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Category Archives: Longevity

Chris Jericho on Not Thinking About Retirement, Why He Has Had Career Longevity, More – Wrestling Headlines

AEW star Chris Jericho says he still doesnt know how much longer he will continue to lace up his wrestling boots.

The 51 year old Jericho recently spoke with Newsweeks Matthew Allen Girard and said the end of his career is the furthest thing from his mind. He made his pro wrestling debut back in 1990. Jericho commented on his longevity.

I think a lot of times people always kind of want to put a bow on everything but it really doesnt work that way, Jericho said. I think part of the reason Ive had such longevity is that I go with the flow and I follow my heart. Did I ever expect to be 31 years on the job? I cant say that I did, but I cant say that I didnt.

I dont think when youre 19, you really think about [retirement]. I never really said OK, Im going to do it this long, and I still dont. I dont know how long Im going to do the sport because I dont think that way. When people ask how long are you going to do this, I say I dont know. When I feel like I dont want to do it anymore. I dont feel that way right now.

Jericho talked more about his lengthy career, and said he credits his constant evolution for the longevity.

I think one of the reasons why Ive had such a long career, wrestling-wise, is the diversity and constant evolving and re-inventing that I do, Jericho said. I can vividly remember, in about the year 2000, really thinking about how do I constantly stay relevant in what Im doing? Theres a way to do that but you have to take chances and you have to be confident in your ability as a character and as a performer.

Jericho has not wrestled since The Inner Circle defeated Ethan Page, Scorpio Sky and American Top Team in the 10-man Street Fight at AEW Full Gear on November 13.

Stay tuned for more.

Follow Marc on Twitter at @this_is_marc. Send any news, tips or corrections to us by clicking here.

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BWW Review: Marieann Meringolo Displays Her Longevity With IN THE SPIRIT at Feinstein’s/54 Below – Broadway World

What is it that makes a person go back to see an annual Christmas show that has lasted for fifteen years? It's Christmas music, after all, and how many different ways can one singer find to sing "Jingle Bells"? Truly, why would there be any reason for an annual Christmas show lasting fifteen years?

Marieann Meringolo, that's why.

Last night this writer got to (finally!) see IN THE SPIRIT, the Marieann Meringolo holiday show, and got to see, to hear, to learn, first hand, what all the fuss is about, for IN THE SPIRIT is a marvel of musical program being led by a wonder of a woman. If you haven't seen Marieann Meringolo live before, then you just don't know, but this is one heck of an entertaining lady. For seventy-five minutes last night, the ever-so-chicly attired boss lady served her fans and followers a mixture of the holiday season from Santa to dreidels, from gifts to god, from winter weather to New Year's Eve but the theme with which Marieann led was one of gratitude and love for her fellow man, and always with that seamless blending of Meringolo vocals and Marieann humor. In fact, it can be (at times) startling to watch this entertainer turn on a dime, going from the picture of elegance in burgundy velvet to the paragon of playfulness... startling but invigorating. For this beacon of vocal prowess may stand tall as a musical storyteller, but when she gets down into the goofier aspect of her personality, she goes from zero to sixty on the adorable meter and, let's face it, adorable will win every single time, and it is a boon to Ms. Meingolo that she has so caring a director as WILL NUNZIATA, who gives her permission to be all the parts of herself, be it classy, sassy, introspective, or effusive. And silly.

When it comes to the music in In The Spirit, it just doesn't get any better, and although the leading factor of that excellence is a voice of such exquisite control and crystalline refinement, there is no downplaying the contribution made to the proceedings by Musical Director Doyle Newmyer's arrangements, all of which take these same, tired, old Christmas songs we've heard over and over and over again and turns them into something new and exciting that is a pleasure to listen to. It's not just nice, it's not just pretty, it is a pleasure to (not hear but) sit back and listen to these arrangements in Ms. Meringolo's storytelling wheelhouse. Throughout the night, people around the room could be heard to sigh or make exclamations like, "Wow", and shaking heads could be seen, nodding in approval, eyes closed in blissful immersion into the art being presented, particularly on a spectacular "Do You Hear What I Hear?" and a mashup of "Silent Night" and "O Holy Night" that took unsuspecting members of the audience by surprise. Jokingly remarking that she (an Italian catholic) is often mistaken for being Jewish and has no idea why (indicating a prominent proboscis), Meringolo had an entire Chanukah section to her show that yielded both hilarity ("It's Christmas and We're Jewish") and poignancy ("A Chanukah Prayer"), and a Grand Marnier-informed duet with Mr. Newmyer reminded people that, when it was written, the song "Baby It's Cold Outside" wasn't scandalous, it was flirtatious. Watching these friends, 22-years-long, sing the titillating tune (with references to his wife and her girlfriend) is proof perfect that those who find something objectionable to the composition are looking for something about which to object: this is good, provocative, grown-up holiday fun.

