Sunday, February 10, 2019

Hot Serial: Who Hot’s and Who’s Not – Serial Killer Edition

So, Ted Bundy seems to be a thing on the Internet these days. One, he’s being played by hottie Zac Efron in a new movie. There’s also a Netflix series out there about him – with the first episode called “Handsome Devil.” In fact, the idea that “Ted is hot” is something of a meme right now.

And, you know, it’s not just Ted. There are people out there who think Jeffrey Dahmer is hot as well … and Andrew Cunanan, and Robert Chambers (the Preppy Killer), and the Norwegian mass murderer Anders Breivik, and many more.

Of course, it probably all has something to do with just plain, simple, old-fashioned sociopathy. I mean, these guys are supposed to be charmers, right? Now, if they’re going to be a bit successful, it certainly wouldn’t hurt if they weren’t also good looking.

So, that’s part of the appeal. But, I mean, these guys have tortured and killed dozens of people. What’s could possibly being going on here? 

Well, you know, serial killers are kind of edgy and transgressive. I mean, people love their forbidden fruit – as long as that fruit is safely out of reach, of course. I guess you could say, too, that, when it come to bad boys, these guys have to be the ultimate.

Now, I’m sure you’re familiar with the women who send fan mail and even love letters to these dudes (and sometimes even marry them). But did you know, there’s actually a medical term for that? It’s called hybristophilia, and is also known as Bonnie and Clyde Syndrome.

Alright, as an old true crime fan, I can play with it. So, here we go …


#12  Paul Bernardo  *

This guy probably wouldn’t have it made onto this list if it weren’t for his hot wife, Karla Homolka:


And, yes, they were partners in crime. Though he was quite capable of raping and killing on his own, he would later be helped by the lovely Karla, who would lure and drug young girls so that Bernardo could have his way with them (including Homolka’s own sister, Tammy). 

Known as the Ken and Barbie killers, the Canadian couple were responsible for 4 deaths. Bernardo’s still in prison, though Homolka got out in 2013.

Have they gotten their own glamorous Hollywood treatment? Why of course:

 


The movie (the 2nd one) is from Netflix, is called Karla, and features Laura Prepon (from That 70s Show) and Misha Collins.


#11  Kenneth Bianchi


You know, it’s kind of a 1970s, Italian guy, fireman/cop kind of look. He actually reminds me a lot of a hot baseball player from that era, Keith Hernandez:

  
Bianchi was part of another dynaminc duo – this time with a cousin, one Angelo Buono. The two would become known as the Hillside Stranglers. Operating out of the LA area, they would rape, torture, and murder 10 women in the late 70s. Their typical MO was to use fake badges and pretend they were cops. Their nickname came from where they dumped the bodies.

Bianchi is currently residing in Washington State Prison, in Walla Walla (he had committed 2 crimes in that state after fleeing California). Buono was doing the same down in California before succumbing to a heart attack in 2002.

The two have been immortalized twice, with pix coming out in 1989 and 2004. In those, Bianchi was played by, respectively, hotties Billy Zane and C. Thomas Howell.

 


#10  Dzhokhar Tsarnaev

  
I think this guy plays for The Strokes, right? You know, the tousled look, kinda foreign, sketchy beard, looks like he’s been up all night …? Heck, he could be Fab Morretti’s younger brother:

Of course, Dzhokhar’s real-life older brother was actually evil mastermind Tamerlan Tsarnaev. Together, the pair would plan and carry out the Boston Marathon bombing, killing 3 and injuring 280. Born in Khyrgyzstan, the two Muslims had been radicalized on the Internet. Actually, it was probably more Tamerlan, who seems to have been something of a Svengali figure, with lots of power over the more hapless Dzhokhar.

The bombing would get Dzhokhar on the proverbial “cover of the Rolling Stone” … who would then be roundly criticized for glamorizing the act. 

 
Tameraln would die in a shootout after the bombing, but Dzhokhar would survive. He’s currently awaiting a death sentence.

