Sunday, June 30, 2013

Graduation Day 2001

With the rite of passage of receiving a diploma either coming up or having taken place in cities all across the country, this time of year I often think of the single moment that trumps all others in my memory bank.

What comes to mind when you think of the year 2001? Chances are you'll remember it for what happened that Tuesday morning in Lower Manhattan, the Pentagon and in surburban Pennsylvania. It perhaps represented the worst of times in our lives. In my mind, however, the best of times took place three months earlier on a Saturday morning in June at Milpitas High School, my hometown high school. On this warm summer day, me and 562 other people lived the one day that binded all of us for the rest of our lives. Graduating high school (and the 40 weeks worth of senior year that precedes it) is something that, except in rare instances, happens only once in our lives. I was fortunate enough to live out the day-long experience of taking part in the time-honored tradition of graduation with people I've known as far back as elementary school, and celebrating it afterwards with my family and cousins.

Unlike all other big days in my life, the prelude to the biggest of them all was atypical for me, just like the other grads. Even though I had anticipated June 16, 2001 since I saw my cousins Jeff and Jenny go through this graduation routine a year earlier, I took part in only one event leading up to Graduation Day: a Senior picnic before Memorial Day weekend. Other than that, I didn't take part in any other pre-Graduation function (including Grad Night at Disneyland) just because I didn't want to have the whole graduation jitters get the best of me until I turned in my last Final Exam. In that sense - as I tend to be a bit more traditional than most of my friends in my inner circle, I put the important matters of school first, then it would be time to seep in the celebration and Graduation Day, which that year took place on Father's Day weekend, adding an additional incentive to the importance of the biggest day (and weekend) in my life. Once the final month of school rolled around, I began to eagerly count down the days until that big Saturday. And once I got out of my final class at school and waited for our graduation practice, that was where I realized that I was about to get into the most exciting and defining 24 hours of my life.

Graduation Day 2001 began with the typical scene of my annoying alarm clock going off at 6:30am. Despite that, I woke up with a strong sense of anticipation and an upbeat energy that would carry with me throughout the day. As per tradition among my family and cousins, my mom and dad put leis covered with candy and pennies around my neck to go along with the Gold Cord Milpitas High awarded me for maintaining a consistently high GPA throughout my four years (at 3.25 or something along the lines of that). At just about 8:15am, my mom drove me to MHS so I would get ready for the commencement ceremony (yes it's the official title). When I got there, I saw and chatted with many of my fellow grads who were in a great mood like me. When we got to the staging area located behind the P.E. locker rooms, that would be where it would finally sink in to me that this was going to be my finest hour. It was now only a matter of time for (what I would refer to) "The Greatest Show on Earth" to get started.

The biggest two hours in the lives of me and over 560 other young adults began right on the dot at 10am when we began walking from the holding area in the back of the school towards the football stadium. As you might expect for an event of this magnitude, I felt perhaps the ultimate goose bumps of my entire life. When I walked down the ramp leading to the field, three of my five senses rung true to me: 1. the huge sight of the families, friends and well-wishers of the grads; 2. the sound of "Pomp and Circumstance" blaring out on the loudspeakers, and 3. the smell & warmth of California's early Summer air of mid-June despite taking place on a Saturday morning. When we walked through two lines of faculty applauding us when we got to our seats, I felt very proud for what I've gone through not just in four years in high school, but the eight preceding years in elementary and junior high that preceded my Freshman year of 1997-98. The commencement ceremony, like the typical one, had its usual components (national anthem, Alma Mater), but was mixed in with a strong, energenic atmosphere, especially for us, people of Generation-Y (and the official first class of the new millennium). After speeches from Jermaine, Manisha, an past alum of the school and "It's So Hard to Say Goodbye to Yesterday" by a classmate in my sophomore year art class named Melvin - who would have his life tragically cut short three years later at a lake in Merced, the climatic moment that I and everyone else had anticipated for 12 months finally arrived.

