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Everything posted by That Aud Smell
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It is interesting. In terms of business model, this is indicative of more slashing, though. TBN is moving to newbies and free lancers.
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Right. And I probably should have added: Capable talent evaluators on the offensive side of the ball.
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This is a huge concern. Of course, the reality is that if you don't have an offensively-gifted coach like Reid, a talent like Mahomes may not become anything.
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it's only been a few posts, but this fake inkman thing is dumb and annoying.
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Ah. Fair point. He seems good.
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Nothing. Absolutely nothing.
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I'll have to go and listen. In his defence (not sure why I'm offering it), it could be very, very tricky to find the right tone given his role and team's performance. Maybe he is actually shell-shocked, but he could also be struggling to figure how best to talk about what's going on (from an optics perspective). It's a complete and total mystery to me what they had in mind on the offensive side of the ball. I mean, on D, at least they drafted a young stud and made some FA moves (bad ones, it would appear). But on offence -- what the actual fook? It's possible that that might be the worst offensive unit in the history of the non-strike NFL. McCoy at 30 years of age might save them from that judgment. Unless, of course, the plan was to soft-tank.
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There’s gotta be some slight difference in the name, yeah? Otherwise.... how? edit: When I “search” for members, only real inky comes up. Faux inkman’s profile doesn’t pop up.
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Yeah - you gotta watch it. I had to digest it in chunks, it was so bad. Bizarre.
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I’m not withholding anything. My thoughts are incomplete and disorganized. I think McDermott is a good and honourable man with good intentions. I do not in any way mean to imply that he’s some raving racist. No way. But there’s something about the wrestling, the faith stuff, the ever present camo hat, the persona, the *process*. And like I said to Flagg: I’m not theorizing that there’s some big secret. People are complicated. And multi faceted. Ambiguity abounds. I think that there are some specific non-football considerations that McDermott brings to bear in personnel matters. I’m not exactly sure what they are. But they lead to a place where Pat DiMarco is a captain on offence.
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Does it makes as much if not maybe a little more sense *with* a whiff? I think it might. And I’m not guessing at a horrifying revelation. I’m wondering whether those ... factors are squarely in the mix, consciously or otherwise. I suspect they are.
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Soon enough, the brands that you wear, the national chain restaurants you patronize, the car that you drive, etc. will pronounce to the world who and what you are. I realize this is already true to some extent. But I think the lines are going to become much clearer -- and the corporations themselves are going to facilitate the process of branding themselves in alignment with certain segments of society.
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You really need that much more with regard to Peterman? Sheesh. Okay, though. Another name comes to mind: DiMarco. I watched Embedded. He is a darling of McDermott's. I read that he was the team's top-paid FA acquisition on the offence's side of the ball (can that be right? was he on the team last year?). Anyway. I saw a Tweet that he played ONE snap on offence yesterday. ONE. What is it about DiMarco that McDermott clearly finds so valuable? Literally went and Googled for this: ""Len's been awesome. He's a mentor. He's a spiritual leader, not just for games, but in the locker room," fullback Patrick DiMarco said. "He's in here a good bit talking with guys. He's also been ears to listen sometimes when we need to get something off our chest. ... This is the most proactive chaplain I've had from a team standpoint. For Bible study we have at least 15 or 20 guys, and chapel it's more than 30."
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And of course all of that is correct, too. And yet, this regime has shown a willingness, a readiness to look beyond similar (or worse) failings or limitations with other players.
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That's another part of what I was getting at with Taylor, and I appreciate your identifying it (where I failed). Taylor seemed to check every box with this FO, and yet ... something didn't fit or click. Was it his penchant for high-fashion outfits that did it?
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I infer that Nevada's tax code played a role.
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Lol at the Penguin prospect coming into the frame/play on his knees. https://twitter.com/BuffaloSabres/status/1039205815171702784
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Appreciate that. My thoughts are really half-baked at this point. Lotulelei and Tolbert are other examples. Obviously, they fit into an obvious "those are their guys" assessment. But I think there's maybe something else, or maybe something specific, with what Beane/McDermott value and prize in those guys. I have no idea what those things might be. This may be a roundabout way of simply saying they have poor, flawed criteria for personnel selection. It's the specific manner in which the criteria are poor or flawed that interests me, though. Because I think they could be going about their fukkery in a uniquely bad way. Could be. I'm not sure.
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The national political parties have long been trending towards extremes to mobilize their base(s) and energize the electorate. I think it's a fair point that the Democrats were on the leading edge of this tactic (identity politics, I guess?), and that Trump's GOP reflects the right making its own move within the culture wars. Talking head pundits from differing political alignments appear on TV and mostly yell at each other, or make faces of disbelief and disgust. So, our political leaders have been fanning the flames of division for a while now, with the hope that the result will be their party taking a seat, a majority, what have you. When the Nike ad campaign came on line, it really stopped me in my tracks. I'd long assumed that for-profit ventures, like Nike, would prefer to stay out of the culture war fray. Because they want everyone's money. This was played out in a microcosm when Deep South Taco in Buffalo got into a political p1ssing match on social media about a year ago or so (for supporting Sheriff Tim Howard). My wife was encouraged when Nike's online sales jumped 30% or whatever. Because, ostensibly, this means that there's some majority of the country (or maybe just active consumers?) who support the political position Nike staked out. But I found myself despairing. I have all sorts of family members who've been posting all sorts of take-downs of Nike, Kaep, etc. on their social media feeds. I've muted most of them. But I love them all. I love them all (or at least try mightily to love them) because they're my family. I have an in-law whose politics are really backward and fairly repugnant. But there are many ties that bind the two of us. I prefer to focus on the ties that bind, rather than the forces that serve to separate and divide. But now that Capital has arrived, now that the Markets are in the mix, I don't think the situation stands much hope. The country will be divided, irrevocably. I think that Artificial Intelligence will soon play a role in this, too. Augmented reality devices will allow us to avoid, and never meet or interact with, people with whom we disagree.
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That's not the point that I, or anyone as far as I know, is making. I appreciate that. My antenna are back up for Beane/McDermott trying to find, draft, recruit players based on certain ... call it non-football criteria. And I'm not saying that a player's race or ethnicity plays a role in those criteria. It could, subconsciously I guess, but I don't think that would have to be the case for the hypothesis to have some validity. The Trent Murphy situation was the one that really got me thinking about it.
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Nice work by Asplund on that first goal.