Of course there was a movie.  Dzhokhar would be played by former child star Alex Wolff, with his brother being played by super hottie Themo Melikidze:



#9 Jeffrey Dahmer  *

 

So, this is the dude with the heads in his refrigerator? How could “hot” ever be used in the same sentence? That said, the Internet does give me plenty of hits like these when I type in “jeffrey dahmer hot”:

  • 9 Hot Serial Killers Who We Would Want To Slice Us Open
  • Oh my GOD, Jeffrey Dahmer's soooooo hot | Jeffrey dahmer | Pinterest ...
  • Jeffrey Dahmer Is My Sex Bomb
  • 10 of the Most Charming Serial Killers Ever

I don’t wanna go into the details (necrophilia, cannibalism …), but it was all rather gross. Overall, Dahmer was responsible for the rape, death, and dismemberment of 17 young men, over a period of 12 years, mostly in Milwaukee.

Though sentenced to life imprisonment, he would be beaten to death by another inmate after only 2 years in prison, at the age of 34.

And did Hollywood come calling? You betcha! In fact, I could find no fewer than 4 non-documentary Dahmer flix – The Secret Life: Jeffrey Dahmer (1993), Dahmer (2002), Raising Jeffrey Dahmer (2003), and My Friend Dahmer (2017). Here are some of the hotties who have taken on this particularly meaty role (in order, Carl Crew, Jeremy Renner, and Ross Lynch):

 




#8  Peter Sutcliffe  *

  
And here’s one from across the pond. You may actually know Peter Sutcliffe better by his moniker of the “Yorkshire Ripper.” Like his namesake, Sutcliffe preyed on prostitutes and particularly enjoyed slicing them open. He was also a bit like the Beatles’ Maxwell Edison, typically first rendering his victims senseless with a hammer.

Overall, Sutcliffe committed 13 murders, and kept England on edge for most of the ‘70s. His case may be most famous, however, for the sheer ineptitude of the police, who interviewed Sutcliffe no less than 9 times before finally figuring out he might actually be the guy.
Imprisoned in 1981, he’s been there ever since, and is now 72 years old.

Sutcliffe was played by Craig Cheetham in a British TV mini-series. The resemblance is a little scary:




#7  Charles Manson  *


Soulful puppy eyes!  Who could resist?

Well, he certainly had a way with the ladies, didn’t he?  In fact, he never killed anyone himself, but got his “girls” to do it for him. You know, Squeaky, Sadie, Gypsy …


 


In order, that’s the girls who went to trial, those who didn’t, and the 27-year-old who wanted to marry him in prison.

I probably don’t need to say any more about this guy. I’ll bet, though, that you didn’t know that some poor actor has tried to portray him in no less than 3 movies. Though none of them were famous, a couple were somewhat hot:





#6  Ted Bundy  *


Here’s our man. The twinkle in the eye, the fashionable scruff, the curls, the strong chin, that soulful look … It’s the complete sociopath, and everyone’s favorite serial killer – ladies and gentlemen, may I present Mr. Ted Bundy!

The story’s probably pretty familiar by now. The ex law student, the political ambitions, the friendship with true crime author Ann Rule, the multiple prison escapes, the sorority house rampage, the 30 murders in 7 states …

Was he hot? Well, as one journalist wrote, “Ted lured females the way a lifeless silk flower can dupe a honey bee.” And no less a source than The New York Times called him “Kennedyesque.”

Has he been shamelessly glamorized by Hollywood? Well, would 6 movies and being portrayed by Mark Harmon, Corin Nemec, and Zac Efron count?





  
#5  Charles Schmid  *


And here we have the suave and deboniar host of a talk or news show at, say … oh, I don’t know, Unavision?

Charles Schmid is not as famous as some of the other killers here. Known as the “Pied Piper of Tucson,” he only racked up 3 kills, back in the ‘60s. The moniker came from his charming personality, especially around teenaged girls. 

Schmid was, however, quite the cause celebre at the time. He was written up in LIFE and Playboy, and was the basis of a short story by Joyce Carol Oates. There are a number of movies “based on the story,” but none where Schmid is actually named. 

Like Dahmer, Schmid would be killed in prison by some of his inmate friends.


#4  Paul John Knowles  *


Too bad it wasn’t John Paul – or even better, Jean-Paul. I mean, can’t you see this guy sitting at a cafĂ© on the Left Bank, maybe with Godard or Belmondo?

