Football's Joys and Agonies Get a Thorough Dissection in Berkeley Rep's Dramatic <em>X's and O's</em>

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Gridiron triumph or disaster? Find the answer in the eyes of (from left) Marilee Talkington, Anthony Holiday, Eddie Ray Jackson, Dwight Hicks, Bill Geisslinger and Jenny Mercein.

Photos by Kevin Berne

The course of ardent love needs to involve pain, and sometimes even agony or tragedy, doesn’t it? That’s the formula in theater, if not always in life.

In X’s and O’s (A Football Love Story), the high-energy drama that’s receiving its world premiere at Berkeley Rep, such affection and emotions revolve around an institution that commands American attention like few others: professional football. It’s a fact-based narrative, crackling with far more heartbreak of disaster then thrills of victory.

The play was written by KJ Sanchez, who calls herself a superfan, and Jenny Mercien, the daughter of a Green Bay Packers running back who is still remembered as the hero of the famed “Ice Bowl” of 1967. To supplement their personal knowledge and feelings, the pair drew upon an immense amount of research, including interviews with players, former players, relatives and survivors of players, physicians and fans.

What emerged is a brief history of the game, skimming across the evolution of its structure and rules and skills and equipment, and landing squarely on a phenomenon that had gone unnoticed or ignored until the past decade or so: the delayed traumatic effects on the brain caused collision after collision throughout a career in football.

Called chronic traumatic encephalopathy — CTE for short — the condition affects memory, personality and the ability to function, and on occasion leads to suicide.

The disorder is described with vividness and fervor by a neurosurgeon (Marilee Talkington, in one of several effective and affecting roles). To support her words, she points to projected X-rays of damaged brains, which bear an unmistakable resemblance to those of Alzheimer’s victims.

Sanchez and Mercien did their best to come up with a balanced narrative, giving lovers of football a fair chance to display their intense engagement, whether in a stadium or staring at the big screen in their favorite sports bar. But it’s clear that the writers’ sympathies lie with the young men whose lives have been shattered or shortened by the collisions that are central to the game, and with even younger players — children and teens — who are prodded and coached and equipped with far less care than NFL pros.

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Jackson brims with youthful eagerness; Geisslinger remembers the pain.

Why the game has long since displaced baseball as America’s favorite spectator sport is impossible to say with assurance. But the play suggests that the multi-billion-dollar enterprise it has become, thanks to TV and newer media, make it likely that the game will maintain its status and allure well into the future.

(Let me interject here that the structure of X’s and O’s won’t be found in any standard description of a “play.” Rather than progressing from a starting point to some logical conclusion, it consists of short, frequently powerful and informative episodes, and ends where it began, with the full cast miming the intense glee and agony of fans watching a game.)

The ensemble that covers the dramatic spectrum includes four men and two women, all filling multiple roles with great skill. In addition to Talkington, there are actors Bill Geisslinger, Anthony Holiday, Eddie Ray Jackson and writer/actress Mercein, who come to the show with backgrounds as lifelong performers. One actor, however, didn’t turn to the craft until his 30s. That’s Dwight Hicks, who played in the Pro Bowl four times and the Super Bowl twice with the ’49ers before moving into the physically safer realm of entertainment. On stage, as on the field, he’s a pro.

Tony Taccone directed, pulling the fragments into a smoothly flowing whole that makes its points without ever becoming preachy, and reaches into remembered lives with sympathy and poignancy.

For anyone who can’t make heads or tails out of the title, X’s and O’s are symbols used to chart plays in football. Berkeley Rep’s program contains an extensive glossary that explains the basics, but the drama might make you wonder why anyone would accept the game’s risks … or allow his or her children to do so.

X’s and O’s (A Football Love Story) runs through March 1 in Berkeley Repertory Theatre’s Thrust Stage, 2025 Addison St., Berkeley. Tickets cost $29-$79, from 510-647-2949 or berkeleyrep.org.

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Facebook, Instagram Suffer Widespread Outage Overnight; Tinder, Hipchat Also Go Down

Facebook and Instagram went down early Tuesday morning as a major snowstorm hit the Northeast. Reports on social media indicate that Tindr and Hipchat were also down.

Users worldwide were affected by the outage, The Associated Press reported, many of whom took to Twitter to express their outrage (mock and in some cases genuine) and crack jokes.

After about 40 minutes, Facebook and Instagram were back online.

Lizard Squad, the hacking collective that claimed responsibility for taking down the Malaysian Airlines website on Sunday, suggested on Twitter that it was also responsible for the social media outage.

Meanwhile, on Twitter, the Facebook outage led to the usual snark, including #pray4facebook and #ThingsIDidWhenFacebookWasDown hashtags.

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It’s your job as a parent to always try to see things through your children’s eyes — no small feat now that the online world has broadened their experiences exponentially. “The advent of the Internet means that the [drug] pusher is no longer on the corner in the bad part of town, but on the Internet a click away from your own kitchen table,” explains Dr. Phil in his Tip of the Day. “There is such accessibility for these children that you have to plug in and know what’s going on. Don’t be intimidated by technology, and don’t be intimidated when they roll their eyes. If you’re asking your kid questions and they’re rolling their eyes, that doesn’t mean that their ears have turned off … Knock on the door again and get an answer — it is your job.”

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Neil deGrasse Tyson And NFL Football Maker Wilson Call Bull On Bill Belichick's Deflategate Excuse

Neil deGrasse Tyson, director of the Hayden Planetarium at the American Museum of Natural History and all-around scientific badass, said on Monday that New England Patriots coach Bill Belichick is full of hot air when it comes to Deflategate.

Belichick claimed “atmospheric conditions” may have caused balls to lose air pressure during his team’s AFC Championship win over the Indianapolis Colts on Jan. 18.

But Tyson deflated that theory with a single tweet:

Also on Monday, the NFL’s official football manufacturer said Belichick’s explanation didn’t fly.

That’s BS,” Wilson representative Jim Jenkins told Boston.com. “That’s BS, man.”

Jenkins told the website that different environments might cause the PSI inside the ball to change,but “maybe in a year or two.” To cause the pressure to change more quickly, Jenkins suggested a ball would have to be placed in a freezer, then thawed.

Tyson and Jenkins aren’t alone in dismissing Belichick. Last week, Bill Nye “The Science Guy” poked holes in another explanation floated by Belichick, that the balls could become deflated when they were rubbed before the game.

Rubbing the football — I don’t think you can change the pressure,” Nye said. “To really change the pressure, you need one of these, the inflation needle.”

However, four Boston-area scientists told the Boston Globe that temperature changes will cause a football to lose air pressure.

“Based on simple ideal-gas-law calculations, I would not be surprised if the Patriots are vindicated,” James Bird, assistant professor of mechanical engineering at Boston University, told the newspaper. “That said, there are many unknowns that can make small differences.”

ESPN reported last week that 11 of 12 Patriots footballs fell 2 pounds short of NFL standards for inflation, which require between 12.5 and 13.5 pounds per square inch.

Under-inflated footballs are easier to catch, especially in the wet weather during the AFC title game.

All of the footballs used by the Colts met league standards.

On Monday, the Patriots reportedly turned over a surveillance video to the NFL that allegedly shows a locker room attendant taking two bags of balls into a bathroom.

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