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joemad
ParticipantThat’s a very cool article.
those Rams teams were the best teams in football that never won a ring.
That’s part of the reason I like them so much. They dominated and were Vegas favorites but it still felt like you were rooting for the underdog
joemad
ParticipantNow the Rams need a receiver that reminds everyone of Julio Jones…..
joemad
ParticipantWow, great trade both a win win for Philly and Minny
I wish Sam the best too…
September 2, 2016 at 6:06 pm in reply to: Fisher: Goff likely to open season as No. 3 quarterback #52049joemad
ParticipantAll of Goff’s throws from the Vikes game
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This reply was modified 8 years, 6 months ago by
joemad.
September 2, 2016 at 1:31 pm in reply to: Fisher: Goff likely to open season as No. 3 quarterback #52036joemad
Participant
It’s like getting a birthday present of a
baseball glove in December, and knowing you wont be able to
do anything with it until Spring.I want Goff to be ready NOW,
dammit.…Now watch that little shit Case Keenum become the league MVP 🙂
w
vGoff looks like he received a baseball glove for a left hander, when he actually throws right handed…..
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joemad
ParticipantRookie franchise QB Jared Goff called a play and didn’t know what it was. That’s not what bothered me.
What bothered me was Offensive Coordinator Rob Boras took the blame saying that he should have been in the huddle with him. To hell with that. Did we draft him to coddle him? What happened to the expectations of learning the damn plays? When was saying “I don’t know the plays” a good enough excuse to get the coach to say I should have been there holding your jock strap? How about you ask someone in the huddle what the play is, or will you get in a game and call a play and not know where you are going with the ball?
I thought the same thing… Boras is as green as Goff.
joemad
Participantyes, Sam was always an accurate QB….. I was very sad and surprised when the trade was announced for Nick F.
joemad
Participanthttps://medium.com/the-night-of/the-cat-525630bb1244#.ufe7jvm7d
The Cat
Steven Zaillian: The cat in The Night Of has no name, not even “Andrea’s cat.” At most, it’s referred to in dialog as “her cat,” but more often just “the cat” or “it.” This was intentional.
At the beginning, there were no grand designs for the cat as a character. It was there in the first episode to establish in a natural way that Naz has asthma and uses an inhaler. That and one other thing.
But once the cat had served its purpose, then what? You can’t just forget about it, have it disappear, thank you for helping with plot, now goodbye. Its owner has been killed, but it’s still around. What do you do with it now?
Instead of abandoning it, perhaps it could be integrated into the story. Like other characters, it too had suffered loss. What might happen to the pet of a murder victim who has no close family? Maybe it could become involved in attorney John Stone’s story.
Stone does what most people who are allergic to cats would do with a stray in this situation. He takes it to an animal shelter and begins asking around if someone wants to adopt it.
When he, and we, first see the shelter, its stark walls and cages resemble a prison cellblock. This, too, was intentional. And as the cat with no name is carried by a volunteer past the chain-link cages housing loud dogs, it’s an experience not unlike Naz’s when he’s first taken into Rikers by a corrections officer. The outlook for both of them is grim.
From there it was a matter of asking, “now what,” “what if,” and “then what,” and “then what if.” This is what writing is.
The Real Cat
How do you choose a cat actor? How do you audition cats? I certainly wasn’t going to have them come in and do scenes. All I could think of was to do what I’d do if I were looking to adopt one — to meet and spend some time with them as you would at a shelter, to try to get a feel for their personalities, and, in this case, their comfort around people.
Unlike the cat in the story, the real cat, of course, has a name. His name is Bam Bam, and he was brought to meet me by Diane Bove and Dave Frischenmeyer. Bam Bam was adorable and engaging and expressive — and entirely unimpressed with all the activity on a film set.
I fell for Bam Bam right away, and so did everyone else, no one more so than John Turturro, which was important, obviously, since John would be acting with Bam Bam in far more scenes than anyone else. He was very fond of Bam Bam.
There are actors who people say are naturals. I would say there are also animal actors who are naturals. Bam Bam was not some circus cat trained to jump through hoops; Bam Bam was a natural actor. All you had to do was create a nice environment for Bam Bam, turn the cameras on, and marvel at his work.