Indeed, one of the joys about Marieann's act is that it is an adult act. Many is the time that we, the audience, sit in a cabaret or club and see a show that is young: maybe the artist is new to the art form and has yet to find their artistic voice, perhaps an act is making its debut and isn't finished baking, sometimes an artist is of a generation informed by riffs and runs, rather than interpretation and skill. These are young shows. Marieann Meringolo's act is one put together by a woman who knows herself, her aesthetic, and her voice: it is sophisticated, elegant, grounded, and confident. It is listenable and pleasurable, and though the vocals soar and the volume impresses, the show is quiet and peaceful. It's a grown-up Christmas show, one particularly enhanced by Marieann's performances of "Winter in Manhattan" and brand new tunes by Anthony Nunziata ("New York on New Year's Eve") and by Jeff Franzel, Tom Kimmel and Marieann Meringolo herself ("In The Spirit"). It turns out the Lady is branching out as an artist, and she is doing so with a prodigious debut, one wildly well-accepted last night by an appreciative audience of adoring devotees, many of whom were so swept up with emotion that, at various points in the show, they were calling out praise from their seats. That praise was well-earned, warranted, and will, no doubt, be repeated one year from now, when the In The Spirit club will meet again, just for Marieann Meringolo.

The In The Spirit Band are Boots Maleson on bass, Brian Woodruff on drums and Musical Director Doyle Newmyer on piano.

Find other great shows to see at the 54 Below website HERE.

THIS is the Marieann Meringolo website.

Marieann Meringolo gets a five out of five microphones rating for performing her entire show without the use of a lyric sheet, tablet, or music stand.

Photos by Stephen Mosher

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BWW Review: Marieann Meringolo Displays Her Longevity With IN THE SPIRIT at Feinstein's/54 Below - Broadway World

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2021 Sportsperson of the Year: Tom Brady – Sports Illustrated

Age is just a number. But that number is on the move, and longevity is on its way to running up the score. According to the United Nations, in 1990 there were 95,000 people on the planet who made it to 100. Today there are more than 500,000 centenarians, and, by 2100, its projected there will be more than 25 million. In 1980, around 382 million people were 60 and older. By 2050, that number will exceed 2 billion. There are some gerontologists who believe the first person to live to age 150 has already been born. Others ask: Are we so sure there are age limitations on human life?

What are fun facts and dinner-party conversation starters for us are foundational to the School of Aging Studies at the University of South Florida. Its the largestand, appropriately, one of the oldestschool of its kind in the country. Its mission statement cites a commitment to understanding the biological, psychological, social and public policy aspects of aging. But talk to faculty casually and its clear that one of the core principles of the curriculum is this: to teach life hacks that help human beings get older with grace.

Located as it is in Tampathe U.S. metro area with the densest concentration of senior citizensthe school has always had plenty of subject matter and data points nearby. But now, the campus is also within a golf-cart drive of the archetype for aging gracefully. Want to conduct a field study to see what longevity looks like in practice (not to mention in games)? Well, Tom Brady lives and works just a few miles away.

For all his manifold football gifts, Bradys true superpower is his ability to take time, stretch it out like the resistance bands he uses and then double it back. For the 44-year-old, time is a construct, measurable by ways other than revolutions around the sun.

Id say there are parts of me that are 55, and I think theres parts of me that are 25, says Brady. What parts? I think Im wise beyond my years. I think Ive had a lot of life experience packed into 44 years. When I go through the tunnel and onto the field? Probably mid-30sand Ive got to work really hard to feel good. Its a demolition derby every Sunday. I feel 25 when Im in the locker room with the guys. Which is probably why I still do it.

Simon Bruty/Sports Illustrated

Order the 2021 Sportsperson of the Year Issue

He explains this theory of time on a warm Tuesday in November. Hes seated inside a Tampa yacht clubhes not a member, hes quick to point outthat looks out over Hillsborough Bay and is convenient to Bradys home. He has risen early this morning (of course). Walking with energy and purpose he enters the main dining room carrying a water bottle the size of a fire extinguisher. He is wearing designer sweats and a big, warm smile that makes his teeth look like a row of white iPod Nanoskids, ask your parentsaligned perfectly inside his square jaw.

Back to time: How the hell is he still doing this, volunteering for those weekly car crashes for months and months, well into his 40s? Its complicated. Its not like I wake up every day, like, Hey, man, its another sunny day! says Brady. No, its like, All right, lets grind and move on. Then he quickly adds, Theres still joy. The competitions fun and, uh, you know, Im still pretty good at it, too.

Theres also the specter of the alternative: I imagine not playing. And I imagine watching football on Sundays going, These guys suck. I could do way better than that. And then still knowing in my heart that I actually could still do it. If I stopped, I think Id have to find something else that Im pretty good at. And I dont think that, you know, Im going to be able to jump into something that has the same amount of excitement.

So long as thats the case, so long as he can continue finding fulfillment, Brady will play on, thanks. Hes fond of a phrase that suggests continuity, one that befits someone so committed to hydration: Why not keep drinking?

If, in the manner of Bradys career, we want to extend that analogy: Its not just that he is still drinking; he is chugging. And theres no indication hes near the bottom of the glass. He is at an age when even the finest of his peers are beyond their prime. Roger Federer (40), Serena Williams (40), Albert Pujols (41), Tiger Woods (45). Titans all, but not acclaimed for their athletic achievements in 2021.

Then there is Brady. Still pretty good at it warrants a 15-yard penalty for flagrant understatement. He continues to discharge his duties with his customary, clinical excellence. He still throws with precision and maneuvers deftly in the pocket. Maybe more than ever, he maintains command of himself, and by extension his team, projecting comfort, evincing poise when it matters most. And he is still winning.

Brady started the year by piloting his new team, the Tampa Bay Buccaneers, to five straight wins, one to end the 2020 regular season and four in the playoffs. The culmination came on Feb. 7, when Brady started his 10th Super Bowl. He walked away with his seventh ring and was named Super Bowl MVP for the fifth time, leaving his heel print on yet another NFL season.

