodger Dog is listed here that the "Fenway Frank" should also be on here. Throwing some Boston Beans on a hotdog at the park doesn't make it a notable regional style. A Fenway Frank would go into the "hyper local" thing I was talking about earlier, as well as into a "try hard" category of things that WANT to be regional styles, but aren't. The Atlanta Braves also want "Atlanta dogs" to be a thing, but they never will be a thing.

16. Bagel Dog - Another one that has no specific region (although I'm sure New Yorkers will claim it as "theirs" as they do with a lot of things). A hotdog wrapped in bagel dough (often Everything Bagel style) and baked that way. A cousin to pigs in a blanket, but I'll go ahead and say it is a "hotdog" even though I do not count either pigs in a blanket nor corn dogs among the ranks. Perfectly delicious, but also not "hotdog-ey" enough for it to climb the rankings too high.


15. Kansas City Dog - Similar to a Reuben in hotdog form. Take your dog and bun (typically a sesame seed bun), and put on sauerkraut and melt some Swiss cheese. No Russian Dressing need be applied, though brown mustard is certainly allowable. It sounds just... okay. I mean stick to BBQ when you're in Kansas City, folks.

Ah, the good ol' hot dog cart.

14. Dirty Water Dog - You could also call this a basic "New York" Dog, and argue that this isn't a variety at all. This is the "control" or "plain" of hotdogs, to which all other hotdogs are compared. It's sitting in the cart on the street of New York City (in salty, hot water, hence the name), and the guy at the cart puts on non-ambitious ingredients like mustard, relish, onions, sauerkraut, etc. "Sabrett" is probably the most famous brand of these, though I'm not talking about brands here. If you're boiling hotdogs in a pot in your kitchen, you're basically making one of these. Yes, this is "plain," but sometimes you just want a plain hotdog.

13. Hot Wiener - Sometimes confusingly called the "New York System," I won't call it that, because it's actually from Rhode Island instead of New York. As with the Coney Dog, people elsewhere simply chose a name evocative of New York, given the city's strong association with weenies. The name "hot wiener" itself also isn't ideal, because basically all hotdogs are hot, aren't they? The Hot Wiener comes dangerously close to simply being yet another Coney Dog (aka Chili Dog), although it has what is called "meat sauce" instead of "chili." Beyond that, it's got the same chopped onions and mustard on it that is typical for hotdogs, and often also with a sprinkle of celery salt. The not-quite chili "meat sauce" is also not-quite as good as chili.

12. Memphis Dog - Memphis, like the previously mentioned Kansas City, is famous for their BBQ. Although unlike KC, they learned a lesson from that and that's exactly why a Memphis-Style Dog could also really just be called a "BBQ Dog."  These are bacon-wrapped hotdogs with BBQ sauce on them. Sometimes also things like a sprinkle of cheese and green onions. This one almost doesn't make the cut of notability, but it's hard to say no to bacon. Ingredient and taste-wise, this could rank higher. But given the lack of notability, I have to skew it down a little to a modest 12th place.

11. Polish Boy - Cincinnati varieties of food are really bad in general, but their Ohio rival of Cleveland does things much better, or at least they do as I talk about their Polish Boy hotdog.  It's a kielbasa (technically falling outside of the true "hotdog" category and venturing into "sausage" territory, but like the half-smoke that I'll discuss soon, I'll allow it due to it being a less course grind that's almost a hotdog) placed in a bun, and covered with a layer of french fries, a layer of barbecue sauce (or hot sauce), and a layer of coleslaw. Most of the time it's grilled, though some will fry it. Grilling is the way to go though. Too many people fry a hotdog and think that makes it a special variety. No, it means you're fat, fatso.