Turns out Paul John Knowles was just a low-life petty thief who went on a killing spree after escaping from prison on his latest charge. He would criss-cross the country through 1974, killing 20 to 30 pretty random people in a number of pretty random ways. 

He was called the “Casanova Killer,” really just for his good looks. A British journalist who unknowingly slept with him termed him a “dreamboat” and a “cross between Robert Redford and Ryan O'Neal.”

Knowles would be captured at the end of a wild manhunt through the Florida woods by an irate farmer with a shotgun. He would then die at the hands of some Georgia police after a struggle in a car they were using to transport him. 

I’m kind of shocked he’s never been the subject of a movie – made for TV or otherwise.


#3  Andrew Cunanan  *

   
Something of a gay gigolo, Andrew Cunanan lived largely off the largesse of one wealthy older boyfriend after another. A pathological liar with delusions of grandeur, he would also become heavily involved in drugs – using and dealing.

While visiting a friend in Minnesota, Cunanan somehow snapped, beginning a new career as a spree killer. He murdered the friend, then 4 more – all in less than 3 months and all across the country. The last one would, of course, be the biggie – fashion designer Gianni Versace.


After Versace’s murder, Cunanan would somehow manage to avoid one of the biggest manhunts in history for over a week, never leaving the area and finding himself a hideout in some rich guy’s vacant houseboat. When police did finally approach him, he made sure the last victim would be himself. 

With the handsome perp and famous victim, it’s not too surprising that we ended up with no less than 3 flicks for this one. Unfortunately, none of the actors who portrayed Cunanan were very well known or particularly hot.


#2  Richard Ramirez  *


Man, would you just look at the those cheekbones. Richard Ramirez’s slightly androgenous appearance makes him look like the lead singer for some rock band from the ‘70s or ‘80s. In fact, just add some sunglasses, and the guy could be a Ramone:


Ramirez also has a nickname that’s pretty rock-and-roll as well – the “Night Stalker” (from his MO of noctural home invasions). He was active in California for about a year during the mid ‘80s and killed at least 14 people. 

An avowed Satanist, Ramirez would begin his murder trial by shouting out, “Hail Satan!” Given 5 sentences of death, he would beat the hangman by dying of lymphoma, aggravated by hep C, at age 53.

Ramirez was very popular with the prison groupies. In fact, he would actually marry one of his admirers while in prison.

The Night Stalker would inspire 3 movies, all of which make great use of that killer nickname. Lou Diamond Phillips was the only big name in any of them, though this guy – one Bret Roberts – was definitely a looker:
  


#1  Tiago Henrique Gomes da Rocha

 


Another Latino hottie, Tiago Rocha was actually from Brazil. Of his 39 victims, he had some definite categories, as well as a different a MO for each one:

  • Gay men – choking
  • Homeless men – shooting
  • Prostitutes – stabbing
  • Pretty young women – shooting them in the chest from a motorbike

That last bit would earn him the nickname “The Motorcycle Killer.” 

This was all fairly recent, dating back to only 2014. Maybe that – and his being from Brazil – is what’s behind the complete lack of Hollywood interest in his story. 

He also, though, seems to lack the proper personality – seeing himself as a victim and also pleading for forgiveness. I am not making up the following quotes:

  • “In a way I'm a victim here, too.”
  • “I was rejected a lot in the past, so I directed part of my anger towards women.”
  • “My mind went blank, but I would cry later.”

The former security guard had lived with his mum.


* -  author read the book / watched the doc 


Next time,
killer babes!


More true crime:

Sunday, February 3, 2019

Best Baseball Players by State II

Last time, Alabama to Missouri. This week, Montana to Wyoming.


Montana – Dave McNally

No contest. Especially if you consider that only 24 Montanans ever played in the majors. Heck, we could invite them all over for a cookout.

Just to give you a little better idea though … McNally won 184  games. His next closet rival won 41 (and lost 53). McNally had a WAR of almost 26. The next closest? John Lowenstein … who just couldn’t quite make it into double figures, at 9.95.