Early in the offseason Brady flew to Los Angeles and cleaned up (his phrase) his left knee. In this season, his 22nd, he has turned in some of the most brilliant shifts of his career. Brady leads the league in touchdown passes (34), the unprecedented 600th of his career coming in October, and the Bucs lead the league in scoring (31.4 points per game). His team is 93, and Brady is among the favorites to be named MVP. And he has already, officially, taken this honor: Tom Brady is the 2021 Sports Illustrated Sportsperson of the Year.

Brady, this year, is the recipient of the 68th annual SOTY. He alsomind the gapwon the honor in its 52nd year. That was for his excellence in 2005, a time when cars ran only on gasoline, squarely in the flip-phone era. How long ago was this? In the SI article celebrating Brady there is a reference to his posing once while holding a goat. And its describing a bizarre photo shootnot nodding to the GOAT, the honorific that now, of course, accompanies most mentions of Brady.

TitledThe Ultimate Teammate,the story praises Brady for his work ethic (You can see his innate ability to carry the logic of practice to the conclusion of a game) and his commitment to incremental improvement (the grinding work of constructing football excellence that pays off in the public performance). Brady, then in his 20s, speaks cautiously but describes his passion for football: I love it so. Just running out there in front of 70,000 people. Also, his sheepishness about standing out: I dont need to be the showstopper, the entertainer. Id much rather people assume Im one of the guys.

Simon Bruty/Sports Illustrated

Here, in 2021, Bradys coach, Bruce Arians, takes inventory of his quarterback, reeling off a string of superlatives but landing on a familiar turn of phrase: He is the ultimate team player. To a man, the Buccaneers describe Brady being down to earth.

Brady is, you might say, committed to the role. His organizing football principles are largely unchanged. Same for his leadership traits and his character. And yet in other ways Brady is a much different man than that 28-year-old bachelor. Handed the cover from 2005, he smiles. I think I recognize that person, he says. But theres so much more to me now.

He is the best-ever practitioner of the most important position in his sportperhaps in all sports. But lets be clear: This award is not for lifetime achievement but based on Bradys body of work over the last 12 months. This is not an aging athlete admirably hanging on. This is an athlete who may never have performed better.

It happened not even two years ago and already it carries a historic ring, cemented into those hinge-point New England moments, deserving of its own shorthand, right up there with Revere Rides Through Town, Tea Dumped in Harbor and Sox Exorcise Curse. And, for that matter, from fall of 2001: Backup QB Brady Thrown Into Fray.

On March 16, 2020, as COVID-19 was just ramping up in the U.S., Brady drove to the home of Patriots owner Robert Kraft to make official what he had decided privately months before. As Brady recalled to Howard Stern, I was crying. Im a very emotional person. After 20 unbroken years with New England,Brady to Become Free Agent.

Brady didnt arrive at the decision easily. He knew well that this stay-or-go athlete dilemma tends to yield mixed results. The player with whom he always will be bracketed, Peyton Manning, left Indianapolis for Denver, won a Super Bowl and never played another NFL down. That was nearly six years ago. The day Brady won his first Super Bowl, in 2002, Michael Jordan was playing, unmemorably, for the Washington Wizards. And Brady still winces when he recalls when, as a teenage 49ers fan in San Mateo, Calif., he learned that his idol, Joe Montana, was decamping late in his career to Kansas City.

Two days after Brady met with Kraft, Arians sat in his home with Bucs general manager Jason Licht. For months they had been running point on a recruiting mission they called Operation Shoeless Joe Jackson. (Field of Dreams . . . get it?) That afternoon Brady called Arians, who passed the phone to Licht, who recalls that when Brady began the conversation, Hey, babe, it was safe to assume the Buccaneers had their man. It was a phone call, and it was during COVID, says Licht. But it was one of the biggest moments in franchise history.

First came the yuks. Brady was going to Florida, because . . . Florida. Where else do well-preserved Northeasterners go when its time to throttle back? Then came the cynicism. Brady was availing himself either of the states lack of personal income tax or the congenial weather or the Buccaneers soft expectations. Here was a franchise that, pre-Brady, had an all-time winning percentage of .386 (267-424-1), the worst of any major mens U.S. pro team.

Brady, though, is nothing if not a pragmatist. Tampa was a market with low-intensity lighting, and still a short flight away from his son Jack, who lives in New York City. Brady is also a football pragmatist. He saw a team with a loaded defense, exceptional skill-position players and sturdy offensive line. He also saw the opportunity for an invigorating culture change. Arians, 69, was born within six months of Bill Belichick but cuts a different figureenjoying, as he does, laughter, self-deprecation, motorcycle rides and a reputation as perhaps the least autocratic coach in the NFL.

But that was only the start. Brady laughs as he plays the compare-and-contrast game: different conference, different division, different coaches, different offense, different terminology, different players, different drive to the stadium. Determined that the divorce remains amicable, Brady gently reroutes conversation about the Pats. But this he will say: Our team here, I think there are more voices. And its fine. Theres different ways to be successful.

With Brady, the Bucs started out 75. In New England this might have marked a crisis. (Belichick always had a saying, Brady recalls. When you win, your quality of life is better for everybody.) In Tampa it did not. The COVID-19-constricted season was supposed to be one of transition for the Bucs; in 2021, they would really be a cohesive unit. But then Tampa Bay didnt lose another game the rest of the season.

Brady found a different kind of coach in Arians (left), but the end result was a familiar one.