This, but in two dozen barely different varieties.
10. Chili Dog / Coney Dog - In my introduction, I talked a little bit about the "Coney Island Hotdog" problem. In the end, there are likely 400 different "Coney Island" dogs that are all basically Chili Dogs, because in the early days of hotdogs, Coney Island, NY was famous for hotdogs and a "Coney" became a generic word for any hotdog in general. Somewhere along the line (to which there is great debate), it got specifically linked with dumping chili, cheese, and other fixin's on them. All of the various "regional varieties" of Coney Dogs that I mentioned in the intro go here. There are also things that I haven't specifically mentioned, such as the "Michigan Red Hot" (which is ironically from New York rather than Michigan, in an odd reversal considering that the most famous Coney Island dogs are from Michigan instead of New York), a "Texas Dog" (there are multiple hotdogs called "Texas Dogs," but basically most of them are chili dogs, the supposedly unique "Cincinnati Dog" (which uses its own gross, disgusting Cincinnati-style chili with nasty bullshit like cinnamon in it). Arguably, some other dogs that also have chili in them (half smokes, Carolina / WV style, as I'll mention soon) could also be called "chili" dogs, although I think there are enough unique things about them added on to separate them from the multitude of others. To be honest, this is actually linked pretty high for where I think it belongs, taste-wise. Coney Island / Chili dogs are just okay to me. Not great. A little too sloppy and I don't think a dog needs chili on it.

9. Half-Smoke - One of Washington DC's only notable food contributions to the world (beyond Mambo sauce, though people from Chicago will try to claim it). This famous dog is really something that's half-way between a hotdog and a sausage. I'm not ranking sausages, but I'll let this slide.  All hotdogs are sausages, but not all sausages are hotdogs. It's sort of a hotdog, just more coarsely ground, but not quite as course as something like a brat. Nobody can agree on what "half-smoke" even means, with at least 4 different theories. The most popular is that it's half-beef, half-pork, and smoked. Anyway, this thing has chili and onions thrown on top of it. It's different enough (with the unique tubed meat, rather than any ol' dog) to not simply fall under the "chili dog" category, especially since there is no cheese added like there is with most chili dogs. In the end, I'll rank this slightly above the Chili / Coney dog because the thicker, smoky and sometimes slightly spicy (though not really spicy) tubed meat in this is better than the normal, skinny hotdog that goes on chili dogs.

8. Carolina Style - The Carolina-style hotdog is pretty much yet another simple take on the aforementioned Chili Dog, although the difference is that it adds on coleslaw (and onions, though onions should already be on a Chili Dog) atop the chili and the hotdog. Often mustard too, I suppose (but again, that should already be on a Coney Dog). Sometimes people also talk about a "West Virginia" dog (also called an "Appalachian" Dog) and claim that there is a difference. If there is, it is so minor that it's not worth noting. Perhaps "Slaw Dog" would be the more important name, but I know them as Carolina Dogs. Sorry West Virginia. You're not special at anything. Anyway, like I said, Coney Dogs / Chili Dogs aren't my favorite, but adding some coleslaw at least mixes it up a little.

Seems like a natural color for onions to turn.
7. Papaya Dog - Despite what the name sounds like, this New York City-style hotdog has no papaya on it, but was instead initially sold by a chain that had Papaya in its name. It's bordering on the "hyper local" category, but became famous enough to go beyond it, as a trip to have a "New York" hotdog either refers to having a Dirty Water Dog (talked about before) or this. This is likely the slightly classier cousin to a Dirty Water Dog. So what is this, if it doesn't have papaya on it? Sauerkraut, mustard, and an "onion sauce."  The onion sauce is really what makes it (sort of) unique, although in the end this is a fairly standard hotdog. Again though, if you want an iconic hotdog (even if it might be somewhat "plain"), this is the way to go.

6. Texas Tommy - Not from Texas at all, the Texas Tommy is from Philly (or technically the suburbs of Philadelphia, if you want to be entirely accurate), and is cut in half, has cheese stuffed in it (Cheez-Whiz, typically in Philly... though cheddar and Velveeta are also used), and is then wrapped back up with bacon. Yes. Bacon and processed cheese! This sounds like it's amazing! Closely related to the "Danger Dog," but different enough to be singled out. The difference is that a Texas Tommy doesn't have to be fried (and honestly, I think of them as grilled), while Danger Dogs are. It might be close to being "too" local, but it seems to have become famous enough on its own, as it appears on menus outside of the Philly area.

