Fenway Park is a baseball park near Kenmore Square in Boston, Massachusetts. Located at 4 Yawkey Way, it has served as the home ballpark of the Boston Red Sox baseball club since it opened in 1912 and is the oldest Major League Baseball stadium currently in use. It is one of two "classic" Major League ballparks still in use, the other being Chicago's Wrigley Field and it is considered to be one of the best-known sports venues in the United States.
Because of the ballpark's age and constrained location in the dense Fenway–Kenmore neighborhood, the park has had many renovations and additions over the years not initially envisioned, resulting in unique, quirky features, including "The Triangle," "Pesky's Pole", and most notably the famous Green Monster in left field. The Red Sox have sold out every home game since May 15, 2003; in 2008, the park sold out its 456th consecutive Red Sox game, breaking a Major League Baseball record. Fans who attended this game received gifts to celebrate this accomplishment. As of April 17, 2012, the Red Sox have had 717 consecutive sellouts, which is the longest such streak in Major League Baseball history. The sellout streak is aided by the Red Sox's fan base, the success of the Red Sox during this time (a winning record all nine seasons, during which time the team achieved at least 90 wins seven times, six playoff appearance and two World Series Championships), as well as the fact that, as of 2012, Fenway Park has the fourth lowest seating capacity and second lowest total capacity of any MLB stadium; it is one of the seven MLB ballparks that cannot accommodate at least 40,000 spectators.
Derek Sanderson Jeter ( /ˈdʒiːtər/; born June 26, 1974) is an American baseball shortstop who has played 18 seasons in Major League Baseball (MLB) for the New York Yankees. A five-time World Series champion, Jeter has been a central figure of the Yankees during their success of the 1990s and 2000s due to his clubhouse presence, on-field leadership, hitting ability, and baserunning. He is the Yankees' all-time career leader in hits (3,155), games played (2,472), stolen bases (342), and at bats (10,066). His accolades include twelve All-Star selections, five Gold Glove Awards, four Silver Slugger Awards, two Hank Aaron Awards, and the Roberto Clemente Award. Jeter is the all-time MLB leader in hits by a shortstop, and the 28th player to reach 3,000 hits.
The Yankees drafted Jeter out of high school in 1992, and he debuted in the major leagues in 1995. The following year, he became the Yankees' starting shortstop, won the Rookie of the Year Award, and helped the team win the 1996 World Series. Jeter continued to contribute during the team's championship seasons of 1998–2000; he finished third in voting for the American League (AL) Most Valuable Player (MVP) Award in 1998, recorded multiple career-high numbers in 1999, and won both the All-Star Game MVP and World Series MVP Awards in 2000. He has consistently placed among the AL leaders in hits and runs scored for the past ten years, and since 2003 has served as the Yankees' team captain.
Steven Tyler (born Steven Victor Tallaricco; March 26, 1948) is an American singer, songwriter, and multi-instrumentalist, best known as the frontman and lead singer of the Boston-based rock band Aerosmith, in which he also plays the harmonica, and occasional piano and percussion. He is known as the "Demon of Screamin'" due to his high screams and his wide vocal range. He is also known for his on-stage acrobatics. During his high-energy performances, he usually dresses in bright, colorful outfits with his trademark scarves hanging from his microphone stand. In the 1970s, Tyler rose to prominence as the frontman of Aerosmith, which released such milestone hard rock albums as Toys in the Attic and Rocks. In the late 1970s and early 1980s, Tyler had a heavy drug and alcohol addiction, and the band's popularity waned.
He completed drug rehabilitation in 1986 and subsequently maintained sobriety for years, but had a relapse with prescription painkillers in the late 2000s, for which he successfully received treatment in 2009. After Aerosmith launched a remarkable comeback in the late 1980s and early 1990s with the albums Permanent Vacation, Pump, and Get a Grip, Tyler became a household name and has remained a relevant rock icon. As a result, he has since embarked on several solo endeavors including guest appearances on other artists' music, film and TV roles (including as a judge on American Idol), authoring a bestselling book, and solo work (including a Top 40 hit single in 2011). However, he has continued to record music and perform with Aerosmith, after more than 41 years in the band. He is included among Rolling Stone's 100 Greatest Singers. He was also ranked 3rd on Hit Parader's Top 100 Metal Vocalists of All Time. In 2001 he was inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame with Aerosmith, and he was the presenter when AC/DC was inducted into the Hall of Fame in 2003.
Plot
When the new Warden comes in disguised as an inmate, he sees first hand all the corruption and scams the guards and prison officials and running. When he reveals himself, and starts to implement reforms to stop the corruption, the local business community, who had been benefiting from the scams, fights back, and the corrupt southern prison system, starts making political trouble for the new warden.