Simon Bruty/Sports Illustrated (2)

Before Super Bowl LV, Brady recognized a sort of power imbalance. He had played in more big games than the rest of his teammates, combined. So he sent a blizzard of texts to them. Some were sent individually, some to a group. Some contained motivational saws (process over perfection); some were concrete instructions about schemes or observations that Brady had picked up while watching film of their opponent, the Chiefs.

Licht recalls that hours before the game he took time to try to savor the moment, to drink it all in, as his quarterback might put it. One season earlier Tampa Bay was 79 with an offense piloted by Jameis Winston; now, with Tom Friggin Brady under center, the Bucs were in the Super Bowl. The game was at Raymond James Stadium (even if cardboard cutouts filled two-thirds of the seats); no other host team had ever played in a Super Bowl. Brady noticed Licht, walked over, sat down beside him on the bench, smiled his smile and said simply but firmly, Jason, its going to be a great day. And it was.

Ask Brady about a singular moment from the game and he strokes the light stubble on his chin, trying to come up with something specific. The defense played well; the opponent did not. Brady was at his Brady-est; his best plays didnt stand out in the way they do for other star quarterbacks, but the ball always got where it had to be with virtually no mistakes. Unflustered and unhurried, he completed 21 of 29 and connected with his old buddy, tight end Rob Gronkowski, for two of his three touchdowns.

Tampa Bay, a three-point underdog, prevailed, 319. In the weeks before the game, Brady strenuouslyand probably wiselyavoided the obvious story line, the one that traced back to New England. Arians did not. Tom is playing for his teammates right now, Arians told SI in January. I think personally, too, hes making a statement. You know? It wasnt all Coach Belichick.

Brady recalled the postgame scene after the Patriots won Super Bowl XLIX in 2015: We had beaten Seattle and we flew home to Boston, and I came home to a house that was flooding. I mean, literally, I had a broken pipe and I had a waterfall coming down. And that night you thank God. Its so glorious the night after a Super Bowl. [But] the reality? I got to fix this leak in my house.

Ben, Gisele and Vivian were among Brady's family on the field after the Super Bowl LV win.

Mark J. Rebilas/USA TODAY Sports

In a sense it was a healthy reminder that the real world happens, even to Super Bowl MVPs, so its important to savor the moments before the pipes burst. Now it comes to him: The highlight of that night, of Super Bowl LV, was when he brought his familyhis wife, model Gisele Bndchen; their kids, Ben, 12, and Vivian, 9; and Jack, 14, Bradys son with actor Bridget Moynahanonto the field to celebrate.

That Brady wasand isa winning football player makes for something other than a news flash, especially for the men who recruited him to Florida. Even so, both Arians and Licht marvel at the full force of the Brady Aura.

Arians tells the story of watching Brady lead an early informal workout with tight end O.J. Howard and wide receiver Scotty Miller. Arians had recently told both players about the need to pump their arms on their routes. When they didnt, Brady also noticed and pointed it out to his two teammates.

Says Arians, They look at me [when I tell them] and go, Oh, O.K. And when Tom tells them they go, O.K., Tom! And they do it. Arians then cackles, thinking of other messages he would let Brady communicate to players on his behalf. He tells em to do it, and they listen! (Pause for a thought exercise: Imagine Bradys previous coach joking about delegating some of his duties to the charismatic quarterback.)

Brady may have, like the rest of us, binged The Last DanceThats my era!but his leadership style is at striking odds with that of the basketball GOAT. Michael Jordan demanded that his teammates match his intensity and humiliated those who couldnt handle his lacerating edges. Brady is all soft power. Teammates should feel seen and heard. Gaps in accomplishments and fameand commitment levelsamong players must be bridged. Experience is something to be shared.

Licht laughs when Brady introduces himself warmly to rookies and new teammates by saying, Im Tom Brady. No s---, youre Tom Brady. But the message is clear, as is the effect. Tom is known as the greatest player of all time, and I get the sense they were expecting him to come in and want preferential treatment and have an egowhich would be well deserved, says Licht. But he just wants to be one of the guys. He wants to earn their respect. And they think, I dont want to let this guy down. We all think that.

Early on Brady issued a request to his new center, Ryan Jensen. Could he apply baby powder to his backside to keep the football free of sweat? Jensen complied, then walked around the field trailed by chalky plumes, as if he were announcing the new pope. Before it could be a source of embarrassment or teasing in the locker room, Brady spoke to teammates to make sure it was taken as instructional: These are precisely the kind of small sacrifices and adjustments you make when you are fully committed to winning.

More than ever Brady is surrounded by teammates who entered the league with more fanfare. Mike Evans, his favorite downfield target, was the seventh pick in 2014. Tampa Bays top running back, Leonard Fournette, went fourth in 17. Even Bradys backup, Blaine Gabbert, was the 10th choice in 11. Two decades after he left Michigan, Bradys modest draft slot ofall together now199, still galvanizes him. He had to work for everything, says Arians, and he just never, never lets himself forget that.

But the coach noticed something else: Brady has taken a source of personal motivation and alchemized it into something to benefit his teammates. What was once aboutto use the tired tropeproving the doubters wrong has evolved into, Guys, if I can go from good to great, you sure as hell can, too.

Its hard to exaggerate just how statistically outlying Bradys longevity is. The NFLs next-oldest player is Rams offensive tackle Andrew Whitworth, who will be 40 on Dec. 12. Brady is closer in age to Dan Marino, who played his last game in 1999, than he is to Chiefs quarterback Patrick Mahomes. Nearly half the NFLs coaches13 of 32are younger than he is. (Though Bradys own coach, pointedly, is the leagues third-oldest.)