Bacon. Hot Peppers. YEEAAAHHH!
5. Danger Dog - Another reason I mentioned that these are simple "variations" instead of "regional styles" is because ideas like the Danger Dog. In its heart, the Danger Dog (though it has many names) is a bacon-wrapped, fried hotdog. Okay. So you have my attention, as well as the unending fear of my arteries. However, sometimes they are also called "Tijuana" Dogs (though they're likely more Californian than Tijuana, though they may have been inspired by something from Mexico), and in Chicago something that is very similar is called the "Francheezie."  Similar dogs are also the "Jersey Breakfast" dog and the "Mission" dog (from SF). As with its bacon-ey cousin, the Texas Tommy, cheese is typically involved too. However, the Danger Dog also loads up on spiciness with hot peppers (or sometimes less-spicy poblano peppers, and other stuff like mayo, grilled onions, mustard, ketchup. The "danger" presumably comes from the fact that they are made of suspect meat, sold on street carts, with heart-clogging goodness like fried bacon and mayo mixed in with indigestion-causing chilis. Obviously the Chicago and Jersey versions of it lack the spice and use other toppings, though the "Mission" style from San Francisco is almost always with jalapeños.  What's not to like?

4. Sonoran Dog - Ingredient-wise, this one is quite complicated. This is a bacon-wrapped (YES!!!) hotdog in a  bolillo (a Central American bread, sort of like a mini-baguette). Is a baguette too big to put a hod dog in? Yes, which is why that bread is also filled with a ton of other things like pinto beats, green chili peppers, onions, tomatoes, relish, tomatillo salsa, mayo, mustard and cheddar. Once this huge thing is full, you're left with a massive feast. Nice. Plus, you know, bacon and the actual dog in there somewhere. I have zero problems with any of these ingredients. The only problem with this one is it might actually be too much

3. Puka Dog / Huly Dog / Hawaiian-Style - An amazing creation using Hawaiian sweetbread (which is sort of Portuguese sweet bread in truth) instead of a bun, hollowing that bread out to make a hole, and then sliding/jamming the hotdog in the hole along with other (often "tropical") ingredients like a special mustard (often guava or passonfruit) along with a fruity, non-pickle "relish" (pineapple, mango, coconut, papaya, etc). The hotdog is also often more like a Polish kielbasa too, meaning that like with some others it's only a borderline "hotdog" rather than a sausage, but I couldn't not include this one because it's so damned good. Plus it's always called a "dog," which means it's a dog, damnit.

2. Seattle-Style - Another iconic and unique hotdog, deserving of a high place in the rankings. In this case... #2! Take a hotdog and bun, put on cream cheese, grilled/sauteed onions, and jalapeño peppers, and you have a Seattle-Style Dog. From there, you can add additional ingredients (like mustard, sriracha, BBQ sauce, sauerkraut, etc), however the holy trinity of cream cheese, onions and grilled jalapeños must never be interfered with, or it ain't Seattle-Style. I don't know why this works so well, but it does. Cream cheese and sliced jalapeños seemed like interesting choices for a hotdog the first time I heard about them. But if you asked me to have a Seattle-Style Dog or a Coney / Chili Dog ten times in a row, I'd choose Seattle-Style all ten times without getting tired of it yet.

The relish might be radioactive fallout. But still.
1. Chicago-Style - One of the most iconic (yet difficult to eat) that there is. Why difficult to eat? Because there is so much damn stuff on it. First of all, if there is no poppy seed bun, then it's not a Chicago Dog. Then, somehow, you find a way to stuff between the buns a pickle, onions, tomato, relish (often of an unnatural glowing green color), hot "sport" peppers, and dash on some celery salt. A Sonora Dog at least used a larger bun to fit in all of its madness, while the Chicago Dog tries to stuff all of this in a somewhat normal-sized bun. You're going to need to open your mouth wide for this... and still expect a mess after. This gets #1 because it's both tasty and super iconic.

Sunday, August 2, 2020

Ed Ranks the 50 State Quarters, Part IV: The Best (and BONUS!)

The final part. The top 8 quarters. These eight states did a good job and produced awesome quarters to represent themselves. Good work, eight states. Others should have followed your example, because you are the cream of the crop.

