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I'm not afraid to speak or write what I feel, but I don't know that I'd ever be able to write a thousand-word blog post that says, in essence, "Hey Tim! Fuck you!"
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Yes
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Hi, devout religious single people! Did you know your dating site is owned by the same company as Penthouse magazine? Good Christian values!
Page 48 of 128
Reuters: Blockbuster CEO open to partnerships with telecoms. “As we move toward video-on-demand and pay-per-view, Blockbuster is well positioned not only to compete on our own, but also to partner with others,” said CEO Jim Keyes.
Not mentioned in this news bulletin is that Blockbuster was a smart but failed early innovator in this space. Your host pilot tested a Blockbuster-Enron VOD partnership back in 2001, when high-speed connections and video compression were not ready for mass consumption. Perhaps this time around Blockbuster will fare better.
I will also note here that due to Time Warner Cable’s less-than-robust bandwidth in my area, and its less-than-robust widescreen VOD offerings, I still go to Blockbuster and rent DVDs when I want to see a movie at home.
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This is pretty significant: Apple reports every track in the iTunes Music Store will be DRM-free, and many available in 256k-quality downloads, by March. Incredible progress
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Meet Senator Comedian, representing the state that once elected Governor Pro Wrestler
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Nice article on ecommerce redesign strategies in the latest IR, including a couple of quotes from me
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It's true: a well-struck golf ball can harm your ears. Tinnitus sufferers (like myself) and the hard-of-hearing should be careful. See also: http://www.sportsfilter.com/news/12710/playing-golf-may-damage-your-hearing#221909
Ten-letter words!
Sastrugi
Curvetting
Hagrides
Alforja
Tegular
Queerling
Solonetzic
Atopies
Errhines
Rhamnose
Gisarme
Outhearing
Overholy
Actinas
Stereoed
Pliskies
Grecized
Deforces
Isologue
Markhors
Two days into January and I’ve already got six words on my list. Either the computer is getting more ridiculous or I’m playing too much.
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I love Consumers Union (and Consumer Reports) and I appreciate Consumerist, but I have a hard time reconciling these two under the same umbrella
I was never much of a physical force growing up. Slowest in the 440 at school, always a few pounds overweight, I was more of a thinker, and made my way by being clever and omniscient, not all-powerful.
Which is why sometimes it’s hard for me to root for the New York Yankees. I get tired of seeing them outspend the league, overspend on players, and basically pummel the free agent market into submission every winter. Defending my team’s actions is tiresome, particularly since I don’t always agree with the maneuvers, despite being a loyal fan for 30 years.
More importantly, where has it gotten them? The most-expensive-ever Yankees of this season are the first in 13 years to miss the playoffs. The Yanks of the late 1990s achieved four World Series championships in five years with a foundation of homegrown talent. Since then the Yankees have proved (like the Orioles did a decade earlier) that a team can’t simply buy a championship.
The Yanks are determined to try, which is fine. But what particularly galls me is the level of disparity. Their 2008 payroll was 51% higher than the second-highest team and 140% more than the league average. I don’t exactly dislike the Yanees’ ability to spend, but come on. The system is surely broken that their budget can be $209 million when the average team is spending $90 million.
Major League Baseball needs to reconcile the Yankees’ payroll in a way that simultaneously appeases the players’ association and other owners. So the Yanks paid $26 million in revenue-sharing: that’s barely 12% of payroll, and didn’t slow them at all. At the same time, MLB must also continue to address parity; the Florida Marlins’ $22 million payroll, at 10% of the Yankees’, is equally embarrassing.
In lieu of a hard salary cap, which will be too hard to fit into baseball’s current economic model, perhaps a tether is in order. What if the maximum spend were set at, say, 200% of the previous year’s median? That would give wealthier teams room to pay, while preserving a realistic upper limit. It would allow the less wealthy teams to spend less, as is their wont. It might also realign teams’ responsibilities–the Yankees would suddenly have tens of millions of dollars of their own money freed up for other things. Like paying for their new stadium without begging for more public funds.
Last year’s median spend was approximately $80 million (between the Brewers’ $81 million and the Indians’ $79 million). If the tether were in place, the cap for the 2009 season would be $160 million. That’s more than $21 million higher than the payroll of every other team in baseball, but a good $40 million below the Yankees’ expectations. It would have allowed them to sign CC Sabathia or Mark Teixeira or A.J. Burnett but probably not all three. Which in turn would put, say, Teixeira in Washington, boosting the Nationals’ payroll by $20 million, which raises the median price, bumping the 2010 tether, and so on.
This is just one of many ideas, and it may not get noticed beyond this blog. But it would sure be nice to do something about this imbalance. Because like the bully in many a Hollywood tale, the Yankees keep proving that might does not make right. A little fiscal restraint might do them, and the rest of baseball, some good.
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Genius! Swap unused store credit for a different store, or cash (not that I love the 20-40% markdown, but still)
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If there were ever a recession-proof industry in which to invest in a recession…
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I've basically done this my whole career. Three years designing at Billboard; three years design directing at The Economist; three years marketing at Clarins; now into my second year of strategy
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I feel like I just overate at a buffet. Also, "It was then learned that Teixeira had favored the Yankees all along" is the most bullshit PR-spun sentence I've read in a long time
(A bit delayed; December will post promptly after New Year’s.)
Grewsome
Trisemic
Scoriate
Learier
Finfishes
Parerga
Roupily
Vinifera
Althorns
Eyedness
Gleeked
Emeroids
Finings
Thelitis
Stanged
Agravic
Worrited