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Saratoga Rallies Behind Tiz the Law Ahead of Travers Stakes

This Saturday, August 8, exactly one year after hometown hero Tiz the Law‘s first career win at Saratoga Race Course, the Sackatoga Stable-owned horse will try his luck in the Spa’s most important race: the Travers Stakes. But it seems he doesn’t really need luck: “Tiz the Law is a big favorite in this race,” says Brien Bouyea, communications director for the National Museum of Racing and Hall of Fame and Saratoga Living‘s sports editor. “He is 1-1 odds on the morning line and likely will go off even lower than that.”

The horse has been a celebrity in town since he became the first New York bred to win the Belmont Stakes since Forester in 1882. Fans can buy Tiz the Law gear to benefit the Backstretch Employee Service Team and the New York Race Track Chaplaincy, as well as Tiz the Law face masks, which Stewart’s Shops announced it would be selling on August 5. Saratogian Bob Giordano even affixed custom “Tiz the Law” signs to the stop signs near his house to spread cheer and support for the local horse during a depressing racing season; while the signs were removed only a few days later by the city, the Saratoga County Chamber of Commerce began using the hashtag #TizTheLaw on posters hung around the county to remind residents that wearing a mask and practicing social distancing “tiz the law.” The horse, along with Sackatoga Stable, Managing Partner Jack Knowlton, trainer Barclay Tagg, assistant trainer Robin Smullen and jockey Manny Franco, will also be honored with the Siro’s Cup Award at Pennell’s Restaurant on August 6.

In normal years, the Travers is a big deal—it’s the most important and historic race at Saratoga, one of the most important and historic race tracks in the country. But this year, despite fans not being allowed to attend (though that hasn’t proven to be a problem for the New York Racing Association, which reported a 9.4 percent increase over last year in all-sources handle for opening weekend) the Travers is even more important. For one, because the Triple Crown schedule was disrupted by the COVID-19 crisis, the Travers is the biggest race to run since the Belmont back in June, and is giving racing fans, who are used to having three Triple Crown races under their belts by August, a much-needed dose of heart-thumping excitement. But it’s also a qualifying race for the Kentucky Derby, meaning that the winner will automatically qualify for the Run for the Roses on September 4. (Regularly held later in August, the Travers was moved up to allow for more time between it and the Derby.) Tiz the Law’s Belmont win already earned him a spot in the Derby, and he’s the current favorite to win the race, but if he, (*gasp*) loses the Travers, he’ll gain a Derby adversary on Saturday.

The horse with the best chance of beating out Tiz, Bouyea says, is Bob Baffert’s Uncle Chuck. “He’s very talented, but has only raced twice (both wins). Baffert obviously thinks highly of him because he has made comments comparing him to Arrogate, the 2016 winner who owns the fastest time in Travers history.” Other horses to keep an eye on, Bouyea says, are the Chad Brown-trained Country Grammer, winner of the Peter Pan Stakes on opening day at Saratoga and third-place Belmont finisher Max Player, whose trainer, Linda Rice, is attempting to become the second woman to train a Travers winner.

Coverage of Saturday’s races will be aired in a special expanded broadcast beginning at 11:30am on FS2, and will be picked up by FS1 and MSG at 1pm. The Travers, which will go off at 6:15pm, will be the centerpiece of a 90-minute broadcast on Fox from 5-6:30pm. Tiz the Law fans are invited to watch the Travers Day races live with owners from Sackatoga Stable at The Diamond Club at Embassy Suites, hosted by Capital OTB handicapper Seth Merrow, and to tune into the Saratoga Springs Preservation Foundation’s virtual tour of Saratoga Race Course, featuring an exclusive interview with Jack Knowlton, on Facebook Live at 9:30am.

No one is as excited for Saturday’s race as Tiz the Law trainer Barclay Tagg, who nabbed his third Triple Crown victory when Tiz won the Belmont. (He trained the Sackatoga Stable-owned Funny Cide to victories in the Kentucky Derby and Preakness Stakes in 2003.) At 82, Tagg also became the oldest trainer to ever win the Belmont. But the Travers? “I’ve never won the Travers, and I want to win it,” Tagg told Saratoga Living back in June. “It’s very important to me.” If Tagg does it with Tiz the Law, it’s safe to say a Travers win is very important to the horse racing fans of Saratoga Springs, too.

Review: City of Saratoga Springs Monopoly

Most people like the idea of Monopoly more than the actual game itself. They like to make reference to Get Out of Jail Free cards and Monopoly money in conversation, but then complain about how the game “never ends” and always ruins family game night.