As my fellow grads and I seated in the back row stood up and walked towards the platform as the first graduation line to get their diplomas, the same exact chills I had walking from the back of the school to the seating area came back to haunt me. However, those chills would go away in only a matter of seconds once the person who stood in front of me walked up the ramp. Once my name got called out, I shouted "What's Up?!" two times to the crowd as I walked up to receive my diploma and got handshakes from the Principal, school officials and the Mayor. Once I got back to my seat, I got call-outs and fives from some of my friends. And since I was one of the very first names read out, I just then sat back for the rest of the time, even relaxing my feet on a chair a couple times. While seeing all the  grads go through that same exact routine I did, I also played the spotting game and saw my dad & relatives directly across from me. After every one of the 563 names were called out, I stood up on top of my chair as we were directed to turn our tassels, and it was time for the celebratory side of me to take over. Literally seconds after the ceremony ended and after many of the graduation caps were thrown in the air, I immediately made my way towards where my mom, dad and family were located. They gave me those standard hugs, handshakes and congrats, as Vitamin C's "Graduation (Friends Forever)" played in the back. Likewise, I did the same to any classmates I knew that I spotted in the crowded atmosphere. Then, I sprinted to the gym to pick up my graduation certificate, official proof that I had completed all four years to receive my diploma (yes the actual diploma).

The aftermath of my finest hour had all sorts of emotion, as well as a party. First off, it was surrealistic and a bit sorrow in the way that Graduation Day would be the last time each and every one of all 570 of us would be together at the same place and the same time (at least for a while until I discovered this little thing called social networking). For the handful of people that I've known since elementary school, this marked the closing chapter of a long journey that started twelve years earlier cross-town in elementary school, right as the decade of the 90's beaconed. For others that I became friends and classmates with as time went on as I went to two other schools, then junior high and then at MHS, Graduation Day would be one more opportunity for us to hang out before we go our separate ways on into a new world. On the other side of the spectrum, I felt very relieved that all the pressures I had and any difficulties I encounted in my four years at MHS & 12 school years overall was finally forgotten. After talking to some friends one last time, my sister Marjorie and I drove back to my house for my graduation party (only for VIP i.e. my relatives and their friends). Guests at that party gave me over $400 worth of graduation gift money, as well as some gift certificates. I remember a few times during that party, I just sat alone in my room and reflect on what had just happened. By the time all the guests left after 1am, I felt a little bit sad because I wanted the whole Graduation day experience to continue until I decided to call it a night, even though all of this took place during Saturday of Father's Day weekend.

In closing, I was very proud and stoked to live out the one moment I had anticipated for not just all of those four years in high school, but all of the dozen years I have been attending school here in our great town known as Milpitas. For an entire day, I felt like the number one person on earth because I was the focus of my family the entire day, as if I was famous. It might've began with a simple, annoying wakeup alarm, but on this atypical but special day, it was a day that was all about celebrating what I had done my entire life and marking the so-called "end of one chapter and the beginning of another," as some girl from a reality TV show likes to put it. The highlight of this, of course, was getting my diploma and getting recognized one more time by people I've known for much of my life in this town we call home. I will always remember 2001 not for its low point on September 11th, but for the high point all 562 of us lived out together in the California sun on that Saturday morning in mid-June. And even if meeting my favorite band was a big moment, it would still not be as bigger as the moment that took place five years ago today: Graduating High School.

- DC

Thursday, June 27, 2013

That Was The Twitter Year That Was

By DC Cueva

Well, today is the day. It has been one whole year since I joined Twitter at 3pm PT on a warm summer afternoon on this date, June 27, 2012. The timing of me joining this powerful social media platform could not have been any better. It came one exact month before the beginning of a golden Olympic fortnight in Great Britain, just two days after the release of an album by a band I've had the opportunity to meet 9 years ago - Linkin Park, and on the same day as the season 27 premiere of my favorite show, The Real World. And from then on, my social media life hasn't been the same since.
   The last 365 days have seen me experience through this network major news stories, memorable sporting events, exciting entertainment and a further enhancement of a long relationship. There were the tragedies in Connecticut, Boston and Oklahoma, a terrible hurricane that ravaged the East Coast, the resignation of a pope and a reelection of a president, and yesterday's historic Supreme Court ruling, among others. In the sports side of things besides London 2012, there was, among other things, the Giants winning another World Series, the Ravens just beating out my Niners in Super Bowl XLVII and a dramatic NBA postseason - the Warriors on a great run and one of the best NBA Finals ever. And in entertainment, we had everything from chart-topping music and great movies & TV, to Amanda Bynes' everyday occurrences dominating the gossip.