We all adored him.
joemad
ParticipantSo I guess Tuturro ended up keeping the cat……….
many lives drastically changed “The Night Of” when “7 crimes” occurred that evening…..
I’ll miss that show….
joemad
Participantjoemad
ParticipantInteresting to see what happens in the final episode.
Modern Day Midnight Express…
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This reply was modified 8 years, 6 months ago by
joemad.
joemad
Participanti had no idea that Mules, Jacks, Jenny’s Donkeys and horses could or could not reproduce based on gender and chromosome counts… In addition, there is more meaning to Beast of Burden than Mick Jagger’s lyrics… very Interesting article…
Billy T, Beta Max vs VHS… that’s funny… unfortunately both are now extinct forcing people to pay monthly DVR service… that still bugs the shit out of me…….
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This reply was modified 8 years, 6 months ago by
joemad.
joemad
Participant– Naz is getting deeper and deeper into prison life and possible drug addition…..while his defense lawyer seems to be falling for him…..conjugal visit in the near future?
– Tuturro seems to have found a cure for his feet, but needs to work on his bench press lifts a little more….. was it the step dad that was pressing the weights on Tuturro’s chest.
No one wants that poor damn cat…
I’m not so sure it’s the limo driver anymore, even though his character is beginning to get relevant. ……. “She’s the cat, and the men in her life are the ball of yarn….
The DA questioning the pathologist (Dr. Katz) on the witness stand was the best scene of the show so far…. Dr. Katz is cool. “””””honestly, I was thinking of desert”””” lol…..
Great show….
joemad
Participantmost of the NFL owners are business people…… business is profit, and if you’re not making a profit, you’re not in business. In addition, good business people find ways to optimize their profit… That is what the Rams are doing, they are optimizing their investment in ways that would never happen in the STL market
I disagree in part. It is not inevitable or natural that an owner chooses that kind of motivation over issues of community. That’s why I prefer the more traditional owners like the Rooneys.
“Optimizing the brand” is no more automatically defensible than any other motive. In fact I think SK is starstruck with that kind of thinking to an extreme. That’s why the Rams are playing games in China etc. Frankly I don’t particularly care for that whole Jerry Jones/SK trend of brand pimping. I don’t even think it’s good business.
An owner can actually choose to be like the Rooneys instead. They certainly don’t disdain money but they also balance it with other, more commendable values.
I agree the Steelers have a good sustainable model, but not all teams can be owned by fine Irish Catholics (Rooney, Mara, etc) but ya never know……somewhere along the line one of these “Traditional NFL Owners” may someday marry a show girl… because, THAT was the root of this relocation problem…….Georgia single handedly destroyed the culture of one the premier organizations of the NFL.
joemad
Participantthe move from LA to STL was solely based on greed… moving to a City that is 18th in the US in market size to a stadium that was deemed outdated before it was finished was not a sustainable business plan. Especially with a clause that stated that this outdated stadium needed to be in the top tier of facilities in the NFL.
most of the NFL owners are business people…… business is profit, and if you’re not making a profit, you’re not in business. In addition, good business people find ways to optimize their profit… That is what the Rams are doing, they are optimizing their investment in ways that would never happen in the STL market.
Georgia was not a business person, nor a football person, she was short sighted for a quick greedy pay day for herself when she moved the team to Missouri. In addition, Georgia’s ownership was THE laughingstock of the NFL. It takes years to shed that business / football culture that her team created in both Anaheim and STL.
joemad
Participantyou beat me to it…. good read…. “The R-word in STL”
https://theringer.com/rams-st-louis-media-nfl-2edfa5bcea59#.455e49jj2
On August 6, grieving fans of the St. Louis Rams were offered a rare ray of sunshine. Orlando Pace, the team’s former left tackle, was inducted into the Hall of Fame. But then St. Louisans flipped on their radios and learned about Pacegate. On August 7, a writer named Patrick Karraker discovered that when the NFL had posted Pace’s acceptance speech to YouTube, part of the speech had been excised. It happened to be the part during which Pace thanked the fans of St. Louis.