Not to pour it on, but here are a few more points in McNally’s favor:

  • 4 straight 20-win seasons
  • 3 All Star selections
  • Finishing in the top 5 for the Cy Young award 3 times
  • A 7-4 record (and 2.49 ERA) in the post-season

McNally was born in Billings, the largest city in the state. Except for playing baseball, McNally never really left it. The minor league team there has a pretty cool statue of him:



Nebraska – Grover Cleveland Alexander

Sorry, Bob Gibson. Sorry, Wade Boggs. Sorry, Sam Crawford. This guy’s only got 373 wins (3rd all time), a 2.65 lifetime ERA, and a 642 winning percentage. He’s also considered the 12th best player of all time (Sporting News), is in the Hall of Fame, led the NL in WAR 6 years running, won 3 triple crowns, blah, blah, blah …

Alexander was born in tiny Elba (population 215), kind of in the center of the state. He would be buried in the nearby – and almost as dinky – St. Paul.



Nevada – Bryce Harper

So, this guy is only 26 years old and already has the second highest WAR of any native Nevadan. Give it a year or two, and he’ll surpass #1 Barry Zito easily. I mean, he’s already nabbed a Rookie of the Year, an MVP, and 6 All Star berths in his 7 years. A genuine multi-tool player, the sky is still the limit for him.

Harper is from Las Vegas, and starred at Las Vegas High. He later attended the College of Southern Nevada, in nearby Henderson, where he now lives in this nice little $3M cottage:



New Hampshire – Arlie Latham

Chris Carpenter has a slight better WAR, but Arlie Latham leads all Granite Staters in pretty much every offensive category, and by a long shot. I’m talking about 1481 runs to 942, 1836 hits to 1394, and the ridiculous 742 stolen bases to 98. Finally, Latham may have had one of the greatest nicknames ever, “The Freshest Man on Earth.”

Latham is from Lebanon, on the White River and right on the border with Vermont. Other well-known Lebanese include Mormon founder Joseph Smith as well as famous brain injury survivor Phineas Gage.



New Jersey – Mike Trout

Yeah, Derek Jeter does have a better WAR, but his 72 was over 20 years. Trout’s 64 was in a mere 8. If Trout gets 20 years, he may set an all-time record. During those 8 years, he also just so happened to collect a Rookie of he Year award, 2 MVPs, and 7 All Star selections. Another multi-tool player like Harper, Trout may end up being one of the greatest players of all time.

Trout was born in Vineland, in the southern part of the state. He would attend high school in neighboring Millville. And that’s where his nickname the “Millville Meteor” – echoing Mickey Mantle’s “Commerce Comet” – would come from. Trout lives on a 300-acre estate somewhere in the same rough area, though in this extremely ordinary house:



New Mexico – Ralph Kiner

Poor Ralph Kiner. If only he had played for someone other than the lowly Pirates of the late ‘40s and early ‘50s, he’d probably be a lot more well known. All the Hall of Famer did was lead the NL in homers 7 years in a row. It’s probably not too surprising that he also was the Pirates’ (often sole) representative in the All Star game for 6 of those years.

Kiner was born in Santa Rita, which is interestingly enough now a ghost town. The site of a huge copper mine, when the copper ran out, the town shut down. 


Not his boyhood home – just one of the few buildings left


New York – Lou Gehrig

The Empire State certainly has their fair share of Hall of Famers – Spahn, Koufax, Eddie Collins, Yaz, Hank Greenberg, Whitey Ford … It just goes on and on and on. A-Rod is actually the best candidate – #1 in runs, homers & RBIs – but then there are all those darn PEDs.

I think the Iron Horse is a pretty good sub though. I’m talking 2 MVPs, that incredible games played streak, a lifetime OPS over 1000, setting the AL record for RBIs with 185, winning the triple crown, being elected to the All Star team 7 times in a row … It just goes on and on. He also seems to have been a great person as well.

Gerhig was born in Manhattan and never really left the New York City area. After a stint at Columbia, it was 17 years in the Bronx. He’s buried in Westchester.  


Yorkville, where Gehrig was born, was known as Little Germany


North Carolina – Gaylord Perry

My home state! And, I believe, pretty well represented by Gaylord Perry.

