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#1
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![]() I think there's a celeb rehab show that we may see him on.
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Don't sweat the petty things and don't pet the sweaty things. |
#2
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#3
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![]() Can you feel the buzz?
I can see it now...the stars of the reality show go on to star in The Wizard of Oz on Broadway as the Lollipop Guild. And really, some of these jockeys should move on to bigger and better things. Please. For the love of God. |
#4
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![]() I really don't give a rats ass about the relationship of Mike and Chantal,which they will probably focus on a lot.And I think sex with Kayla Stra would be better than winning.
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#5
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![]() cheese......
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"You miss 100% of the shots that you don't take." Follow me with the Rays grounds crew at https://twitter.com/TripleCrown59 www.facebook.com/TripleCrown59 K&S pics- http://share.shutterfly.com/action/w...0BYtWrhw2csXLA |
#6
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![]() Talamo coming across as a little pompous douche.
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Felix Unger talking to Oscar Madison: "Your horse could finish third by 20 lengths and they still pay you? And you have been losing money for all these years?!" |
#7
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![]() Why does everyone think that showing horses wiping out in the promo is such a terrible thing? I think it's hilarious every time I hear someone on the show moan that breakdowns and Eight Belle-type situations are what's turning fans off to the game. I think they're way off. I know this sounds insensitive, but I truly believe the average sports fan out there couldn't care less about the health of horses. From my experience as a racing enthusiast surrounded by rabid sports fans who care nothing about horse racing, I find what keeps my friends from getting into racing is 1) the sport suffers from image problems relating to it's seedy gambling/fixing reputation, 2) it is only heard from during Triple Crown season (and only then until the Derby winner loses) and sometimes the Breeder's Cup, allowing it to gain zero momentum with sports fans. Most people understand that breakdowns are a rare occurance and that sometimes euthanasia is necessary. They understand and they just don't care. The only people who seem to care are that tiny vocal minority of ill-informed idiots like PETA and Moon Beam and the Granola Kids -- people who's opinion are taken far to seriously and kow-towed to far too often in this country anyway. Sane people don't give a damn what these groups say.
At any rate, I think showing horses wiping out, and thus, showing how perilous and exciting the life of a jockey can be will only assure more people tuning in to see the show. And whether people are interested or disgusted by what they see, their thoughts will be on it, and at least the game will be promoted. There is no such thing as bad publicity. Besides, people want to see that sort of thing anyway. NASCAR has done an amazing job over the years getting people to watch and become fans with the promise that there will be crashes. This is a whole other topic, but I think horse racing could do a lot for itself by taking a good look at what NASCAR has done. It's taken a sport suffering from major stigmas (it was too "red neck" and "Southern" for many, much like betting on animals is considered degenerate in many circles) and made it bigger than Jesus. Ah, I'm not going to get into it. I've rambled on long enough. They're going to kick me out of here. |
#8
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![]() And I do want to mention that I don't consider myself a NASCAR fan. I'm not interested in auto racing and have no desire to see a race. Yet, because ESPN, Fox Sports, and all other major news outlets care, I find that I cannot escape from knowing what's going on in the sport, who's making a run for the Cup, and what car Carl Edwards is driving. Christ, I even got into a NASCAR fantasy league this past season. Whatever billionaires are calling the shots in horse racing ought to get together and start thinking about promoting their sport and trying to draw new fans in much the same ways and stop sweating the small stuff, like the occasional breakdown of a part of their most abundant commodity.
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#9
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![]() Yeah people love seeing athletes/animals break down ,suffer and die on the track. I remeber how ecstatic everyone was when Earnhardt died at the end of the Daytona 500. In fact I think Nascar tried to promte the sport that year by running ad with the slogan "Come see who dies this week". ![]()
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Felix Unger talking to Oscar Madison: "Your horse could finish third by 20 lengths and they still pay you? And you have been losing money for all these years?!" |
#10
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For what it is worth, I liked the show, it is pointed towards the MTV Real World crowd, which I liked years ago. |
#11
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for a better take on why many don't follow racing....a lot of people don't gamble-and they connect horse racing only to that, not as entertainment. i think showing these breakdowns is a terrible thing, in that they will probably show a far higher percentage of breakdowns on that show vs races run without incident, thereby giving the impression that breakdowns are fairly common-far more common than what really occurs. |
#12
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![]() If you didn't follow racing, and watched that show ( I know, that's impossible, but just stay with me for a second ), you would think a horse breaks down every race.
I fail to see how that's a good thing ( forgetting about how inaccurate it is as well ). Using our game to cater to the audience this, apparently, wants to capture, eludes me as a good idea for racing. There is a lot of great stuff in the game, a lot of great human interest stories as well, but breakdowns isn't one of them ( at least to me ). I would rather be ignored than used in that manner.
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Just more nebulous nonsense from BBB |
#13
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PBR focuses on the animals as athletes, gives details on the riders - and there are certainly terrible crashes - but the sport is thriving, as the average fan can readily know about the participants - human and animal. Someone gets hurt badly, and the focus is turned on Dr. Tandy, sportsmed, what they can do, etc. (like the AAEP vets at big race days) I agree with the NASCAR success model - heck, even I know lots of the names associated with NASCAR, and that's only from casual contact when it floats into my field of vision against my choice. People don't even know what most jockey's faces look like. Haven't seen the Animal Planet program, but I agree that there is (nearly always) no bad PR, only PR. Too bad the average racetrack program didn't have a few pages devoted to photos of the jockeys and trainers, with short bios.
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"Have the clean racing people run any ads explaining that giving a horse a Starbucks and a chocolate poppyseed muffin for breakfast would likely result in a ten year suspension for the trainer?" - Dr. Andrew Roberts |
#14
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Impossible to beat - and not worth the time invested to learn. 22% of US adult males between the ages of 18-49 play fantasy sports. Most are hardcore nerds who are obsessed with numbers and stats. These types are more likely to gamble on poker than horse racing by a tremendously wide margin. It's information based gambling just like with the stock market or fantasy sports .. and I think a lot of people understand that. What they might not understand is that the sport is not impossible to beat .. and you can make a living from beating it .. but it is tougher than hell .. and anyone talented/crazy enough to do it consistantly could probably make at least double doing something else. |
#15
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Sorry, but I call BS on the "watch and become fans with the promise there will be crashes." I've watched NASCAR for 14 years with people who have watched NASCAR with their fathers and families for 40 years. Crashes are an incidental part of the sport that only to matter to a real fan in terms of how one's driver is affected and impacted in the final race finish. No one that I know that REALLY follows NASCAR is looking to see wrecks. Unless we're talking about rubbing paint at Bristol or something similar. For the record, I've been a thoroughbred racing fan for about 3 times my NASCAR fan years. And I'll jump in on someone's comment about Ruffian that indeed that match race took the wind out of my thoroughbred racing fan sails for quite awhile. |
#16
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"I guess it comes down to a simple choice, really. Get busy livin' or get busy dyin'." |
#17
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If she was used to winning, then Im sure it would be different. Or your right, if she had a decent sized cannoli to go home to.
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"A person who saw no important difference between the fire outside a Neandrathal's cave and a working thermo-nuclear reactor might tell you that junk bonds and derivatives BOTH serve to energize capital" - Nathan Israel |
#18
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![]() I had a friend that went to Delmar and he didn't like it at all. Said he didn't know what all the hype as about. He loved Santa Anita.
I haven't been out west at all. I have a friend in San Diego so maybe one day I'll make the trip
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ΜΟΛΩΝ ΛΑΒΕ |
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