Part of the reason an 85-year-old game that everyone hates has stayed relevant in 2020 is because it is constantly being reinvented. In recent years, Hasbro has released editions of the game with countless themes, from Game of Thrones and Fortnite to Frozen 2 and Lion King. If you’re a GOT fan—even if you don’t like Monopoly—you have to have the GOT-themed game. Tack on the word “collector’s edition,” like Hasbro did for its Stranger Things edition, and fans of the show just can’t resist. All these special editions are not to mention the many variations of the original Monopoly game itself that have been released throughout the years, such as the Cheaters Edition, Monopoly Speed and the 85th anniversary edition. Hard-core Monopoly fans, like collector Neil Scallan, the Guinness World Record holder for the largest collection of Monopoly editions (he purchased his 2,00th game in 2017), buy up such games just to say they’ve played them.

If you haven’t noticed, I’m a fan myself, mostly because I actually do like the game; if played correctly and without “house rules” it really does come to an end sometime. I love the challenge of taking a handful of low-valued properties, making some good trade moves and, with a bit of luck, coming out on top. (The game’s real-world implications, however, in which one can only win when others go bankrupt, I’m less fond of.) But even I can’t resist a special edition game—in addition to the classic Monopoly, I also own Star Wars Monopoly (not my favorite) and National Parks Monopoly (as good as the original), and I grew up playing a knock-off game called Horse-Opoly, which wasn’t produced by Hasbro (fun anyway). So, when I saw that Adirondack Trust Company was promoting the release of a City of Saratoga Springs edition, I was all in.

In 2019, Adirondack Trust Company got approval from Hasbro to create the game as a fundraiser for its Community Fund, and thanks to support from local businesses, the Saratoga County Chamber of Commerce and the Cooley Group in Rochester, the game became available to the public earlier this summer. This was a first for the city—a game called Saratogaopoly has existed for years, but, like Horse-Opoly, it wasn’t created by Hasbro. Other cities, such as Las Vegas, London and New York City also have Hasbro-made Monopoly games.

Saratoga-themed Adirondack Trust Company Community Fund and Saratoga Sponsor-A-Scholar cards replace traditional chance and community chest cards in the City of Saratoga Springs Monopoly game.

By the time I got around to buying the game, Putnam Market was already sold out. (They were planning to get another shipment in a few days.) With the downtown Adirondack Trust office being closed (it was Sunday), I ran over to Impressions of Saratoga and found a stack right at the front of the store. It was $49.99. (For a full list of retailers carrying the game, click here. You can also purchase it online, but there’s an additional $15.99 shipping cost.)

The game comes with everything a traditional Monopoly game would come with, but with a Saratoga twist. The money is custom Adirondack Trust Company currency, the houses and hotels are called carriage houses and mansions and the tokens are Saratoga icons—a horse, Saratoga Springs City Hall, the Columbian Spring, a Pitney Meadows tractor, a Saratoga Battlefield Cannon and the Spit & Spat fountain. The board, which features a photo of the Spirit of Life fountain by local photographer Randall Perry, is also custom: Four local hotels replace the traditional railroads, Saratoga Water Services Inc. replaces Water Works and Saratoga County Chamber of Commerce membership fees replaces Luxury Tax.

The order of the properties, which are replaced with Saratoga businesses such as Druthers and Skidmore College, is my one small complaint about the game. While I thought it was fitting that Saratoga Race Course and Saratoga Performing Arts Center took the place of Boardwalk and Park Place, I didn’t think the overall order of the properties was necessarily fitting. For one, Stewart’s Shops, a regional behemoth with more than 300 stores, was one of the pink properties, valued at only $140, while Sunnyside Gardens was one of the yellow properties valued at $260. Saratoga Hospital is one of the brown properties, worth a mere $60.

Besides that, the game was a blast. Usually, I don’t pay attention to what the Community Chest and Chance cards say—I just skip to the bottom to see if I collect $200 (the best card) or have to pay $40 per house and $115 per hotel (the worst card, if you’ve already developed your properties). But in this game, I read every single “Adirondack Trust Company Community Fund” and “Saratoga Sponsor-A-Scholar” card out loud, because they all have to do with Saratoga. A few of my favorites are “You got caught chasing ducks around Congress Park. Pay $100.” and “You bought a round of Oboys. Collect $10 from every player.”