What's been the highlight for me? I've always been a loyal fan of MTV's The Real World going all the way back to high school, and this past year has seen me enhance this great, long relationship through twitter. It began with me sending welcome tweets to the St. Thomas cast just a few hours before it premiered on the East Coast - which also took place on this day one year ago tonight, and Trey & Laura were the first ones to tweet back to me. Ever since, the entire STT & PDX casts, as well a lot of their fellow RW & Challenge alumni - about 90 of them in all, have interacted with me on Twitter & Instagram. They've been like an extra group of friends to me, and they've been very receptive of me in the social media world. For someone who's not met a cast member from any MTV show in person but whose time should come very shortly, it's me having an unprecedented opportunity to interact directly with them that's allowed me to enjoy Real World even more.
   It was also because of Twitter that they helped reintroduce me to The Challenge. I hadn't traditionally been big on following it as much as I do RW, but the interaction I had with 26 of the 32 competitors for whom I had more of a familiarity with than others, coupled with watching these people in an environment totally new to me and carrying the competitive inspiration & momentum from the London Olympics, made me enjoy Battle of the Seasons that much more. It was also there where I got to see the power & communal experience of television and the spontaneous interaction of Twitter collide for the first time.
   And just recently, I got engaged in Real World Portland. I got to follow the cast just as soon as filming ended in November last year back when they were unknown, and right up to the premiere & through the season. It might not be the most watched season ever, but PDX is now a season that joins that select group of those RW seasons that stand out to me most. Yes there were all the drama amongst the cast - the most-vicious RW fight ever comes to mind, but there was also a cast who, like STT, have been fan friendly, and all the eight castmates have interacted with me. In fact, two members of RWPDX - Jessica & Averey - actually follow me, both by surprise.
   I've done a lot of live tweeting "As DC Sees It" on every episode of these three seasons, growing from just a few tweets early on to later including just about every event & quote. The comments the cast have tweeted back to me are many: from Marlon in Portland teasing at the huge drama of his season well before we saw the trailer, and Dustin & Nany talking about the tough environment of living in the BOTS house in Turkey; to Ashley from San Diego after the Sandy Hook tragedy in her home state and various members wishing me happy birthday last November. And because of this show I've also been introduced to new twitter friends who I've never met or heard of before but share the same passion for this franchise as me, & are those who, amongst me & each other, talk everyday about these shows, both on twitter and numerous podcasts & forums: Andrew, David, Morgan, Stefan, Whitney, Kevin, Neya, Ace and others too many to mention.

Another highlight for me was experiencing the biggest events through twitter. There's no place where people are able to talk about the biggest events & stories and I got to see it all in the last year on here. For last year's biggest event: the London Olympics, I got to be part of a record engagement in the sports event I look forward to more than any other, and I followed the action both as it took place there & later on here. On Super Bowl Sunday - a day that saw me be engaged in the biggest single day sports event like never before thanks to the 49ers making it to New Orleans, I set my all time one-day tweet record at over 400 tweets (or RT's) through the course of that February day. From the buildup that started at the end of the NFC championship game, through the halftime show & blackout, to the comeback that almost was & the disparity of losing in the last minute but being proud at the same time for Ray Lewis & fellow Baltimorean Trey from RWSTT, it was the most exciting period of this past year for me on twitter.
   Similar events, not matching those two events, have also seen strong engagement from me, including big sporting events (such as the NBA postseason that concluded last Thursday and the Giants World Series win), every major awards show (MTV's VMAs, the Grammys & so forth), and some others along the way too. And I got an interact from a few athletes, including Olympic gold medalists Kayla Harrison & Jordan Burroughs during London, bobsled pilot Steven Holcomb who gave me a follow during the pre-Sochi winter sports season, and recently Jose Bautista from the Blue Jays gave me a follow.
   With all of these things, I have been able to experience it all through my twitter app on my iPhone and later on my iPad. There have been so many instances where I had to keep my eye on that news feed during many of the past year's biggest events, and see if I wanted to RT or favor someone's tweet. And there hasn't been that much time in the last year that I've not spent at least several hours without having a iPhone or iPad with me.