Keep going? Brady is older than 59 members of Congress. On that fateful day in 2000, when 198 other players were summoned into the NFL workplace ahead of Brady? Bill Clinton was president. There have been six presidential elections since. Remember, too: Bradys longevity-to-the-point-of-absurdity is coming in pro football, a sport in which careers are notoriously nasty, brutish and short. And there hasnt been any sign of falloff.

Thats not just the eye test; advanced statistics bear it out too. Arianss offense attacks deeper than mostno risk it, no biscuit being the operative phrase. In 2020, Bradys air yards per intended pass, a measure of how far downfield a quarterback throws on average, jumped to 9.3 yards, a 22% increase from his last season in New England. Yet, despite the higher degree of difficulty, his completion rate also rose, from 60.8% to 65.7%.

Hes doing it at a time when defenders have become freakish in their own right. From 2000 to 03, Bradys first four seasons in the league, 10 defensive linemen clocked in under 4.7 seconds in the 40-yard dash at the NFLs scoutingcombine. Over the past four years, 41 have done so. That has led to an emphasis in athleticism among the new class of quarterbacks. Indeed, according to Next Gen Stats tracking data, through Week 12 of the 2021 season only Steelers vet Ben Roethlisberger was covering less ground per play (7.2 yards) than Brady (8.0).

In the 2021 opener Brady picked up where he left off, in a victory over the Cowboys.

Erick W. Rasco/Sports Illustrated

Retirement has its appealgolf, time with the family, business opportunitiesbut it is outstripped by the lure of continuing to work. And so it is that Al Michaels, 77, the voice of NBCs Sunday Night Football, has consulted with and confided in Brady. Their pregame broadcast production meetings, once filled with football shop talk, now veer toward weightier topics and shared experiences. Says Michaels, When I see Tom, I think, Damn, you can go at that level no matter what youre doing, and I feel like I can. Its just a cool thing, the kind of symmetry.

Michaels isnt alone in finding inspiration in Bradys longevity. UFC fighters, European soccer players, pro golfers, athletes of a certain maturitythey all try to see some version of themselves in Brady and come seeking his counsel and inspiration. Comb social media and youll find teachers crediting Brady with their decision to get back in the classroom, pilots referencing him when they decided to stave off retirement.

Even though serving as a standard-bearer for manipulating time only adds to his pressures, Brady welcomes the opportunity. If people want what I want, then Im there to help them, Brady says. If they dont? All right, let them do their own thing. No problem. But if you come to me and you say, Hey, how can I have a career like yours? Id be very happy to help anybody.

At the same time Brady readily admits that he holds no secrets; he, too, looks to others. His wife. His parents. Towering athletesMontana, Jordan, Steve Youngwho came before him. But he also turns to a sort of council of elders, whove lived well and lived long. Ageless Tom Brady might work alongside teammates half his age, but he often socializes with men twice as old, many of them successful entrepreneurs or titans of industry. They neither want nor need a selfie or comp tickets or the nimbus of Bradys celebrity. These friendships come without the whiff of transaction.

The tribal elder in this circle might be Sam Reeves. Armed with a wealth of stories he tells in a slow Southern drawl, Reeves made his fortune as a cotton merchant. He recently gave up bodysurfing but still plays 150 rounds of golf a year. Hes 87, but he puts his functional age in the early 60s. Im not really paying attention to the chronological, he says.

Reeves recalls meeting Brady while playing golf at Pebble Beach maybe 20 years ago, and the two have been close friends ever since. I didnt know much about him, says Reeves, but he was so gracious. Through Reeves, Brady has met various other wise men, including Jimmy Dunne, 65, vice chairman and senior managing principal of Piper Sandler investment bank.

When Brady is in the company of these wise men, decades older, he spends a lot of time listening. Learning from those people is really important to me, says Brady. I dont think you can go through life and be fixed. I was listening to someone the other day, and they said, The words I dont know are the most powerful words because theyre limitless. Its limitless potential. And as soon as you think you know something, youre fixed.

Reeves has given great thought to what makes Brady special and has come up with three bullet points:

He makes people feel valued. That could mean really listeninghes an extraordinary listenerto someone hes meeting for the first time. He thrives on excellence, for himself and those around him. He wants you to have what he has. He wants people to be the best they canbut hell help you get there. He is a person of joy. Pain is inevitablecertainly in footballbut misery is optional, and Tom does not accept misery. Tom runs the opposite way. He runs to joy.

Then Reeves absently adds a fourth. Tom keeps his routines, but he is open to adventures. And . . . wait . . . catch that? It sounds like a throwaway line, but aha. That, as much as anything, might unlock the secret to Bradysand, for that matter, ourlongevity.

Yes, Tom keeps his routines, so much so that his fanatical habits figure prominently in the mythology. His sleep schedule and his infrared pajamas. His training and his plyometrics. We know about his hydration and his electrolyte intake. Lord knows we know about his diet and nutrition. He dares to eat a peach . . . and avocado ice cream. (There is a sports-media edict that says Brady cannot be discussed without a reference to avocado ice cream.) But he dares not ingest carbs, nightshades, dairy, white sugar or white flour.

Golf is one of Brady's passions off the field, though he and Mickelson (far right) fell to Aaron Rodgers (second from left) and Bryson DeChambeau (middle) in The Match last summer.