So, whether you like Monopoly or not, if you’re a Saratogian, I’d suggest you get in on America’s favorite—or is it least favorite?—board game.

Oscar’s Smokehouse Unveils New Bacon Vending Machine

Move aside, candy bars and soft drinks—there’s a new type of vending machine in town. Oscar’s Smokehouse, a family-owned, regionally known, specialty meat and cheese store in Warrensburg, has unveiled a new, refrigerated vending machine where customers can pick up their bacon, cheese, sausage, pancake mix and more with the swipe of a credit card and the push of a button, 24/7.

It all started when New York State contacted Oscar’s to sell its products in a vending machine full of locally made goods outside the state-operated welcome center on I-87 between Exits 17 and 18. “We were a little bit hesitant because we had never seen meats or anything like that in a vending machine, so we tried it and it’s actually gone very well,” says Oscar’s General Manager Jerald “Joq” Quintal. “Because of that, and because we reduced our hours—we’ve got a lot of people who come here before we’re open at 8 o’clock and after we’re closed at 5 o’clock—we figured it’d be a convenient way for people to get our products.”

The vending machine is convenient for customers who shop during regular business hours too: If the shop is busy, or if customers are still wary about going into stores due to COVID-19, they can head straight to the vending machine, where the prices are almost identical to those in the store, to avoid the crowds.

Since it’s unveiling on August 3, the machine has caused quite the stir in the community. A post to the Oscar’s Facebook page had more than 1,600 likes as of Tuesday afternoon, and Quintal says customers were already using it after hours on Monday. “I’ve already had four business owners who have said, ‘Put my name on my list when you guys start to do these throughout the Capital District—I want one outside of my business, I want one outside of my campground,'” he says.

Spreading bacon vending machines far and wide isn’t necessarily part of the plan, but Quintal says that maybe, sometime in the future, additional machines could work outside of some of the smokehouse’s large wholesalers. In the meantime, you can make the drive up to Warrensburg, or buy Oscar’s products at Lakeside Farms in Ballston Lake and Sander’s Meat Market in Ballston Spa.

Saratoga Chocolate Co. Opens Flagship Store in Saratoga Marketplace

Looking for something to satisfy your sweet tooth? Now you can stock up on decadent chocolate treats at Saratoga Chocolate Co.‘s new flagship store located in the Saratoga Marketplace.

The artisan chocolate company, started by Allison Rose and her husband, Henry, in 2016, opened the doors to its first brick-and-mortar location on the lower level of the Marketplace, (which recently reopened after renovations) last Friday, July 31, after a four-month delay due to the pandemic. The new shop offers a wide array of chocolate confections, from handmade gourmet chocolate bars and seasonal truffles to chocolate beverages and cacao superfoods.

Saratoga Chocolate Co. has been a hit at regional farmer’s markets for nearly five years now, and is available at more than 80 retail locations from the Adirondacks to the Hudson Valley. In addition to classic bars and bark, the company also creates gift baskets and custom treats for holidays and events. The opening of the brick-and-mortar store will allow the company to expand its offerings to include new flavors and creations in addition to popular favorites.

“We are thrilled to launch our flagship store at the Saratoga Marketplace,” said Allison and Henry in a statement. “We are so encouraged by the community support we received from our customers during this unprecedented time. It is that support that has given us the confidence to launch our business into this next phase of retail, rooted in downtown Saratoga Springs.”

Mark Straus, the owner of the Marketplace building at 454 Broadway, also expressed his enthusiasm for the new store, saying, “We are thrilled for Saratoga Chocolate Co. to join the Saratoga Marketplace family. We are a group of thoughtfully curated and well appointed shops that compliment each other’s offerings with a wide range of products for the discerning shopper.”

The new store is open Thursday-Sunday weekly for in-store shopping as well as store or curbside pickup.

Glens Falls Art Museum The Hyde Collection Set to Reopen on August 1

Some exciting news for art enthusiasts: Glens Falls art museum, The Hyde Collection, is reopening to the public this Saturday, August 1, after an extended closure due to the COVID-19 pandemic. Guests will be able to explore two new exhibitions, in addition to The Hyde’s permanent collection, and the museum has put in place a number of new safety protocols to put visitors at ease.

In order to limit the number of people in the museum at one time, visits to the museum will be by appointment only, and must be booked prior to arrival at the museum via The Hyde’s website. Time slots will be assigned in 10-minute intervals to ensure sufficient distance between groups of museum-goers, with only four guests allowed per time slot. Mornings from 10am-12pm will be reserved for seniors and those at high risk, and the museum will close for cleaning from 12pm-1pm before reopening to the general public.