These days, St. Louis sports radio crackles with talk of conspiracy. If there was a contest to see which city’s press corps knows more alleged NFL plots — and the previously anonymous functionaries who carry them out — St. Louis would be a half game behind Boston in the standings.
Dan Shaughnessy Roots for Himself
Boston’s inveterate hater sports columnist is officially a Hall of Famer, and thriving in the age of the internet
theringer.com
As it happens, Karraker’s father, Randy, hosts a talk show on 101 ESPN, the former home of the Rams. Randy Karraker hadn’t taken the move well. “The way I describe it is there are five stages of grief,” he told me. “Number two is anger. I’m stuck on that.” When he learned about Pacegate, he accused the league of hating St. Louis and called the edit “vicious,” “vile,” and “depraved.”Karraker, a big man with close-cropped gray hair, is a sports-radio host verging on a civic mascot. “I’m kind of St. Louis’s little brother,” he said. St. Louisans first heard his voice on the legendary station KMOX when he was 25 years old. Dave Peacock, the businessman who led the effort to keep the Rams in St. Louis, noted Karraker’s bottomless knowledge of trivia. Once, on his show, The Fast Lane, Karraker got to reminiscing about the Rams’ Greatest Show on Turf era. D’Marco Farr, one of his cohosts, looked over and noticed that Karraker had begun to cry.
When the Rams move was announced in January, Karraker, who was also a season-ticket holder, set out to purge any trace of the team from his life. He canceled his DirecTV service (DirecTV is an NFL partner); his new cable plan doesn’t include the NFL Network. He filled three trash bags with Rams gear and donated it to the homeless — the homeless in Los Angeles. On August 13, when the Rams played their first preseason game in L.A., Karraker didn’t watch. He was off seeing a production of Aida at the Muny.
It’s an ascetic life — but even that wasn’t ascetic enough for Karraker. Four decades ago, Stan Kroenke, the hated owner of the Rams, married into the Walton family. With the Rams gone, Karraker now refuses to shop at Wal-Mart. He canceled his Sam’s Club membership. “Stan Kroenke is — and this is sports and nonsports — the biggest villain in the history of our city,” he said.
For its part, the NFL pleaded that Pacegate was the result of a mere “technical error.” Karraker didn’t care. The NFL had screwed over St. Louis so many times — why take the league’s word about anything? Karraker went on 101 ESPN’s morning show with host Bernie Miklasz to fan the flames.
“I don’t understand the cruelty,” Miklasz said. “They’ve got what they want. … You assume they can’t go any lower, and they do.” A few days later, Miklasz told me, “It’s like The Godfather III — they pull you back in. This is so incredibly petty. Why do that? What’s the point?”
Roger Hensley, the sports editor of the Post-Dispatch, has compared watching the Rams from St. Louis to checking in on an ex who dumped you. Gee, how’d I wind up on her Facebook page again? When you listen to Karraker and his compatriots, you hear anger, hurt feelings, and more than a touch of schadenfreude. You also hear the St. Louis press corps asking a practical question: With a hole where the NFL team used to be, what do we talk about now?
Talk-radio hosts often cite something called the Rush Limbaugh Rule. It holds that Limbaugh is a better listen when a Democrat is in the White House. The St. Louis corollary might go like this: Randy Karraker is better when the Rams are in Los Angeles.
Karraker would have roasted the Rams for extending coach Jeff Fisher’s contract even if they were still in town. But when bungling is underlain by betrayal — when every misfire is less an affront to a team than a whole city — normal sports radio can suddenly become profound. “It’s great material,” Karraker said.
Consider Foodgate. In June, Rams COO Kevin Demoff told a Southern California group that his staff couldn’t eat the food delivered to the team’s Earth City, Missouri, headquarters. Demoff told The Ringer in an email that he was trying to make a joke about food poisoning (aggrieved Rams fans and all), not taking a shot at St. Louis cuisine. But 101 ESPN hosts went crazy.
“If Kevin Demoff walked in this studio right now,” Miklasz said on the air, “you would have to prevent me from strangling him. I would actually have my hands around his throat. If you didn’t pull me off, I’d actually be facing life imprisonment.”