By now I have already previewed the question of "Why is a ranking of 50 stated divided into four parts, because 50 is not divisible by four?" What number is divisible by four, however, is 56.  Four different rankings of 14 coins = 56 coins. Because in addition to the state coins that ran between 1999 and 2008, 2009 also brought us a final round of six coins - the District of Columbia and United States Territories! Did you forget about that? Yes? No? Maybe?

Anyway! Once we finish the top 8 states, we'll then go into a BONUS ROUND, featuring a ranking of the six US Territory quarters. FUN!

8. Texas
  • Depicted: State outline, the lone star
  • Caption: "The Lone Star State"
  • Year Released: 2004
  • Analysis: A big ol' picture of Texas, taking up most of teh coin, and a lone star. Yeah. This was about the only way Texas could go. This is a very Texas coin, and represents Texas about as well as a coin can be expected to. They didn't need to show a cowboy trying to lasso anything too. The only qualm would be that it didn't need the caption at all. We get it. We all know it's the Lone Star state. I can't hate on having a silhouette of Texas on this coin at all, like I sort of do with other states being lazy with such depictions. Texas ALWAYS puts silhouettes of its state outline on things, ranging from key chains to "Don't mess with Texas" tote bags. Texas loves the shape of its state, and it's probably the most iconic state outline. So if any state gets to throw its outline up, it's Tejas.

7. Nevada
  • Depicted: Mustangs running, mountains, the rising sun, sagebrush
  • Caption: "The Silver State"
  • Year Released: 2006
  • Analysis: There is a bit too much happening here, but overall I think this is a pretty good coin. The wild mustangs obviously have to stay, but at least one of the other elements could have been taken away and it would have been better. Still though, it would have been nifty to rampant gambling and/or legalized prostitution somehow represented. Why else does anyone go to Nevada? Oh right. "The shows." Suuuuure. Anyway, a lot of states threw horses on their coins. Horse-wise, Nevada did it the best. 

6.  Arizona
  • Depicted: The Grand Canyon, with a saguaro cactus in the foreground
  • Caption: "Grand Canyon State"
  • Year Released: 2008
  • Analysis: I would call this coin "full," but not "busy." While a few other states with so much on the reverse are indeed busy, this is all one iconic landscape, rather than a bunch of random elements thrown together. Because of that, it works and looks good. Once more, I'll say that the motto / caption is totally unnecessary and sort of like when a TV show puts a closed caption on someone who is speaking perfectly fine English for idiots who can't understand a slight accent. And by "slight accent," I do not mean Tom Hardy. That mushmouth needs to be close captioned in every film he's in. I'm not sure I've understood a single word that man has ever said. Anyway, nice coin. Thumbs up, Arizona.

5. North Dakota
  • Depicted: American bison, badlands, the sun
  • Caption: None
  • Year Released: 2006
  • Analysis: For your reference, Kansas. THIS is how you make a coin depicting bison. From the side. Grazing. Epic landscape in the background (which I guess Kansas couldn't do because it's flatter than Taylor Swift's ass). Great coin. It's strange to think that the same woman who designed this epic coin also designed the shitty Michigan garbage coin.

4. New Mexico
  • Depicted: State outline (with relief), Zia sun symbol
  • Caption: "Land of Enchantment"
  • Year Released: 2008
  • Analysis: Good coin. The state outline has some texture on it so you can see mountains and rivers on it (done much better than New York did their silly river and canal), and the iconic sun symbol of the Zia people (also on the New Mexico state flag) is there. This is a nice coin. I could have done without the caption / motto, but that's just being nit-picky now. If you're going to have an outline of your state on the coin, it might as well look like this. 

3. Maine
  • Depicted: Pemaquid Point Lighthouse with rays of light, the schooner Victory Chimes (at sea) with some birds flappin' around.
  • Caption: None
  • Year Released: 2003
  • Analysis: HELL YES. Maine knows how to make a coin. Maine knows they are famous for lighthouses, so they put up a damn lighthouse, and added a boat and water in the background because that makes sense and can naturally fit in. No need for an outline of the state. No need to try to work in a state bird, state flower, state insect, state sexual position, or state diet cola as these other stupid states try to do. And the Maine coin, after five years of the coin program running and 23 states, was the FIRST state that didn't insert any caption or motto on their coin. They didn't actually write "Pemaquid Point Lighthouse" or "Victory Chimes" on their coin in tiny letters. Because they didn't need to. Everyone can see it's a damn lighthouse and a boat. Nobody needs a damned caption. If someone is interested enough to figure out which lighthouse or which / what type of boat, they could look it up. Everything about this coin is great. It took 23 damn coins until a state finally "got it right." Would other states learn from that and improve their coins? Eh. For the most part, no. But there are two states whose coins rank higher, so... sort of!