“We’re very excited to be open again and to be sharing The Hyde Collection with the community,” says Hyde CEO Norman Dascher. “We are opening two new exhibitions—the J. S. Wooley, Adirondack Photographer and Images of the People: Russian Lacquer Painting exhibitions—both of which I think the public will enjoy a great deal. We spent a lot of time and effort getting ready for the opening, making sure that our visitors as well as our staff are safe.”

Upon arrival at the museum, visitors are encouraged to download The Hyde’s self-guided tour app, which will provide information about the artwork to them in lieu of a live tour guide. The floor has been marked to create an easy-to-follow route through as the museum, with added markers reminding guests to stay six feet apart while viewing the artwork.

In a show of support for those on the front lines of the COVID-19 pandemic, The Hyde will be offering free admission to all essential workers during the month of August. Reservations are expected fill up quickly, so make one soon—and don’t forget your mask!

Saratogian Bridie Farrell Files Civil Suit Against Alleged Sexual Abuser

For Saratogian Bridie Farrell, today marks another new beginning. Farrell, who had her sights set on speedskating for the US national team and eventually in the Olympic Games at the tender age of 15, only to have her dreams shattered when an Olympic speedskater more than twice her age allegedly sexually abused her in Saratoga Springs over a seven-month period, has today (July 30) filed a civil lawsuit in New York State Supreme Court against him, as well as the US Olympic and Paralympic Committee and US Speedskating. (Read more about the lawsuit here.)

Farrell, who is the co-founder, president and CEO of America Loves Kids (formerly NY Loves Kids), a nonprofit organization that advocates for child sexual abuse victims across the country, publicly outed her alleged abuser, four-time Olympian Andy Gabel, in 2013, some 15 years after the abuse took place. At the time, it caused a crush of media coverage, including reports on ESPN and later, an in-depth feature in Marie Claire. Four years later, she would co-found America Loves Kids, and since then, Farrell’s lobbied hard to see child sexual abuse laws passed on the state level, her initial focus being in her home state. That initial fight came to fruition on February 14, 2019, when New York Governor Andrew Cuomo signed New York’s Child Victims Act (CVA) into law. She’s also advocated for the passage of similar laws in New Jersey, California and Arizona; and that list has grown to include Louisiana, Colorado, Pennsylvania and Maryland (though COVID has largely ground the process to a halt).

Remarkably, Farrell was able to file today’s civil suit because of the passage of New York’s CVA, the very law she fought so tirelessly to get passed in the first place. “This is definitely something I’ve been working on for the last year,” says Farrell. “Ultimately, what [I’m hoping to] get out of it is to change the system; I’ve been asking [the defendants] to make changes and clean things up for seven years, and it hasn’t happened.” When Cuomo signed the CVA into law in February 2019, it immediately changed the statute of limitations for future cases filed by child sexual abuse victims ages 28 for criminal suits and 55 for civil suits. (Hence, for example, the flurry of suits filed against various Catholic Diocese across the state in the last year.) In addition, a look-back window was enacted on August 14, 2019, allowing all sexual abuse survivors previously time-barred by the prior statute of limitations, to file new civil cases, regardless of their age for a period of one year. That was what allowed Farrell to ultimately file her complaint.

Obviously, the COVID-19 crisis, which brought everything in the state to a standstill for the past four months, threw a wrench into the process, making things considerably more complicated for those survivors seeking to file new suits and try existing ones in courtrooms. “The problem is that the courts closed, so people that wanted to file Child Victims Act cases were unable to for a period of time,” explains Farrell. “Then the courts did open, but people were still trying to figure out how to actually live and manage through the crisis, which unfolded [most drastically] in New York State. Even though the courts may have opened online, I think that a lot of people were still in triage mode about how to live their lives and do their jobs and raise their kids.”

To that end, Cuomo first extended the look-back window to January 14, 2021. Since then, the New York State Assembly and Senate have passed a bill, which is still awaiting Cuomo’s signature, to tack another full year, so that child sexual abuse survivors would have until August 14, 2021 to file new suits.

More than 1,000 new child sexual abuse lawsuits have been filed in New York following the CVA’s passage last August.

Opera Saratoga to Host Virtual ‘Pajama Party’ Gala

Grab your eyepatch and blankie and tune in to Opera Saratoga’s first-ever Virtual Gala, “The Pirates’ Pajama Party and Treasure Hunt,” which takes place at 7:30pm on August 13. The event is being held in place of its Opera on the Lake gala, which was canceled due to ongoing COVID-19 concerns.