“No disrespect,” Kevin Wheeler, another 101 ESPN host, said. “But I’d get there first.”
The media are still licking their wounds from the relocation wars. Kroenke dodged their requests for interviews. “The last time he talked to me or anybody in St. Louis was January 2012,” said Jim Thomas, the former Rams beat writer for the Post-Dispatch. Of course, the day after the move to Los Angeles was announced, Kroenke granted an interview to the L.A. Times as soon as he stepped off his private plane.
On the airwaves, Demoff is nearly as big a villain as Kroenke. Kroenke hid from the press, the media say, while Demoff was pushed out to peddle the official line. “He’s a slimeball,” Karraker told me. Just as Democrats enjoy unearthing old Donald Trump tweets, St. Louisans make a sport of finding Demoff’s two-year-old odes to St. Louis fans. Dan McLaughlin, the Cardinals play-by-play man, went on a big run a few months back.
The St. Louis media know this may sound funny, even conspiratorial. But some days it feels like they’re being trolled by the Rams from afar. Like when Jerry Jones’s backroom support for the move became part of his Hall of Fame résumé. (Jones is a Kroenkesque villain in St. Louis now.) Or when Karraker got an automated email asking if he’d like to buy a new Rams hat.
Or when the Rams — who last year dared the media to spend weeks talking about Case Keenum — went all in on Jared Goff in April. “A lot of people chimed in that the Rams would have made the trade even if they were still in St. Louis,” said Howard Balzer, a longtime local NFL writer. “We’re going, ‘Yeah, right, sure they would have.’”
There were moments when the media felt like it was being used by the pro-relocation forces. In December, Roger Goodell wrote a chastising letter about St. Louis’s proposed stadium plan to Dave Peacock and Jay Nixon, the governor of Missouri. Peacock had the surreal experience of reading Goodell’s letter in the Post-Dispatch before it had even been delivered to him.
In the post-Rams era, a question hangs over St. Louis: Does the city want to talk about the team at all? 101 ESPN, like a lot of sports-talk stations, doesn’t take listener phone calls. But if a host dares to mention the Rams, the text lines fill up: Say the R-word again and I’m switching to classic rock!
Roger Hensley noted that, for all the bluster, his site’s traffic metrics show a “silent majority” is still curious. They want to see what happens in Todd Gurley’s sophomore season and whether Pharoh Cooper can help a sagging group of wideouts. If Rams talk is mandatory, then, the question is how to approach it.
“The tone is going to be tricky,” said Martin Kilcoyne, the sports anchor on St. Louis’s Fox affiliate, KTVI. “If they fumble and lose the game on the goal line, is it, ‘Oh no, they lost’ or ‘Oh cool, they lost’?” Karraker chose the latter approach. “I think anybody associated with the Rams is dead to him,” D’Marco Farr said.
Farr is about the only media member who can call himself a neutral party. Farr knows the weirdness of relocation first-hand: He played one season with the Rams in Southern California before they moved to St. Louis in 1995. After he retired, he cohosted The Fast Lane and did color analysis for the radio broadcasts. When the Rams moved to L.A., Farr and his wife had already decided to move back west themselves. When the Rams offered him their sideline job, Farr took it — and then carefully explained to listeners why he wasn’t a traitor.
Farr’s final episodes of The Fast Lane were delicate. When Karraker took his shots — calling Demoff a Kroenke “henchman,” say — Farr assumed a sphinxlike silence. On August 13, Farr stood on the field at the Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum, ready to start his new job. There was one problem: The Rams were still working out some technical kinks, and he never got on the air.
In his final days on the Rams beat, the Post-Dispatch’s Jim Thomas took to roaming the halls of the team’s headquarters at night. It was March, and Thomas was the last media member still reporting to the facility in Earth City. Offices were being disassembled around him; boxes were stacked on the indoor practice field. Thomas felt — and this is a media room joke; don’t get offended — like the last man in the American Embassy in Saigon.
