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The Sandlot 3: Baseball, but No Dad

2007-07-02
By

Recently my daughter and I were watching her second favorite movie, The Sandlot 3. (Her favorite movie is The Sandlot 1). The movie is the story of arrogant baseball star Tommy “Santa” Santorelli who (warning: plot spoiler ahead) travels back in time to 1976 and relives his boyhood days on the sandlot baseball team. This time he chooses friendship over individual accomplishments, and ends up turning his life around, becoming a beloved baseball star instead of a hated one.

When Santorelli goes back to his childhood he is reunited with his mother, who died when he was about 12. The boy’s bond with his mom is touching and sad, no question. However….Santorelli’s father is not mentioned.

I don’t mean that he’s not there–we’re used to that. Normally when they want to depict an absent father they’ll depict him as dead or, more commonly, as having run off. (Just once I’d like to see a kid in a mainstream movie casually say “Oh, my dad’s not around–mom divorced him and used family court machinations to drive him out of my life when I was younger.”) But here, unless my daughter, my wife and I all missed something, Santorelli’s father is not referred to at all. A child not having a father has become so routine that the screenwriters don’t even feel obligated to throw in a one sentence reference to dad and why he’s not here.

This is an increasingly annoying feature of many modern movies–”John Tucker Must Die” and Toy Story” are a couple of other examples. It seems particularly offensive here because, dammit, this is a baseball movie. Dads, boys and baseball go together. So in honor of the father-son-baseball bond which  The Sandlot 3 has besmirched, I’ve put together some details about the loving bonds many current and former major league baseball players shared with their dads. Some examples include:

Former New York Mets relief pitcher John Franco, one of the better closers in baseball during the 1980s and 1990s, always wore an orange NYC sanitation T-shirt under his baseball uniform, in honor of his father, a New York City sanitation worker.

Former New York Yankee right fielder Paul O’Neill published the book Me and My Dad: A Baseball Memoir after his playing career ended. O’Neill’s father, Charles “Chick” O’Neill, was a paratrooper in World War II and pitched in the minor leagues. He died after Game 3 of the 1999 World Series. Paul O’Neill went to his father’s funeral, then played in Game 4, helping the Yankees complete their sweep of the Atlanta Braves.

Former Kansas City Royals third baseman George Brett honored his father in his Hall of Fame induction speech.

Current Houston Astros star first baseman Lance Berkman recently told a reporter, “My dad is my hero…I think so much of him. He’s just got tremendous moral values, and he’s just a wonderful person and somebody who’s very comforting to be around…He’s someone I’ve learned through by example more than anything else, particularly with his honesty…He’s not a man of many words. He’s not very charming. He’s not necessarily a guy that will walk up and take the floor and talk a bunch. But the way he lives is an example to a lot of people. He’s a true gentleman. He’s got a lot of people that look up to him and the way he carries himself. A lot of times actions speak louder than words, and he’s a guy that certainly lives that out.”

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  • mruffolo

    donnieboy57 said, “father’s day is d.o.a”

    In Chicago the day after Father’s day, newspapers and television news headlined deadbeat dad story.

    The following Monday, the same media headlined about a man who killed his wife and kids.

    Yesterday headline was a Father (priest) having sex with children.

    Though the media honors women, I do not recall a story that honored a man or a father in the past six months.

  • mruffolo

    Movies with no father:

    Harry Potter franchise
    Shrek franchise
    Jurassic Park franshise
    Spider-Man franchise
    Matrix franchise

    Movies with bad father:

    Star Wars franchise
    Pirates of the Caribbean franchise

    A movie with good father:

    Finding Nemo

  • donnieboy57

    father’s day is d.o.a.

  • http://www.decriminalizefatherhood.com DcFather

    I find it hard to believe that the boring predictability of most Hollywood fare is coincidental and not intentional. Nearly every film these days is a story about overcoming discrimination based on race (non-whites only) and/or gender (females only) and/or sexual preference (homosexual only). The only protagonists who are white and male and heterosexual are those who champion the cause of the allegedly oppressed victim group(s).

    Like the Duke 88, it never seems to occur to them that white male heterosexual = bad is the epitome of discrimination based on race, gender, and sexual orientation. The only thing new about it is that they increasingly target the same message over and over again to a younger and younger audience. The fact that they no longer even feel the need to dream up some reason a father is “absent” demonstrates how successful Hollywood has been at undermining the culture.

    What’s sad is how folks just continue to pay to be indoctrinated and what’s pathetic is how decision-makers including Congress, Senators, judges, prosecutors, and even Presidents are easily manipulated by propaganda if it comes in the form of “entertainment”.

    Many otherwise very interesting stories go untold because the moral of the story does not promote the leftist view. For example, can you name one film where an abortion was easily obtained but later regretted, or even more unlikely to see, the story of an innocent devoted father who opposed the abortion of his child and the torment of his powerlessness to protect his child? No, despite the ease at which a woman can have her almost-born child decapitated, and the very high frequency of women who regret having an abortion, and the many fathers who did not or do not want thei child executed, you will never hear of these people unless it is to portray them in a negative light, and will instead be told over and over and over about the poor unfortunate women who had to overcome some difficulty to have her child executed.

    It’s the same thing over and over with rare exception, each and every story promotes the leftist worldview. And leftists know getting dad out of the picture is fundamental to growing the size and power of government, so don’t expect to see much in the way of a good father championing anything remotely resembling traditional values.

  • steven deluca

    In a nice hotel my wife and I went to the workout room where we saw an older lesbian (how do I know she was, well, she was) on the treadmill watching a baseball movied geared to kids.

    A quick glance at the film was enough for me to recognize it as a girl power movie.

    Those of us familiar with the feminist influence on films showing girl power know that we need a stupid boy to make stupid comments and then to have girls rip him and then walk off smugly. Any boy heroes know that the girls are right and the bad boy is a loser.

    You could see this one coming. The fat boy (who was more likely picked on by boys and girls if kids today are like the kids I grew up with- although that’s not part of the story) sees tall, pretty teen girl with a baseball hat and glove on wanting to pitch I think… and he tells her “girls can’t play baseball” on and on with insults. She pulls him to the ground and and with the back of his head on the ground pounds his face. The fat lesbian shouts “Yes” happily, loudly, … so sure that no one could see such a scene and not respect that girl for battering that boy because of the words he used to demean that girls athletic ability. (could she have just pitched a no hitter, I would like that better)

    Around the time of this movie there was a program about DV on national TV showing how most men and women would intervene if a woman was being degraded or hit in a public place but dozens and dozens of people walked by the man being hit by the woman, and only one, eventually, protested. What was used for the advertisement for the program and was part of the program was a shot of a woman walking by seeing this man humiliate and she shouts to her self “YES” with the arm pump – because we know of course – men have it coming.

    From missing fathers in moviews, or films showing men of so little importance that it’s not even part of the plot to ask why dad’s not there … To women trashing boys and men, to predictible plots where boys act stupid and smart girls show them up, I am surprised that anyone notices these things anymore after seeing a thousand or two over ten years …

    Thanks Glenn and others, for not quitting your protests of such sexist views of men – despite the onslaught or what one man once referred to, when addressing popular culture: “A male bashing cultural tsunami”. Real men don’t give up no matter what the odds if the price of their struggle has value in the long term interest of all.

    SD







Right.

Man up.

Buy the book now on Amazon.com. Or listen to Ronnie tell a story at escaping-from-reality.com.

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