2. Alaska
  • Depicted: A Grizzly bear catching a salmon, waterfall, the North Star
  • Caption: "The Great Land"
  • Year Released: 2008
  • Analysis: Finally! The act of killing depicted on a coin! This is so American it hurts. Take note of this, Washington. If you want to depict a salmon on a coin, this is how you do it. In the mouth of a fierce predator. The waterfall in the background (to show the salmon was going up-river when it got caught, presumably) is unnecessary, but in the end doesn't distract too much from the awesome bear killing. This is a good coin.

1. Nebraska
  • Depicted: Chimney Rock National Historic Site, Conestoga wagon, a blazing hot sun.
  • Caption: "Chimney Rock"
  • Year Released: 2006
  • Analysis: What a GREAT COIN. Nebraska has a sleek, visually appealing coin. My one and only qualm (one that I made often in these rankings) is that it was unnecessary to put the obvious caption for Chimney Rock on it. Otherwise, a fine specimen of a coin. Everything that the Oregon, Louisiana, and Missouri coins don't give me to depict Westward expansion, this coin does. Seeing this coin makes me feel like I'm successfully on my way west, and will cross the state line to make it to Fort Laramie any time now.

~~~~~

Well, I hope you enjoyed that, and agree that Nebraska is #1. At least in terms of state quarters, that is. If you don't agree, I don't care, because I've already moved on with my life and am ready for the BONUS ROUND of ranking the six District of Columbia and United States Territories quarters!

First of all, I'd like to note that I don't hate any of these six. They're all fine. And if they were mixed in with the State quarters, they'd have all been in the top half. But something has to be the worst of the six, and something has to be the best, and thus we have...

6. District of Columbia
  • Depicted: Duke Ellington seated at a grand piano.
  • Caption: "Duke Ellington", "Justice for all"
  • Year Released: 2009
  • Analysis: Props to DC for highlighting Duke Ellington on it. It was a bold move. Unfortunately, as should have been obvious after 50 state quarters, it is really hard to represent a human being in such small format on a coin, especially if you're going to represent him from the knees up. There is just no way you can get that detail in to represent him well. If the words "Duke Ellington" weren't awkwardly written on the piano, nobody would know that this was supposed to be Duke Ellington by looking at it. Seriously. It could be anyone. When looking at it and ignoring the name written next to it, the first idea that comes to my mind is "Orville Redenbacher." My second guess would be "Alex Trebek," but he's Canadian. A good idea, but I'm afraid that the engraver needed a better idea for how to represent this DC native son. Also, DC should have had the balls to put "Taxation without Representation" on its quarter, like it does with its license plates. Though I suppose since this is a federally-issued coin, the federal government put the halt on recognizing that the citizens of DC (and of all six of the lands represented in these coins) are basically second-class citizens with no direct representation in Congress, thus negating the very principle of representative democracy that we rebelled against the British for not being given in the first place. Anyway, I lost my point somewhere here. Duke Ellington. GREAT idea for a DC quarter. But not depicted well by the engraver. 

5. American Samoa
  • Depicted: An ava bowl (a ceremonial bowl used to drink from during important occasions), whisk and staff; with a coconut tree on the shore in the background.
  • Caption: "Samoa Muamua le Atua" ("Samoa, God is first")
  • Year Released: 2009
  • Analysis: I guess if you know what an ava bowl looks like, it looks like an ava bowl. Though I'm not saying it doesn't look like other things, like a drum and/or the coliseum of Rome, for example. The whisk might also be hard for many to interpret, and confused with something like an open torch, a mop, a broom, or a brush. Again, I don't want to sound like a culturally ignorant dick, because their whisks do look like that. It's just hard to depict on a small coin. Everything in the background is solid though. The island shoreline, the coconut trees. Nice. "God is first" is a wee bit aggressively religious. Even the Deep South quarters never went so ambitiously towards a Sunday service. Which is surprising. Guess those missionaries did their job out in the Pacific. 