Over 21 years, Thomas covered all 431 games the Rams played as a St. Louis team. Thomas is 62 years old, meaning he spent more than one-third of his life on the beat. Answering his phone from the Post-Dispatch’s downtown office, which he now calls his headquarters, Thomas said, “This may sound weird, but I’m going to really miss watching practice.”
On his nocturnal rounds, Thomas would peek into abandoned meeting rooms. Mike Martz, the coach who was the architect of the Greatest Show on Turf, once made a deal with him. As soon as the players left, Thomas could go into the wide receivers’ room and watch the game film. Some nights, around nine, Martz would abandon whatever he was doing and watch with Thomas. One night, as the tape rolled, Martz got agitated. The tape rolled some more, and Martz got more agitated. Martz was almost yelling at the screen. Thomas had to remind him he had won the game 36–0.
Thomas was such a fixture in Earth City that, for a time, D’Marco Farr assumed he worked for the Rams. “He was a part of the building,” Farr said, “just like a blocking sled or a helmet or a hot tub.” The Rams’ schedule was Thomas’s own. Friday was the day to file stuff for the weekend. Saturday was for travel. Monday was rehashing the games with the coaches. This year, Thomas had no OTAs to cover in June. He took the first early-summer vacation he can remember.
Thomas’s seniority earned him a corner desk in the media room. He stuck pictures on the wall above the desk. On one side of the wall, there were pictures of Thomas, barely 40, standing with a smattering of Rams employees. On the other side, there was Thomas, thicker and grayer now, and the same employees — the ones who survived the various purges, anyway — aged similarly. It was like when Facebook offers to let you celebrate a friendship “anniversary,” except Facebook doesn’t go back 21 years.
Thomas’s friends joke that the Rams leaving is like Thomas getting his prison sentence commuted. In Thomas’s 21 years on the beat, the Rams had four winning seasons. They haven’t finished above .500 in 13 years. They had a 15–65 record from 2007 to 2011, which is the worst five-year run in the history of the NFL.
Thomas, well, he didn’t mind all that much. “Even a couple of those 1–15s and 2–14s were interesting,” he said. “People love a train wreck.”
A team skipping town can be as wrenching for its writers as its fans. After the Oilers left Houston in 1997, John McClain, an 18-year veteran of the beat, kept writing a weekly Oilers column as a salve. In 2008, the Seattle Times reassigned its two SuperSonics writers to cover other sports, explaining that readers were “sick of and sick from the NBA.” Bernie Miklasz was covering the football Cardinals for the Post-Dispatch when they left for Phoenix in 1988. He moved to Dallas to cover the Cowboys.
The Post-Dispatch has Thomas covering the whole NFL now. He even flew to California to cover a couple of Rams practices. He found himself watching with a beat writer’s eyes, noting Goff’s struggles and the mediocrity of the Janoris Jenkins–less secondary. But that institutional knowledge doesn’t really have an outlet anymore.
That Thomas should travel to California was fitting. In 1994, he and Miklasz had covered the Rams’ final six games in L.A. alongside the team’s outgoing press corps — as “vultures,” Miklasz said. Now, it was as if a new vulture — Gary Klein of the L.A. Times — was dragging the carcass away.
In between moments of genuine sadness, the St. Louis media has allowed itself to indulge in a little schadenfreude. Everyone got a nice laugh when Jeff Fisher said on Hard Knocks that a player’s antics were “7–9 bullshit.” As Karraker asked a guest on The Fast Lane, “Is there a more 7–9 coach in football than Jeff Fisher?”
The Best Moments From Episode 1 of the New ‘Hard Knocks’
Eric Kush is ready to be the MVP of your heart, and Jeff Fisher becomes self-aware
theringer.com
Kroenke’s business empire has furnished more material. When Patrick Roy resigned as coach of the Kroenke-owned Colorado Avalanche, the news made the rounds on sports radio. So did the news that Kroenke bought a Texas mega-ranch and forced several residents to leave homes they’d leased on the property. One woman, whose story was recounted in the Post-Dispatch, was given this heartbreaking descriptor: a “dog groomer who suffers from arthritis.” (101 ESPN is now raising money for the displaced residents.)Last month, ex-Ram Isaac Bruce presided over a “Legends of the Dome” old-timers’ game. It was a cathartic event for Rams fans; Karraker even conducted interviews on the sideline. This month, L.A.’s competing old-timers’ game was canceled due to lack of interest. Jim Thomas’s piece became one of the Post-Dispatch’s most popular sports stories.