Dylan Buell/Getty Images for The Match

Ross Andel, director of the School of Aging Studies at USF, notes that routines and good habits are essential for optimal aging. A Bucs fan, Andel sees Brady and his defiance of time and is unsurprised. His ability to stay disciplined is second to none, says Andel. Other people look for a quick fix or go to extremes. He doesnt mind hard work. He holds onto his schedule. Theres such a resilience.

Yet when discussing keys to graceful aging, Andel also references an opposite, even contradictory, instinct: a willingness to adaptI never want to be fixed . . . he is open to adventuresto stimulate new parts of the brain and pleasure centers. In short, to evolve.

Andel points to a German study in which volunteers were taught to juggle. As the subjects picked up a new skill, brain imaging revealed changes in gray matter. As the subjects became capable jugglers and the skill was no longer novel, the gray matter reverted to its levels before the study. The brain had nothing to adapt to, so it put the neurons elsewhere, says Andel. Its the stimulation, the change of environment that challenges the brain and redistributes our bodily resources. That, says Andel, encapsulates Brady. Hes unbelievably adaptable.

So credit Brady for his rigidity. But his relentless success owes just as much to the opposite trait, his flexibility. Does he contradict himself? Very well then, he contradicts himself. He is large. He contains multitudes. Moving to a different franchise in a different state with a different corporate culture? That example of his adaptability is just one of many.

Brady might, rightly, be depicted as the exponent of clean living. But there he was in February, giving new zest to the phrase drunken fling as he hurled the Lombardi Trophy Frisbee-like from one boat to another during Tampa Bays Super Bowl celebration. He then put to rest any questions about his sobriety with the unforgettable tweet, Noting to see her . . . just litTle avoCado tequila.

Brady is an unapologetic capitalist. His NFL salary of $25 million is dwarfed by his various businesses and investments, from the TB12 health and wellness brand to his clothing line, to his 199 Productions content studio, to his stake and promotion of a cryptocurrency firm. His NFT company, Autograph, is widely considered an industry leader in digital collectibles. Hes arrowing toward billionaire status, if not there already. And hes not simply slapping his name on products. He is poring over balance sheets and Zooming into board meetings, glimpsing his post-NFL life while still playing.

On the other hand, Brady doesnt always show fidelity to the market. His NFL salary, which does not consign him to eating ramen, still ranks ninth in average annual value among QBs. Hes never wanted to be the highest-paid quarterback, says Arians, because [doing so] would mean not getting maybe two other good players.

As much as Brady values health, he mourns the rule changes that diminish the physical risk of football. The game I played 20 years ago is very different from the game now, in the sense that its more of a skills competition than it is physical football, he says. Its like being in the boxing ring and saying, Dont hit your opponent because you might hurt him. Look, were both able to protect ourselves. Im looking at you. Youre looking at me. Lets go.

Brady made those remarks recently on Lets Go, the podcast he hosts with former receiver Larry Fitzgerald and sportscaster Jim Gray each week. And this might represent the most striking example of Bradys adaptability. For most of his career he was willfully, even strategically, unknowable. Not surly or standoffish, but you might say that long before COVID-19, Brady wore a mask. As he put it this summer on HBOs The Shop: What I say versus what I think are two totally different things. I would say 90% of what I say is probably not what Im thinking.

Whatever the case, lately were hearing from Brady more often than ever before. There he is on late-night couches. There he is in a self-effacing Subway commercial. And calling into Howard Stern. The podcast medium suits him especially wellnot just his own, but others (What did [I] major in? F------ football, man, Brady said on actor Dax Shepards Armchair Expert). Hes also jacked up his activity on social media, often hilariously. After a tweet surfaced comparing the TB12 Method with Terry Bradshaws TB 12 beers a day methods, @TomBrady issued the A-plus retweet last month, Tomato, tomahto.

In the 2021 calendar year, Brady has more passing yards (5,231) and passing touchdowns (48) than any quarterback in football, and the Bucs have a better record(143)than any team in football.

Simon Bruty/Sports Illustrated

Brady accepts the premise that lately he has put himself out there. Im rediscovering my voice, he says, and Im having fun with it. The obvious correlation: Brady feels he is able to reveal himself and have this fun now that he is liberated from his coach in New England and from the tight organizational controls. He doesnt deny that.

But theres another correlation. His age. I think theres more comfort just as an older guy, too. My give-a-s--- levels are probably a lot less. Im kind of like, O.K., whats it gonna be like in 10 years? Im really not going to give a s--- then.

It is, of course, irresistible to hear Brady talk about his future and not indulge in speculation about how many more times the odometer can turn over. Licht has already stoked fires (and social media accounts) when he predicted Brady would play until age 50. He doubles down with SI: I dont see any signs of decline whatsoever.

Brady predicts that the source of his declinewhenever that may bewill be spiritual, not physical: Regressing would be a very difficult thing for me to see. As soon as I see myself regress, Ill be like, Im out. I dont really want to see myself get bad. So its just a constant pursuit of trying not to be bad.

Trying not to be bad? Really?

I think if anything, the most challenging part is the emotional aspect of football for me, Brady says. When we lose, its depressing. When we win, its a relief. Its not like the joy, the happinessits a relief. Because when we win, sometimes just winning isnt good enough for you, because you expect perfection, and when you expect perfection and its less than perfect, you feel like theres a down part to that.

Then again, this drive, this internal combustion engine, is what keeps Brady playing at this exalted level. Winning a seventh Super Bowl doesnt dull his ambition for an eighth. Throwing a pass into a window the size of a playing card only increases his desire to deliver another one.

