The animal rights group says "bullpen" mocks the misery of animals and devalues players...PETA says that cows and bulls are typically held in bullpens beforethey are "hung upside down and their throats are slit in the meat industry" and "tormented into kicking and bucking by being electro-shocked or prodded."
"Words matter, and baseball 'bullpens' devalue talented players and mock the misery of sensitive animals," PETA Executive Vice President Tracy Reiman said in a news release. "PETA encourages Major League Baseball coaches, announcers, players, and fans to changeup their language and embrace the 'arm barn' instead." (Source: NPR)
Seriously, Tracy Reiman, does anyone - including Tracy Reiman - believe that using the word bullpen "devalue(s) talented players and mock(s) the misery of sensitive animals?"
I've been a baseball fan my entire life, and I never once thought of a bullpen as being anything other than the place where the pitchers warm up. Was I devaluing the talents of Dick Radatz, Bob Stanley, Jonathan Papbelbon, and Garrett Whitlock? NO! Was I mocking the misery of sensitive animals? NO!
As a means to get people to think about the maltreatment of animals, this campaign by PETA is actually pretty damned effective. They've got me thinking more about it. And while I'm no vegetarian, I could convert pretty easily.
Still, for all the publicity it engenders, it also looks stunt-ish and makes PETA look a bit foolish.
For as much as it makes me think about being kinder to our furry and feathered friends, it also makes me ask myself a lot of silly questions about using animals in figures of speech.
Is saying you're dog tired an insult to puppers? What does horsing around say about what horses are about? Are we being demeaning when we say in a pig's eye? Chicken out? Silly goose? Bird brain?
Cat's pajamas? Bee's knees? Are we mocking those critters?
Anyway, it kind of feels like, when it comes to renaming the bullpen the arm barn, PETA is running around like a chicken with its head cut off. (Can we even say that???)
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That picture of the police officer in the Fenway bullpen was taken at the moment a Detroit fielder toppled into the bullpen trying to catch a David Ortiz grand slam during the 2013 ALCS. The Red Sox went on to win the World Series, and this picture became almost as iconic as the 1975 shot of Carlton Fisk trying to wave his home run fair. Anyway, a few months later, I recognized Steve Horgan on the street and spoke to him for a few minutes. He was quite good-humored about this brief shot at fame.
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