But schadenfreude has a sell-by date. “Making fun of those guys is one thing,” Bernie Miklasz said. “But that doesn’t fill five radio shows a week.”
One theory is that the Rams’ content hole will be filled by another NFL team. Since January, every team within driving distance has tried to get a foothold in St. Louis. The CBS affiliate, KMOV, is showing Chiefs preseason games, while Fox’s KTVI is showing the Bears. Miklasz’s unscientific survey found that, if his listeners were forced to pick between the two, they’d overwhelmingly favor the Chiefs. Even the venerable KMOX now carries the radio rights to the Cardinals, Blues, and Chiefs, giving the Chiefs a semiofficial imprimatur.
Another theory is St. Louis will undergo the same transformation L.A. did two decades ago. Rams talk will morph into general NFL talk. Howard Balzer and Marc Lillibridge’s radio show, which runs on 590 The Fan, rebranded itself as an NFL show. As Post-Dispatch columnist Benjamin Hochman noted, every St. Louisan’s favorite football team is now his or her fantasy team. Or the team they made a bet on.
Hochman nearly always devoted his Monday column to the Rams. Now, he said, he’s searching for new material. Maybe he’d find a worthy Paralympian, or hang with the bocce players over in The Hill.
Some content holes are more easily filled. Fisher’s coach’s show aired at 6:30 on Monday nights on KTVI. According to Spencer Koch, the station’s president and general manager, this fall Fisher’s mustachioed mug will be replaced by an episode of Celebrity Name Game.
Randy Karraker, like a lot of St. Louis sports media types, was born and raised in the city. He read Kroenke’s relocation application in January and winced. “Compared to all other U.S. cities, St. Louis is struggling,” the document said. It was the latest of many blows to the area, from the shooting of Michael Brown in Ferguson to St. Louis’s slow-motion rehabilitation of downtown.
That’s what really eats at the local media: the loss of status for the city itself. “I see Indianapolis, Cincinnati — cities that have passed us by,” Fox’s Joe Buck, who grew up in St. Louis and still lives there, told me this spring. “If you really drill down, that’s what upset me.”
Benjamin Hochman said: “I’m not sitting on top of the arch drinking a Bud Light and talking about how we have the greatest city. But we have an awesome city. Losing a franchise in the greatest sports league is very disheartening because it makes it look like we’re a second-level city now.”
Even for an everyman host like Karraker, there has always been a distance between a sports-talk host and his listeners. A host can dish out populism, but he still stands on a pedestal above the mere mortal.
Back in October, the NFL convened a town hall meeting to let angry Rams fans vent to league executives. The media weren’t allowed to speak. But as a season-ticket-holder, Karraker found his way to a mic. At first, his voice cracked — he seemed near tears. But he recovered and held up pictures he’d printed of 31 other NFL owners who could be seen out and about in their cities. He defended the loyalty of Rams fans. “This is not a bad football market,” Karraker thundered. “It’s a spectacular football town.”
Rams fans gave him a standing ovation. Chants of “Ran-dy! Ran-dy!” filled the room. Just then, Karraker thought, something interesting happened. The Olympian distance between host and listener vanished. “Now, rather than me learning to speak to the audience, we’re all in the same boat,” Karraker said. “We have the same feeling. We’re kindred spirits — kindred spirits against the team and the league.”
It also solved a problem. Instead of talking about the Rams, Karraker could talk and talk and talk about the absence of the Rams. His worst nightmare became his greatest subject. When Karraker thought of the potholes that lay ahead for the team, his voice filled with glee. “I hope there is such a thing as karma,” he said.
joemad
ParticipantBrian Quick. I’m not sure when the sand runs out in that glass, but the guy better start catching the ball soon. Not every throw to him is going to be perfect, but sometimes you just gotta go Malcolm Brown on the throw, and catch it. I would think we are approaching Now or Nevwe
I think I’ve had it with this guy.
joemad
ParticipantAt least Stephen A Smith isn’t talking too loudly.
joemad
ParticipantAugust 12, 2016 at 3:03 pm in reply to: Rams announce they are going with home whites all season #50696joemad
ParticipantCowboys always wear whites at home too…
Allows the visiting team to wear their home colors on the road when they visit Dallas and now Los Angeles.