Perry racked up 2 Cy Young awards, 300 wins, and 3500+ strikeouts. He also played until age 45 and was a 5-time All Star. He’s probably most famous, though, for his spitter. His autobiography is, in fact, called Me and the Spitter. 

Perry was born in Williamston, in the eastern part of the state and home to 5,000 Tar Heels. Born to a family of tenant farmers, Perry was plowing behind a mule at age 7. He currently lives in Spruce Pine, up in the mountains.


Gaylord Perry Park, Williamston NC


North Dakota – Darin Erstad

North Dakota has produced 3 native sons with double figures in WAR – Erstad, Travis Hafner, and Rick Helling. That’s not too bad actually, considering only 17 North Dakotans have ever made it to the majors. Erstad, though, leads the group – in WAR, at bats, runs, hits, and stolen bases. He was also a 2-time All Star and 3-time Golden Glover.

Erstad was born in Jamestown, also home of Travis Hafner, writer Louis L’Amour, singer Peggy Lee, and UFC fighter Ronda Rousey. Jamestown has a little over 15,000 and is about equidistant between state capital Bismark and Fargo, MN. Erstad would leave Jamestown for Nebraska, where he would be the punter on the Huskers’ 1994 National Championship team and is now the baseball coach.



Ohio – Cy Young

It’s one thing to win a Cy Young award. It’s quite another to have it named after you.

There’s a reason, though, why the award for the best pitcher in either league was named for this guy. Though he played over 100 years ago, he still holds the all-time records for wins, complete games, games started, and innings pitched. A true control artist, he led the league 14 times in walk rate, and 11 in walk/strikeout ratio. The second all-time leader in WAR (behind some guy named Ruth), Young was also a member of the inaugural class at Cooperstown.

Denton True Young was born in tiny Gilmore, south of Canton. A farm boy, he would quit school after 6th grade. After baseball, he would retire in the same area, passing away at the farm of some friends, where he was a boarder:



Oklahoma – Mickey Mantle

Mickey Mantle leads all Sooners in runs, HRs, and WAR. The Hall of Famer also earned 3 MVPs, was an All Star for 16 of his 18 years in the bigs, and was a triple crown award winner. A complete multi-tools player, his starring for the Yankees during the golden era of baseball probably made him one of the most famous baseball players ever. 

Hard to believe, but the “Commerce Comet” was actually born in Spavinaw (but then grew up in Commerce). Both towns are in the far northeast corner of the state, an area known for its zinc and lead mines (and where Mantle’s father worked). Here’s his boyhood Commerce home



Oregon – Dale Murphy

Interestingly, Oregon has no Hall of Famers. In my mind at least, a real honest-to-goodness candidate for that honor would have to be Dale Murphy.

Leading all Oregonians in runs, hits, and RBIs, the Murph also collected 2 MVPs, 5 Golden Gloves, 4 Silver Slugger awards, and 7 All Star nods. He was also one of the nicest guys around, earning a Lou Gehrig award, Roberto Clemente award, Bart Giamatti Community Service Award, and induction into the World Sports Humanitarian Hall of Fame. That said, playing for the woeful Atlanta Braves of the 1980s isn’t exactly going to help his chances of getting into Cooperstown any.

Murphy was born in Portland, hipster capital of the world – but a pretty normal town back when Murphy was born, in 1956. He attended high school there, then came east for his career in the majors. He came back west after retirement, and currently lives in Alpine UT.


Murphy was drafted out of Portland’s Woodrow Wilson High


Pennsylvania – Stan Musial

There’s some serious competition here – Wagner, Mathewson … - but Stan the Man surpasses them all. Indeed, he leads all Pennsylvanians in runs, hits, RBIs, games, and All Star game berths (24!). The Hall of Famer was also a 3-time MVP, 7-time league leader in average, 6 times leader in hits and also total bases, and 9 times leader in run created (to throw in a little Sabermetrics on ya). 

Musial was born in Donora – along with Ken Griffey and Ken Griffey Jr.! It’s just a small steel mill town near Pittsburgh, but somehow managed to generate 2 Hall of Famers. 