Its like hitting the perfect 7-iron, he says. You go, How was that? And I go, That was pretty great! I want to do it again! You just constantly keep chasing it.

It was recently put to Brady: Is there anything specific he has yet to achieve in his unrivaled career? His first answer: not really. But he did note that, in all his years and for all that success, he has never won a game on a last-second Hail Mary.

The temptation is to tell Brady that hes completed footballs ultimate Hail Mary. The backup at Michigan whose 40-yard dash time could be clocked with a sundial going from the sixth round to the GOAT pasture, with seven Super Bowl rings? Whose excellence remains unabated at 44? Except that a Hail Mary implies a level of luck. The Legend of Brady is predicated on anything but fluke or chance. Its deliberate and smart and rational.

So here is a manand a sportspersonfor all of time. And for this time. And as aging does its thing, as mitochondria begin to deteriorate, as the mortal coil unwinds, Tom Brady comes bearing lessons for us all about contorting and distorting time, if not stopping it altogether. Balance routine with new adventure. Even more than anatomy, its attitude and character that shape destiny. Head off into the sun, not the sunset.

And if we hydrate and eat right, so much the better.

Additional reporting by Greg Bishop and Jenny Vrentas. Additional research by Reid Foster.

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An ageing country shows others how to manage – The Economist

EVER SINCE 1495 residents of Gojome, a town in northern Japan, have gathered for a morning market. On a recent weekday, along a street of closed shops with almost no people, elderly sellers lay out their autumnal wares: mushrooms and chestnuts, okra, aubergines and pears. It was not always so empty, sighs Ogawa Kosei, who runs a bookshop on the street. He points to pictures his father took that show the scene packed with shoppers.

The population of Gojome has shrunk by half since 1990. More than half its residents are over 65, making it one of the oldest towns in Akita, the oldest prefecture in Japan, which is in turn the worlds oldest country. Yet Gojome is less an outlier than a portent. According to the UN, every country is experiencing growth in the size and proportion of its elderly population; by 2050 one in six people in the world will be over 65, up from one in eleven in 2019. The UN also projects that 55 countries, including China, will see their populations decline between now and 2050.

Demographic change has two drivers often lumped together: rising longevity and a falling birth rate. Their convergence demands a new map of life, says Akiyama Hiroko, founder of the University of Tokyos Institute of Gerontology. Infrastructure created when the population was younger and the demographic pyramid sturdier must be redesigned, from health care to housing to transport. The new reality demands a completely different way of thinking, says Kashiwa Kazuyori, head of Gojomes town-planning department. When he started work in the 1970s, the focus was on growth. Now it is about managing decline.

Part of the challenge is that demographic change affects everyone differently. Two towns or regions may look similar from a distance, but have distinct historical, cultural and environmental conditions; two individuals may be the same age, make the same money and live on the same street, yet have different mental and physical health. We often miss the context, says Kudo Shogo of Akita International University. He is one of scores of young outsiders who have been welcomed to Gojome, which was a trading hub at the crossroads of farm districts. Comparable farm-focused neighbours have been less open to incomers.

That makes designing national policy difficult. Theres not a one-size-fits-all model, says Iio Jun, a political scientist at GRIPS. While the national government is responsible for finance, including pensions, the new map of life is best drawn from the ground up. Many ideas come from listening to citizens, says Ms Akiyama. They know what the issues areand many times they know how to solve them.

One issue is how ageing is discussed: as a problem or a burden. Older people feel theyre not needed by society, laments Hatakeyama Junko, the 70-year-old head of Akita Partnership, a non-profit that manages a community centre. Longevity is not itself a problemit should be celebrated. The problems arise when people live long but unhealthy, lonely, or dependent lives. The goal in Japan has shifted from increasing life expectancy to enhancing the healthy, autonomous life expectancy, says Ms Akiyama.

This means finding ways for old people to keep working. Nearly half of 65- to 69-year-olds and a third of 70- to 74-year-olds have jobs. Japans gerontological society has called for reclassifying those aged 65-74 as pre-old. Ms Akiyama speaks of creating workplaces for the second life. But the work of the second life will differ from that of the first; its contribution may not be easily captured in growth statistics. We have to seek well-being, not only economic productivity, Ms Akiyama says. Experiments abound, from municipalities that train retirees to be farmers, to firms that encourage older employees to launch startups. The elderly want dignity and respect, says Matsuyama Daiko of the Taizo-in temple in Kyoto, which has a second-life programme that offers courses for retirees to retrain as priests.

The other key is staying healthy, physically and mentally. Wiser municipalities focus on preventive care. At the Kadokawa Care Centre, a sleek facility in a former school in Toyama, north-west of Tokyo, septuagenarians, octogenarians and nonagenarians splash through a swimming pool and pump away at exercise machines. If not for this place, Id be in a nursing home, gushes Kyoda Taketoshi, an 82-year-old. The socialisation is no less important. It cost a lot to build this place, but it was worth it, says Saito Yoneaki, 80, before skipping off to join friends in the sauna. Although Japans healthy life expectancy trails overall life expectancy by eight to 12 years, the gap fell slightly between 2010 and 2016.