Keywords: abuse, abuse-of-power, bare-butt, based-on-book, based-on-true-story, beating, brutality, cat, character-name-in-title, corporal-punishment
The most wanted man in Wakefield prison is the warden!
One man against a cruel system.
Lillian Gray: You can't reform the system if you're not in it.
Henry Brubaker: I don't see playing politics with the truth.
Henry Brubaker: That's murder they're talking about in there. And if they condone it, how are you gonna turn around and tell these guys why they're locked up?
Richard 'Dickie' Coombes: What you gon' do about Abraham?::Henry Brubaker: I've got Purcell filling out forms in triplicate, and I'm going to get him released just as soon as I-::Richard 'Dickie' Coombes: Now why do you wanna go and do that?::Henry Brubaker: Do what?::Richard 'Dickie' Coombes: Look, why don't you just leave him be. I mean, all he knows is this place.::Henry Brubaker: You - You knew that he had been in here as long as he'd been in here.::Richard 'Dickie' Coombes: Just leave him alone. He's not- He's not botherin' nobody here.::Henry Brubaker: Hey... You can't hide in prison forever, Coombes.
Huey Rauch: Sanitation detail. You too, Bullen!::Richard 'Dickie' Coombes: Now, wait a minute. This man's hurt.::Huey Rauch: You just deal with colored - I'll take care of the white folks. 'Sides, I don't think Bullen's got much more'n refried shit for brains this morning.
Henry Brubaker: Hey. Can we talk?::Walter: Who the fuck are you? I want the man!::Henry Brubaker: I am. I am the man. I'm the new warden here. My name's Henry Brubaker.::Walter: [throws Bullen and advances on Brubaker] Man, don't be fucking with my head. 'New warden' my ass!::Henry Brubaker: It's true - I swear it.::Walter: Then how come you look like a scumbag?::Henry Brubaker: 'Cause I'm fooling those guys out there.
Henry Brubaker: Mess with me now; you're gonna regret it later.::Richard 'Dickie' Coombes: We don't work this thing out fast, mister, you're not gonna be around later.::Henry Brubaker: Do you want ID?::Richard 'Dickie' Coombes: Listen, man. All I have to do is raise my right hand and that tower guard's gonna blow you out.::Henry Brubaker: ...or you can continue walking with me, like the smart escort I figure you to be.
Larry Lee Bullen: I got picked up for vagrancy - a misdemeanor. Next morning, the toilet's broke clean off the damn wall. There's six men in the cell, and they stick me with destruction of city property over $50. Felony number three.::Henry Brubaker: Habitual. That judge gives you life for a toilet.::Larry Lee Bullen: Yeah, or give me the toilet for life. Same difference. Anyhow; here I am shoveling shit for dead men.::Henry Brubaker: Instead, how'd you like to be a trustee, and run my motorpool?::Larry Lee Bullen: Mr. Brubaker, I've been studying you since you first come in. And it's come clear to me that you are one weird fucking individual. I ain't got you figgered out yet - whether you're a good thing or a bad one.::Henry Brubaker: Does that mean you'll run my motorpool?::Larry Lee Bullen: [whistles] Wear them khakis? Get me a guitar? Be the warden's new boy?::Henry Brubaker: No, you're smarter than that.::Larry Lee Bullen: The whole world's fucked up, Mr. Brubaker. Ain't no use.
Henry Brubaker: Tower number 3 - who'm I looking at? He's looking at me.::Richard 'Dickie' Coombes: Up there, you got Douglass Mizell.::Henry Brubaker: Who the hell is Doug Mizell?::Richard 'Dickie' Coombes: He's a forger. Three times grand theft.::Henry Brubaker: I want a rundown on everybody that's got tower duty. I-::Richard 'Dickie' Coombes: I do believe that's Purcell's job, sir.::Henry Brubaker: I want only murderers up there; one-time impulse killers.::Richard 'Dickie' Coombes: Well, aren't you taking kind of a chance doing that? Aren't you? I mean, uh...::Henry Brubaker: No, it's the habituals you can't trust. Murderers - most of 'em - already have it out of their system. Guys like you, right?::Richard 'Dickie' Coombes: [laughs] There's nobody around here like me.
Zaranska: Let's just take a little bit off around the ears. [hands barber $2]::Barber: Costs five to get you no haircut now, Zaranska. Two only gets you a crew-cut.::Zaranska: Fuck, I could use this on a bed.::Barber: It'll all come off then. Maybe an ear with it.::Barber: [later] What's it be, my man?::Henry Brubaker: [hands barber $5] Leave the ears.