Boyhood home (I don’t think those dishes were there then though)


Rhode Island – Nap Lajoie

Tiny Little Rhodie actually has 3 Hall of Famers – Gabbie Hartnett, Hugh Duffy, and Napoleon Lajoie. The little “Frenchman” led ‘em all, however, in WAR (by a factor of 2), games, hit, RBIs, and batting average. He was also a 5-time league leader in batting, 4-time leader in hits, and once won the triple crown as well. Lajoie was also an excellent second baseman, was famous for being difficult to strike out, and had some success as a manager as well. 

Lajoie was born in the wonderfully named Woonsocket. Said town is right on the border with Massachusetts, and was famous for its textile mills. Many of the millworkers were – like Lajoie – French-Canadians. Even today, well over half of the city of 40,000 is of French descent. 


Lajoie Field, Woonsocket, RI


South Carolina – Jim Rice

Though Rice is actually 5th in WAR among South Carolinians, he also leads them in runs, hits, homers, and RBIs. Rice led the league in homers 3 times and total bases 4, and was also an 8-time All Star. He had one incredible year, 1978, where he led the league in homers (46), hits (213), RBIs (139), triples (15), games (163), at bats (677), plate appearances (746), slugging (600), and OPS (970). And that was good enough for an MVP.  Rice is one of only of two South Carolinians in Cooperstown.

Jim Ed was born in Anderson, in the upstate. Though I have a brother-in-law who lives there, there is no truth to the rumor that one of my ancestors founded the town. 



South Dakota – Mark Ellis

Mark Ellis? Hmm, I don’t recall seeing his plaque at Cooperstown.

Indeed, there are no South Dakotans in the Hall (I’m not including manager Sparky Anderson here). In fact, of the 39 natives who made it to the bigs, only 2 have career WARs in double figures (pitcher Floyd Bannister’s the other guy). Poor Mark led the league in fielding 2 years … and that’s about that. Actually, his 991 lifetime fielding average is the 5th best all time for 2nd baseman.

Ellis was born in Rapid City, the most populous city in the state (with all of 69,000 inhabitants). He was on the American Legion team from there that won the national title.



Tennessee – Todd Helton

Here’s a true Volunteer. Born in Knoxville, Todd Helton would later quarterback UT’s football team, as well as win the Dick Howser award for best college baseball player there. A 5-time All Star, 4-time Sliver Slugger award winner, and 3-time Gold Glover, he somehow missed getting the MVP, in 1999, when he hit 372, and had 147 RBIs, 216 hits, and 42 homers (all but the last one league leaders). He holds the Tennessee state records for homers and RBIs, and the Rockies’ records for hits, home runs, RBIs, and games.

Helton would retire in Colorado, then return to Knoxville as player development director at UT. 


Former home in Colorado


Texas – Rogers Hornsby

Boy, the Lone Star state sure does have its share of superstars – Tris Speaker, Greg Maddux, Frank Robinson, Joe Morgan, Nolan Ryan … That said, Rogers Hornsby was one of the greatest players of all time. He was a 2-time MVP, 7-time batting average leader, 5-time runs leader, 4-times hit and RBI leader, and 2-tme triple crown winner. He also finished his career with a 358 batting average (2nd only to Ty Cobb) and a 1010 OPS. 

The “Rajah” was born on a ranch near the tiny town of Winters, smack dab in the center of the state. His family would move to Ft. Worth when Hornsby was four. Having gambled away most of his earnings, Hornsby would coach and manage the rest of his life, constantly moving around. 

He would return to Texas, though, to be buried in the family cemetery near Austin (the Hornsbys were early settlers of the Lone Star state). The cemetery’s an interesting place (I've been there) – down an old country lane that’s little more than a path, lost in the middle of the woods, and surrounded by a high chain link fence with razor wire:



Utah – Bruce Hurst

Kind of surprisingly, Utah has only two players with career WARs in double figures. Even more surprisingly, the second guy is Duke Sims, a light-hitting catcher who only got 400 at bats once in his career.

Bruce Hurst, on the other hand, has almost 3 times Sims’ WAR. That said, he’s no Cy Young … though he did come in 5th for the Cy Young award one year. His only other major award is an All Star nod. League leadership includes once for shutouts, once for complete games, and 3 times for fielding. 