4. U.S. Virgin Islands
  • Depicted: An outline of the three major islands, a bananaquit bird, yellow cedar, and a palm trees.
  • Caption: "United in Pride and Hope"
  • Year Released: 2009
  • Analysis: I mostly like it, but there are some issues. For one, it looks like one of the trees is growing out of the bird's head. An interesting choice. Using a lowercase font is also strange on a coin, as most use allcaps (though admittedly, Guam and Puerto Rico also chose to go with lowercase fonts. Mississippi (with a faux cursive) and Illinois (with some odd italicization) were the only states to use lowercase in the 50 state quarters, and neither of those ranked high. For some reason, it looks especially odd on the U.S. Virgin Islands quarter. And what's with the weird, jagged triangles poking out from the right of the flowers and bird. What is that? A shoreline? Because it looks like sideways stalactites.

3. Guam
  • Depicted: An outline of the island, a proa boat, and a latte stone.
  • Caption: "Guahan I Tanó ManChamorro" ("Guam, land of the Chamorro")
  • Year Released: 2009
  • Analysis: We  return to the theme of using an outside of the sta...errr... U.S. Federal Territory. Okay, fine. It's obviously something people are going to keep doing. Here, it's fine. I'm a big fan of the proa (a multi-hull outrigger sailboat of the Austronesian peoples) and the latte stone is okay too. By the way white people, "latte" stones have nothing to do with Starbucks, instead they are pillars that served a functional purpose of of holding up buildings atop them. Like when people in Florida put their houses up on stilts because they live in the Hurricane zone, except, you know, in Guam.  Anyway, they haven't been used for that purpose in a long time and are now more like symbols of Guam and the peoples of the Mariana Islands (and you'll see the Northern Mariana Islands also share the latte stone symbol). Anyway, it's an attractive enough coin. I do like boats. And the latte stone depicted here pretty much look like Jesus's cup (of a carpenter) in Indiana Jones and the Last Crusade, which is sweet.

2. Puerto Rico
  • Depicted: A turret at Castillo San Felipe del Morro, a maga flower (Thespesia grandiflora technically, because saying "maga" these days is very painful), the sea, clouds.
  • Caption: "Isla del Encanto" ("Island of enchantment")
  • Year Released: 2009
  • Analysis: Castillo San Felipe del Morro is a UNESCO World Heritage site, and a notable landmark in Puerto Rico. However, it is odd to depict just one turret of a castle, and for a US coin to depict a castle built by the Spanish. I guess the coin is attractive enough though. And anyway, the French built the State of Liberty, and New York still depicted that. A castle is a cool thing to put on a coin, and it works. I always question whether it makes sense to try to portray a colorful flower on a silver quarter, but whatever. I just don't see why we couldn't have put J-Lo's ass on this thing instead. Oh right. Because she's from New York (you know, the place with the French statue). Right. Sorry. And like I noted earlier, the use of lowercase letters, as opposed to allcaps, makes the caption on this coin odd. Still. A castle turret though. Nice. And those tiny, detailed waves of the sea are superb. Best ocean I've ever seen on a coin.
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1. Northern Mariana Islands
  • Depicted: Shoreline with large latte stone and trees, a canoe of the indigenous Remathau ("Carolinian") people, two white fairy terns, and a mwar-mwar (a lei that is worn around the head like a wreath).
  • Caption: None
  • Year Released: 2009
  • Analysis: Finally, one of the U.S. Territories got my memo that it's okay to let the art do the talking, and not put up a caption or catchphrase. The latter stone on this one, when compared to Guam, is HUUUUUGE, which can also be true. While many latte stones are somewhere around the height of a person (or smaller), others are massive, like one surviving stone at the House of Taga (in the Northern Mariana Islands, naturally). The shoreline in this is nice. The canoe is nice. The trees are nice. The subtle lei/mwar-mwar at the bottom is nice. All these things make it a pretty good coin. But especially the lack of a caption.