I wonder if this is a Jerry Jones influenced thing to Stan or a Tex Schram thing that influenced Dallas when Tex left the Rams for the Cowboys.
BTW, NERams, when the Rams were considering moving from So Cal to STL, the Rams also considered Hartford and Baltimore. The Baltimore Rams or the Hartford ESPN Rams….had that happened….. do you think St Louis might have ended up with Art Model’s Browns (Ravens)?
joemad
Participanta little play station action, swimming, carne asada, a chainshaw and chocolate chip cookies… it doesn’t get any better than that…..sounds like life is muy bueno!
August 11, 2016 at 4:28 pm in reply to: Bernie Sanders Buys Third House – A Mere $600k “Summer Vacation House”… #50595joemad
Participantyes, we’re still in San Jose,
$600K wouldn’t get you much here…..
like ZN says, SFW about Bernie’s house price….
August 11, 2016 at 2:56 pm in reply to: Bernie Sanders Buys Third House – A Mere $600k “Summer Vacation House”… #50581joemad
ParticipantHe would live like Ghandhi if not for his wife. Just like a good socialist should live…
I’m just surprised his wife co-mingled her inheritance. That was unwise.
Ozone, how much is your house worth in San Jose?
joemad
ParticipantHappy Birthday Buddy… enjoy the day….
joemad
Participantok. i watched hard knocks. first time i’ve ever watched it, but i couldn’t help myself.
the best thing i liked about this episode. watching how annoyed donald would get with sims when they were playing ping pong. i don’t know how real the scenes are that are being filmed, but he looked seriously annoyed.
gotta love that competitiveness.
Donald’s athletic skills amazed me. His Odel Beckham one handed catches and footwork on those catches were great.
I think he could beat Forest Gump in ping pong.
joemad
Participantthey seem to die young at ESPN….
Tom Mees, Dick Schaap, Stuart Scott, Bryan Burwell was a regular on Sports Reporters….
BTW, Dick Schaap was the host to The Sports Reports before Saunders replaced him as the shows host…..
I start almost every Sunday morning with The Sports Reporters and a my cup of java.
joemad
ParticipantPA,…. I think the limo driver that picked up the cigarette butt that the victim through out the taxi window did it…but only the cat truly knows…..
I’m kinda getting sick of Turturro wrapping his feet in plastic wrap every episode, but he still is my favorite character of the show…..
time to smuggle more heroine……prison life is brutal….I would never last.
joemad
ParticipantVeggies from my veggie garden….my 1st real harvest of the year.
Thank you El Nino.
joemad
ParticipantIt’s cool.
One of the first scenes is Foles getting cut via phone by Fisher.
Weinke is kinda tough on Goff
Rookie QB didn’t even know where sun rises or sets
Goff was fumbling snaps throwing picks. didn’t look good, but he’s working hard and prevailed for TD pass in goal line drill after working late after practice with Britt…
“””I’m not fucking going 7-9 or 8-8 or 9-7 not even 10-6…..this roster is too good …….I know what I’m doing”””””
All the leaves are brown and the sky is grey…… California dreamin’! They’re back in Hollywood but these ain’t Georgia’s Anaheim Rams. They are LA’s team.
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This reply was modified 8 years, 7 months ago by
joemad.
joemad
ParticipantGame pass is here.
I have had Game Pass for the past 2 seasons… this is a good package to have, IMO, a better value and option than Sunday Ticket, which I had from 1997 through 2014.
BTW, when I cancelled DTV and Sunday Tix in 2014, DTV does not allow nor have an option for automated nor online cancellations. I had to do it via the phone with a DTV agent… it took 67 mins for me to cancel DTV via the phone. I was livid…..
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This reply was modified 8 years, 6 months ago by
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