The Possible End of Deferred Contracts 

I’m sure some greedy owners will find something new and dumb to amuse us.

Today is once again Bobby Bonilla Day, the day when retired Major Leaguer Bobby Bonilla gets $1.19 million dollars from the New York Mets. That happens despite Bonilla last playing for the team in 1999, and retiring from baseball altogether in 2001. Such is the ridiculousness of deferred contracts, which will also see the Dodgers paying Shohei Ohtani $68 million a year from 2034 to 2043.

It appears the tactic may not be long for this world, though, as team owners are now seeking to ban it.

[I]f owners get this into the next labor deal, all new pacts beginning in 2027 would not allow deferred money. Management sees this bid, fundamentally tied to its push for a salary cap, as another tool to help level the sport’s economic playing field. 

Even if they do successfully ban future contracts from having deferred money, it won’t impact existing deals. That means we’ve still got nine more Bobby Bonilla Days to enjoy together.

Fireworks Are Not an Inalienable Right 

Starting a wildfire is a poor way to celebrate.

Utah is having a record year for wildfires, and as a result, the governor has changed the state’s policy for fireworks. They’re now banned by default, though local municipalities can lift that restriction in coordination with their local fire chief. Naturally, all hell has broken loose.

Bigger Is Not Better 

It is, in fact, pretty clearly worse for all.

As regular readers know, car bloat is killing us. Recently, the New York Times created an impressive interactive article that details the problems of massive pickups and SUVs in the US. It’s well worth a look.

Perhaps it would make sense for governments to limit the size of vehicles, for the benefit of all. Or perhaps we should all start adding some whirling spike clubs.

The Dirt That Refused to Die 

They “tried to kill it harder with more radiation, pressure, and heat”.

I was surprised to find myself hooked into reading this article about dirt, but it happened.

For 15 years, Sébastien Fontaine has been trying to kill dirt. The biochemist, who runs a lab at the French National Institute for Agriculture, Food, and Environment, wanted to know how much carbon is released by soil — just dirt alone, completely devoid of life. His team sealed dirt into jars and blasted them with sterilizing gamma radiation. Then they waited for the carbon dioxide released by the soil — a sign of ongoing microbial respiration — to drop.

They waited, and waited, and waited some more: weeks, then months. Under a microscope, the irradiated soil showed no signs of life, but it continued to emit carbon dioxide. The soil wouldn’t stop breathing.

It appears the chemistry of life is not actually exclusive to life. Neat!

$100 a Minute 

Also, that “9-9-6 schedule” is horrifying.

I was recently chatting with friends in San Francisco about the devil of a time they had buying a house. An incredible influx of cash related to A.I. coupled with decades of under-building have created a hellish market for buyers. Houses in San Francisco are already quite expensive, and some have sold for a million dollars over the asking price or more. That’s wild.

The aforementioned A.I. cash influx is apparently warping other prices as well.

Extreme Wealth Is a Sickness 

For those afflicted, even “too much” isn’t enough.

I’ve often referenced and promoted the idea that billionaires should probably not exist. I’m damned sure that trillionaires shouldn’t exist.

Rest in Peace, Martha Avila 

The car was purportedly on “Autopilot”, though Tesla claims otherwise.

Do you know where a vehicle really ain’t supposed to be? Inside of a brick home, causing the death of a 76-year-old woman, that’s where this Tesla wasn’t supposed to be.

Excellence, Redefined 

Now “excellence” means “A.I. hallucinations”

Last fall, a report on how businesses are using A.I. contained A.I. hallucinations about A.I. usage by businesses

A KPMG report on how AI is being used by businesses across the world exaggerated adoption of the technology with bogus case studies that appear to have been based on AI hallucinations.

The October report, “Redefining excellence in the age of agentic AI”, made numerous false claims about the use of AI by organisations including the Swiss bank UBS, the UK’s National Health Service and the public transit groups Swiss Federal Railways and Transport for London.

Whups.

Doll Head Defeat Devices 

The name “Full Self-Driving” really ought to be illegal.

Are you tried of your multi-ton hunk of metal nagging you to pay attention while you propel it down the road at high speed? Now, there’s a plastic doll head for that.


[Image via decentmiss_]


[Image via decentmiss_]

It’s amusing that such a low-tech solution can defeat the safeguards of high-tech systems. However, it’s also a near certainty that this will lead to car crashes, particularly given that Tesla’s “Full Self-Driving” isn’t.

Thirsty Scots 

Props are due to the Sam Adams PR team.

Though the relevant stadium may be far away, the Tartan Army has descended upon Boston, with kilts as far as the eye can see. Also, they drank all our beer.

The parent company of Sam Adams said its Boston Taproom ran out of the brand’s flagship Boston Lager over the weekend because Scotland soccer fans in Boston for the 2026 World Cup drank four times as much as the bar usually sells.

Boston Beer Co. said in a news release that from Thursday to Sunday, the Tartan Army — Scotland’s supporters organization — drank four times what the company normally stocks during a typical four-day holiday stretch like the Fourth of July, adding that it had to schedule an emergency delivery of beer Saturday morning and are adding extra deliveries this week to make sure it has enough.

It’s been 28 years since Scotland’s men’s team last played in the World Cup, and they’re clearly keen to celebrate. Per a WBUR report, Scottish fans even rented a fleet of school buses to get about 1,400 people to the first game against Haiti. For tailgating purposes, they trucked out 20,000 beers, which works out to more than 14 beers per person. Don’t worry, though, they also brought 2,000 bottles of water. I’m sure that was enough.