Hurst was born in the very Mormon St. George, in the far southwest corner of the state (and the northeast corner of the Mojave Desert). After some international travel promoting and coaching baseball around the world, he would retire to the Phoenix area. St. George did, however, name the ball field for the local university (Dixie State) after him"



Vermont – Carlton Fisk

Though born in Bellows Falls VT, Carlton Fisk actually grew up in Charlestown NH. Both are on the Connecticut River, the border line between the two states. Bellows Falls just so happened to be where the nearest hospital was. That said, Fisk remains Vermont’s only Hall of Famer. 

“Pudge” was also Rookie of the Year, an 11-time All Star and 3-time Silver Slugger winner, and set the record for catchers with 24 years behind the mask. He’ll probably be always remembered, though, for waving his home run fair to win probably the greatest World Series game ever.

Bellows Falls? A small town of 3,000, it’s quintessentially New England. Charlestown is actually almost twice as big these days. It also has its own hospital too now.


Yup, that says “New Hampshire native” (Fisk made the Red Sox change it)


Virginia – Justin Verlander

No, he’s not in the Hall (Eppa Rixey is the only Virginian who is), but it’s only a matter of time. After 12 years, he’s already got over 200 wins and is pushing 3000 strikeouts. He’s got a Rookie of the Year, Cy Young, and MVP in his trophy cabinet. In addition to that kind of triple crown, he also’s one of the real kind as well (wins, strikeouts, and ERA). Oh, let’s not forget the 2 no hitters.

Verlander is from the incredible weirdly named Manakin-Sabot, which is actually really just a suburb of Richmond. He would attend the just as weirdly named Goochland High, then graduate from Old Dominion University. Today, he lives in this nice little Beverly Hills love nest with model wife Kate Upton:



Washington – Ryne Sandberg

Ron Santo gives him a run for the money, but “Ryno” has 10 All Star berths, 9 Gold Gloves, 7 Silver Slugger awards, and 1 MVP. He also leads all Washingtonians in runs and hits.

Ryne’s from Spokane, where his dad was a mortician. Spokane is in other part of the state, in the drier, flatter, considerably less hip west. It actually has 200,000 people, and is the 2nd largest city in the state and the 101st in the US. Other than Sandberg, it’s got its fair share of famous sons and daughters – Big Crosby, David Lynch, Hillary Swank, Clyfford Still, Mark Rypien … (well, maybe not that famous). 

“Ryno” would, however, elect to retire in this relatively modest house in the Windy City, the city where he spent almost his whole career:



West Virginia – George Brett

Though born in tiny Glen Dale, on the Ohio and in the little northern panhandle that shoots up between OH and PA, Brett would move to sunny Southern California early in life. The Brett family would also bring 3 other brothers, with all 3 playing professional baseball and one, Ken, making the bigs as well.

Brett earned enshrinement in Cooperstown with over 3000 hits, 300 homers, 1500 RBIs, and a career batting average of 305. A 1-time MVP, he was also a 13-time All Star and 3-time batting leader (once hitting an incredible 3900).

Brett would play his entire career with the Royals, then continue to work for them to this very day. Currently he lives in KC, in this massive pile:




Wisconsin – Kid Nichols

Who? Though he played well over 100 years ago, Charles Augustus Nichols has twice the lifetime WAR of the next best Cheesehead (Al Simmons). The Hall of Famer also finished with 362 wins (the youngest to reach 300 ever) and a 2.96 ERA. He also won 30 games 7 times. That’s who!

Nichols was born in Madison, the state capital and home to 255,000. His family would move to Kansas City, though, while Nichols was young. There, he would retire, die, and be buried:



Wyoming – Tom Browning

Not too surprisingly, the smallest state in the union also has the fewest number of natives who’ve made the bigs. A 1-time 20-game winner and 1-time All Star, Browning would finish with a 123 wins, a 577 winning percentage, and 1000 strikeouts right on the dot. And let’s not forget that perfect game!

Tom was born in Casper, but grew up in upstate New York (where he also went to college). He now lives in Union, not too far from Cincinnati, where he played most of his career.

Tom Browning is also an artist who specializes in Western