As its name suggests, the virtual gala will feature pirate-themed music and special performances, as well as an interactive treasure hunt with prizes. Attendees will receive a “Pirate Booty Kit” a week prior to the event, complete with treasure hunt clues and pirate accessories, and can tune in the day of from any device with a camera and Internet access. Gala organizers encourage comfortable attire, whether that’s pajamas or of course, pirate garb, adding, “Pajamas are optional…clothing is not!”

Opera Saratoga’s annual summer Gala is the organization’s most important fundraiser, providing funding for community and education programs, including Saratoga Sings for Seniors; Opera-to-go, which is for elementary school–aged children; and the nationally acclaimed Young Artist Program. This year’s reimagined Gala will also honor Opera Saratoga’s Director of the Young Artist Program, Laurie Rogers, on her 10th anniversary as director.

“In re-envisioning our gala to take place online, we wanted to make sure that we could create an event that would be more than another online concert,” says Lawrence Edelson, Opera Saratoga’s artistic and general director. “Of course there will be music. but this is a real party—an opportunity to ‘mingle’ online with friends and fellow music lovers, to solve a mystery together, and to have fun—all while supporting the year-round work Opera Saratoga does to enrich the region.”

Tickets for the event can be purchased on Opera Saratoga’s website for $100 per person or $250 for Honorary Committee members, who will receive exclusive access to auction items and additional treasure hunt clues, as well as special recognition prior to and during the event.

Marylou Whitney’s 36,000-Acre Adirondacks Estate on Sale for $180 Million

If you’ve been bidding on some of the treasures from the late Marylou Whitney‘s personal collection, why not add one of her largest, most famous estates to the mix? According to the Wall Street Journal, the late Queen of Saratoga’s fabled estate, Whitney Park, a 36,000-acre tract of land, near Long Lake, NY, is hitting the real estate market for $180 million.

Selling the property is Whitney’s widower, John Hendrickson, who inherited the massive property in the Adirondacks when Whitney died last July. “We’ve been very good stewards of the land and we want the next owner to be the same,” Hendrickson told the Journal.

The main house, set back from an eight-mile-long driveway, is known as Deerlands, and features a staggering 17 bedrooms and 11 bathrooms, along with a guesthouse, office and staff quarters. Sitting on Little Forked Lake, the house also includes a two-story boathouse, which will come complete with a collection of early 19th-century Adirondack guide boats and 25 canoes.

Additionally, the greater estate includes its own timber operation, early 19th-century trapper’s cabin and 22 separate lakes.

And a special announcement to all you window-shoppers out there: If you’re looking for a real estate agent’s link, there won’t be one; Hendrickson tells the Journal that he’s planning on marketing the property himself. Thankfully, Saratoga Living was able to get several shots of the property. Click on the gallery above to take a look at some of the highlights of the property.

What It’s Like Returning to Skidmore as a Senior During the COVID-19 Crisis (Opinion)

How schools are planning to reopen this fall has been a hot-button issue of late, whether you’re a parent waiting on guidelines for your child’s return to elementary school, a high school student worried about when you’ll be able to take the SATs or a college senior wondering what your final two semesters will look like. As a rising senior at Skidmore College, I fit into the third category—and it’s been on my mind a lot.

Back on July 2, Skidmore’s new president, Marc C. Conner, unveiled the college’s reopening plan, telling students that they would be able to return to campus for the fall semester on August 24, but would then have to leave by November 20, just before Thanksgiving, at which point they’d finish up final exams remotely. Although it may seem a little strange to invite students back only to send them away again three months later, it’s not so out of the ordinary; the decision to have a shortened, in-person semester followed by a few weeks of remote learning is actually in line with what other area colleges, including The College of Saint Rose and Russell Sage College, are doing. About a third of Skidmore classes will be taught fully online, too, and the other two-thirds will be taught either in person or with a mix of in-person and virtual instruction. This, too, is in line with decisions made by other regional and national colleges.