And now, year 2 of @DC408dxtr on Twitter is only just beginning. Starting in 13 days from tonight, it's another season of The Challenge, and I'll be anxious to follow Rivals 2, this time with the big name veterans, for whom I'm gonna be watching most of them for the first time since their RW season, joining those who I became familiar with last fall as both veterans & rookies compete on the same playing field. Judging from the trailer, it promises to live up to TJ Lavin's word of being the best one yet, and you can only imagine the madhouse Twitter will be come premiere night. And while I'm not ready to call in or appear on camera yet, I'll be able to take part in every chat with the cast thanks to me tweeting questions to them.
   But that is just the appetizer: in 22 days from now, in mid-July to be exact, I will be taking this baby on the road. For someone who doesn't travel much & who got an iPhone since my last trip two years ago this summer, this'll be the first vacation I truly get to share with the social media world. And where better to do it than in the one city outside of the Bay Area that I've grown the greatest love affair with: Las Vegas. I'll be able to use my social media avenues: Twitter, Instagram, Facebook for the inner circle, YouTube, Vine & others where I'm on, to communicate my updates & images from Sin City. So, for the first time ever...for me at least, "What Happens in Vegas...Gets Posted by DC for Everyone to See." Can't wait for that.

Finally, I saved the best for last: the opportunity to say thanks. To all of my followers for staying loyal to me over the course of the past year & putting up with my frequent flooding of your timelines, thanks for your patronage & loyalty. To those who interacted with - whether you're in my family or went to school with me & was brought to here from FB & other networks, those who've I gotten to know on here & have never met in person, or the famous people I've had to pleasure to interact on here - a thanks to you also. The great support & respect I've received is very gratifying, and as always I'm most appreciative. It has been a great 12 months experiencing some of the most memorable events & stories ever and so much more on twitter, and I can't wait for what the next 12 have in store.

From me to you, here's to 365 great days, and here's to 365 more and beyond. Thank you.

- @DC408dxtr

Tuesday, June 18, 2013

WHAT A GAME!

Well, that was something. I'm still trying to rest my voice after watching this great thriller of a game. And there's nothing in sports in this continent that matches the intensity of a one-game playoff to decide a champion, and it's gonna come in my favorite sport. This is the 6th time in my nearly 30 years of my life that the NBA will have a game 7, and it would not have been possible without tonight's game 6. There were times tonight where I thought this would be the last NBA game until preseason in October, and there were times where I raised my voice at my TV during the key moments of the 4th quarter and overtime. The last couple of games in this have been blowouts, and that doesn't really translate into good television. But whenever the outcome is in doubt in a postseason game with a title at stake, it always produces some of the best television anywhere and always puts fans on the edge of our seats...nothing like it.

I would probably wonder where tonight's game ranks with other championship thrillers in recent years. There's Game 6 of the 2011 World Series that Bob Costas called the best game in a team sport in recent years that had echoes of a similar game 6 25 years earlier that folks in Boston don't even want to talk about. There was that Super Bowl in Tampa that if it weren't for Santonio Holmes' tip-toe TD in the last minute, then Larry Fitzgerald's run to daylight would've changed the course of history. Or just last year when Manchester City scored two goals in stoppage time to take the 2012 English Premier League title away from crosstown rivals Manchester United by the tiebreaker of goal difference. And there's some others too: the Vancouver gold medal hockey game & Sidney Crosby becoming a national hero, Tiger winning at the '08 U.S. Open, Nadal beating Federer in that summer's Wimbledon men's final, the relay in Beijing, numerous Stanley Cup playoff & March Madness games, and so many others events too many for me to mention in this short post.

