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"Hey everybody look at me!! *pause* Hey rich white people sit down!! Yeah!! I'm in a ban called Phat Mama! Hey man, good job on winnin this race, you rich guy. It's not like ya need the money huh? Amirite? Hey you know I bet Giacomo. I wish yo hose woulda been owned by a music producer or other entertainment industry type cause I woulda bet it. What's yo name again? Mo' ham ed? Yeah I wish there was some mo' ham here to, Ed. These rich white people bogahtin the hams. Well anyways, playa..congratulation. Can I hold a hundo? Thanks man." |
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Do what Grits says, or else.
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Again, I am not overlooking the importance of wagering to the sport, far from it. I'm just saying that marketing horseracing means milking the KD and TC for all it is worth, because that's the only place where mass public awareness and interest in the sport resides. The fact that no horse has won it for so long -- that's a story, and that's what has brought people out to Belmont Park in droves for the last few years when the TC was on the line (and yes, happily they bet once they get there, even if they only know SJ or FC and haven't a clue about the rest of the field). And maybe the following year, they'll watch a few preps on ESPN too because they get interested in the 3yos and the next one that might do it, and that interest might even extend to the 2yos and some of the non-TC winners who actually stay running after the TC and in the BC. And maybe that helps keep horseracing on TV before it is forgotten all together. Maybe if more people watch there are ratings and advertising revenues at stake, and more corporate sponsorship, etc. I agree that those revenues are not going to replace betting revenue and slots, but it doesn't have to be one or the other: a wider following for racing would ultimately boost the sport's bottom line, and that irrespective of these new fans' interest in or lack of interest in wagering. Now, if they both watch the sport on TV and bet, that's even better...but please don't tell me that higher TV ratings are not an asset for a sport, or I was obviously not raised on the same planet. |
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If they had a Scat Daddy jersey, I'd be the first one in line to buy it. :cool: |
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i just wanted to thank everyone for giving me something entertaining to read for a few minutes. lightened my mood for sure.
the pics were a real bonus!! some of you are outdoing yourselves these days. carry on. |
After both not understanding my point about educating fans, and criticizing it, you offered some vague possibilities and events that do happen, and attempts that have been tried many times and failed, and did not offer a single idea of your own as to how racing is going to make money without gambling.
Once again, if you create fans, and then don't teach them in any way how to bet even mildly effectively, then they will not contribute to the health and survival of the game. I did not say that my ideas about fan education are even close to the be-all-and-end-all for racing, but I believe they are the correct direction racing needs to take, and is currently not doing so. Unless you have an original thought about how racing can help itself, and not telling us about putting races on TV, which has been done and is done, then it seems pretty ridiculous that you continue to make the assertions you do. The truth is if you don't understand that racing will only survive, or strengthen itself, by creating fans that bet, then you really don't understand the dynamics of this industry. |
Use monkeys as jockeys. this is not an original idea. In my first RTIP class, wendy showed us an old video of a mexican dog race with monkeys strapped in as jockeys.
Maybe the funniest thing i have ever seen. I think that monkeys could do just as well on the backs of T-breds (gotta be better than Tyler Baze) and a lot more people would go to the track to see it. man i really have to stop, i am so not funny |
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