Honestly, though, I am pretty shocked to hear that we are going back to Skidmore at all. On the one hand, I am excited, because I get to be on campus for my senior year. On the other hand, Skidmore’s plan raises all types of questions, the most important of which is concerning safety: What measures will it have in place to keep students, faculty and staff members safe while they’re back on campus? Quite a bit of that was covered in the college’s fall plan, which states that all students will more than likely have to be tested for COVID-19 prior to their return to campus, and will also need to self-monitor for COVID symptoms. (How the latter will be monitored is a completely different question.) Spaces in residence halls will be reserved for any student who is placed under quarantine while residing in campus-provided housing, and the college is looking into placing students in local hotels to ensure that no more than two students are housed per room. Skidmore will also be partnering with the Massachusetts Institute of Technology’s Broad Institute to offer COVID-19 testing through its health services department.

Having students back on campus and making sure that they’re safe is one thing, but what about in-person classes, where students and professors are potentially closer together? Per the college’s plan, Skidmore will put in place a number of COVID safety measures for in-person classes, including social distancing, mandatory PPE, deep-cleaning of all rooms and even plexiglass dividers in certain situations. “It’s going to be weird with the plexiglass dividers, everyone having to wear masks and social distancing,” says senior education studies major Kyle Cassarino, “but I think faculty members are going to work hard to give students the best teaching [experience] at Skidmore, despite the circumstances.” I agree; in-person classes are going to feel unconventional, but the safety measures are necessary to make students and professors feel comfortable in that environment. I also concur that professors are going to be working extra hard to make adjustments to this “new normal.” I know of some professors who have gone the extra mile and taken online workshops on remote instruction to prepare for at least another semester of virtual learning. Newly appointed Chair of the English Department Barbara Black, whom I’ll be taking an English class from in the fall, says it’s been challenging trying to figure out how she will be able to teach her class this semester. “I want my class to work for students who are here on campus and those who are learning remotely,” Black says. “It came down to a matter of access for me.” Skidmore’s reopening plan states that the college will work to accommodate those students who are unable or unwilling to return to campus in person come August 24; the class I’m taking with Professor Black, called “The Wild(e) Nineties,” will be a “hyflex” class, meaning that it will not only be available to in-person students like me, but also those that choose to remain at home for the semester. As chair, Professor Black has even laid some groundwork prior to the semester, reaching out to English majors and minors multiple times to check in. “I felt the need to connect with others,” she says. “Our students have been so kind in their response. They appreciate the effort.”

While the last few months have been stressful for all college students, it’s been particularly so for international students, who have faced even more obstacles regarding returning to college in the fall. On July 6, the Trump administration announced a rule that would have required international students studying in the US to return home if their classes were taught entirely online. The rule was rescinded the following week, following backlash from colleges and universities across the country, but not before international students had a real scare about what the next few months might hold. “It’s been a rollercoaster of emotions,” says senior Sanjna Selva, a Skidmore student from Malaysia, who is studying international affairs and minoring in documentary film. “It’s definitely taken a toll on my mental health.” After the Trump administration’s initial July 6 announcement, Selva says international students petitioned and sent emails to the Skidmore administration, and in return, they were given overwhelming support from the faculty and administration, who immediately began troubleshooting how to best protect  students and their visas. On July 10, the administration even released a statement of support for the college’s international students.

College is often described as the best four years of your life, and going into my senior year, I can say that it has been a unique experience. While the pandemic has certainly been a roadblock in many ways, it hasn’t been the end of the road for me. I look forward to making the most out of my final year at Skidmore, mask and all.

Skidmore Graduate Nathan Barr Receives Three Emmy Nominations

Don’t ever let them tell you that a music degree equals burger-flipping. Skidmore graduate Nathan Barr, who studied English and music at the college (and had the cello lesson right before mine with former college teacher Ann Alton), has been nominated for three Primetime Emmy Awards.

According to Variety, Barr has the most nominations of any composer in the music categories, including nominations for Outstanding Original Main Title Theme Music for Netflix’s Hollywood and Amazon’s Carnival Row. Just as in 2013, when he made history as the first composer in history to be double-nominated in the Outstanding Original Main Title Theme category, Barr will be up against himself in the category, facing off with four other formidable players such as The RZA from the Wu-Tang Clan for his title theme for Hulu’s Wu-Tang: An American Saga.

Barr’s third nomination comes in the Outstanding Music Composition For A Limited Series, Movie Or Special (Original Dramatic Score) category, also for his work on Netflix’s Hollywood.

After graduating from Skidmore in 1995, Barr went on to apprentice under Hollywood composer Hans Zimmer, who won an Oscar that year for his score of the Lion King; and has since scored a number of popular movies and TV shows, including horror movie Cabin Fever (2002), HBO’s True Blood (2008) and FX’s The Americans (2013).