The birth rate is harder to change. It fell to 1.34 in 2020, far below the 2.1 needed to keep a population stable. Even if Japan could raise it, rural areas would still struggle. One study reckons more than half of Japans 1,700 municipalities could vanish by 2040, as young people, especially women, leave. Yet though a return to growth is unlikely in most regions, there is an alternative to outright disappearance: a critical core of newcomers. Even a handful of transplants can revitalise an ageing town without replacing the population entirely, notes Mr Iio.

Gojome is a good example. Although the population has been shrinking, a new wind is blowing in the town, says Watanabe Hikobe, its mayor. Over the past decade a small group of young outsiders has arrived, drawn by visions of a slow, bucolic life, and the chance to try new models of untethered work and communal living. Yanagisawa Ryu, a 34-year-old with a computer-science degree from Japans leading university, ditched his job in Tokyo and became a social entrepreneur. He oversees Babame Base, a business hub in an empty school in Gojome that hosts a graphic-design studio, an ecotourism outfit, a local doctor and a firm that trains farmers to use drones, among others.

Such urban migrants are still a relative rarity. Mr Yanagisawa admits his university friends find his lifestyle choices weird. But in many ways, they are the vanguard. Rather than trying to recreate the past, we have to think: what kind of community, what kind of town do we want now? says Mr Kudo. They are not the only outsiders moving in.

This article appeared in the Special report section of the print edition under the headline "The old country"

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LeBron is serious about playing with Bronny With health and a little bit of luck, that would be the ultimate thing. – Basketball Network

Youll never see LeBron James throw a half-court heave at halftime because the King did the math and didnt like the numbers. Over a long career like his, that could impact his overall FG%, and when chasing Michael Jordan, every data point matters. In almost every area you want to compare them in, MJ and LeBron have a case to be made. But theres one area LeBron is already obviously better, and its the one that he knows may swing the argument in his favor longevity.

Almost all the points in LeBrons favor will start with total total minutes played, total number of points, total number of assists, total Finals appearances, etc. James unbelievable longevity will be his calling card and path to GOAT status.

The King of PR, James also understands a lot of this is about narrative, and what would be a better pinnacle of his longevity narrative but to play on the same team as his son. As Bronny James continues to grow as a basketball player, and his dads still playing at a high level, the idea of them playing on the same team is looking more realistic by the day. Its very rare for LeBron to address something like this without any caveats, and that tells us this is a serious goal for James.

LeBron previously opened up about calling his son Bronny being one of his biggest mistakes in life. MJs sons can tell you a thing or two about the pressure of being kids of someone so successful. Giving your son your own name just added fuel to the fire. Thats why LeBron has been very reserved about this topic in the past.

Hes a dad first, and the most important thing was to let his kids find their own path in life. But as the reality of Bronny being a good player is becoming more apparent, and it seems hes not just doing it because we all expect LeBrons son to play ball, James allowed himself to daydream just a little bit.

Its not just the historic achievement thats fascinating. Every parents dream is to see their kid succeed and achieve something special. Making the NBA definitely is such a moment. But being there with them on the court? Its insane LeBron the dad might get that with Bronny.

Ok, so I mentioned LeBrons been evading father time as good as anyone at his level in history of the NBA (and possibly sports altogether). But the last few years are the first period where James has been injured more than in his entire career. LeBron hasnt played four consecutive games this season for the first time, we have proof hes human. So hows LeBron doing physically?

I feel decent physically. Im still getting back to where I was before the (initial abdominal strain).

It started with a pulled groin, and now hes been nursing an abdominal strain. Soft tissue injuries signal fatigue and a need to rest. That would mean that even though James invests millions into his body and is very disciplined about his lifestyle, he cant recover as well and as quickly as he did for almost 17 years.

If he is serious about playing with Bronny, well see a lot more DNPs on his log than before. You cant escape Father Time, only postpone his visit.

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Free Range Flower Winery blooms in Livermore | News | PleasantonWeekly.com | – Pleasanton Weekly

Nitoto said that last year she produced about 1,000 gallons of wine in her shipping container and with the increased capacity the new space allows for, her goal is to at least triple that amount.

Free Range Flower Winery will also have its first tasting room in the space, which will also be shared with Longevity.

Long originally founded Longevity Wines in 2008 with his wife Debra, who died of pancreatic cancer in 2019. He told the Weekly that the couple had previously vowed to never share space with another winery, but he said in his role as a mentor in the wine industry, he started to reconsider.

"I'm pretty responsive to anybody. I've had some great mentors along the way and I'm trying to reciprocate by doing the same," Long said.

Aaliyah Nitoto of Free Range Flower Winery and Phil Long of Longevity Wines. (Courtesy image)

He also said that he felt Nitoto was the right fit for this opportunity.

"I don't know if I would just offer this up to anybody. I've had offers before and turned them down," Long said. "I think part of it is that (Nitoto) is fun and she's really eager to learn and understand and progress, and being in the position that I am to help, I'm more than happy to at this point."

Long also noted that he doesn't feel like they are competing with each other because he makes grape wine and Nitoto makes flower wine.

Nitoto said she is excited for this next chapter in Livermore and grateful for Long's support.

"We're in this position that we haven't been in before where somebody is not only believing in us but also putting some weight behind it," she said, adding that she and her business partner had been in talks with other wineries throughout the years who said they supported her work but were not open to sharing their facilities.

While Nitoto said that she was still in the process of settling into the space and would likely not be fully open for several weeks, Free Range Flower Winery recently participated in a soft-opening of the shared tasting room to begin introducing their wines to their new community.

According to a post on the winery's Instagram, they will be taking reservations for Saturdays and some Sundays through Dec. 18.

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