Well, we've seen a lot of postseason thrillers this spring & summer in both the NBA Playoffs and in the Stanley Cup, including that incredible Boston comeback that folks in Toronto have still not gotten over. Tonight's NBA Finals Game 6 is a sure nominee for that ESPY award for Game of the Year, and it's certainly gonna grab my vote. And considering my buddy-buddy friendship with a good part of the twitter community, it's also a good warmup for what I'll be in when The Challenge: Rivals 2 premieres. And a good start to a summer that includes a trip to Vegas & maybe seeing some NBA Summer League games and/or running into those at the USAB national team development camp too.

Final words for you... NBA Finals. Game 7. Thursday night. I. Seriously. Can't. Wait.

- DC

Monday, June 3, 2013

NBA Finals Look Ahead

And now the NBA Finals are all set: starting Thursday night, it's the San Antonio Spurs vs. the Miami Heat...the matchup everybody - fans, media, viewers - wanted. To be honest, had the Pacers shocked the Heat tonight, oh it would have been casual viewers heading on over to watch America's Got Talent or looking forward to the NFL season more than this. But now, it's the matchup between a defending champion featuring the top player of the moment and making their 3rd straight trip to the Finals, against a dynasty that's won four NBA titles based in a mid-major market and built around one of the game's top players in Tim Duncan.

If there's a thing to look forward to in these Finals, it's the fact of these teams will be at full strength with a Larry O'Brien Trophy at stake (I would suspect it'll be renamed for Commissioner David Stern come next year). And when they met in their 2 regular season meetings, both didn't have either their big lineups in both. In their 1st matchup where the Spurs gave their big 3 a healthy scratch & caught the Commish's ire in a hefty fine, the Heat's Big 3 took a 105-100 win in Miami. And in Game 2 in Alamo City, LBJ & Wade didn't play and the Spurs' Big 3 did and made a game of it, dropping just only an 88-85 final.

After this classic Eastern Conference Finals duel with Paul George and the Pacers, the Heat will try to not only win their third NBA title, but become just the fifty franchise in NBA history to win back-to-back titles. For the well-rested Spurs (thanks to a sweep of the Grizzlies), even though they've not done the back-to-back, they are looking for their fifth title since 1999.

So, this should be a great NBA finals: Interesting matchup, two great teams, some of the top players in this league, and two of the game's greats going up against each other for the second time on the game's greatest stage. Last time in 2007 in the least-watched Finals ever, LeBron & his Cavs were swept by the Spurs on his home court. This time, now everyone will be watching as LeBron has some unfinished business to attend to, not only as the central figure but as the top player in this league.

And for me, The Association determining their champion is another great thing for me to look forward to when summer arrives and when the temps start to reach its peak. It's always been my favorite sport, and the one that's always dominated the sports talk among me, my dad & bro-in-law going all the way back to when my dad lived in the Philippines where hoops has always been the favorite team sport in the motherland. All I have to say is: Bring on The Finals. It all begins Thursday might.

Saturday, June 1, 2013

Softball's Longest Day

32 years ago this summer, the longest game in baseball history was played - a minor league affair in Rhode Island between affiliates of the Red Sox & Orioles which took 33 innings to complete that began the night before Easter, suspended after 32 innings at just after 4am ET and wasn't completed until 2 months later during the midst of the '81 MLB players strike.

Tonight, something similar is happening at the NCAA Women's College World Series in OKC. Games that had to be rescheduled because of yesterday's tornadoes are being played as quadruple headers, including a 15-inning affair which Florida won 9-7 over Nebraska. And just afterwards, the day's final game is in progress between Michigan & Arizona State. This Saturday sports night that saw the Pacers force game 7 against the Heat and the Blackhawks & Bruins take their NHL Conference Final openers is wrapping up on the wee hours of Sunday morning in the Heartland, and ending a week where softball began its road towards perhaps being reinstated as an Olympic sport in 2020.

- @DC408dxtr