calhoun
John C. Calhoun
calhoun

"Hedy Hey Hedy Hey Hedy decky decky decky decky decky decky decky decky decky."

The video is filmed in a different country, one called New Zealand.

They just got carried away because they're so concerned about ethics in journalism.

What's that you say? More Rusty Hardin?

Mark Emmert: "You pay them 10%?! What a ripoff!!"

The Cats were the unfortunate girlfriend who came along to soon after a very bad breakup. And she didn't act right from day one. I think the NBA did more damage to the market by rushing back in. It was very quickly determined that they'd be replacing the franchise, so the League should have not allowed the name,

James Harden: Hair should grow down out of one's face!

Royals fans: burning up their 20 years of goodwill in mere days.

No mention of how terrible the L.A. Lakers are? Get your priorities right Deadspin. Come on.

With what has already been reported as a fractured locker room, the Lakers will really need their supporting cast to step up in his absence.

If you graphed the best anthem singers in World Series history on a dart board, with the best ones near the bullseye, he'd be on the outside.

Wearing the opposing team's colors (a few shades off, but please...) behind home plate in KC is a giant "screw you" to every Royals fan whose only choice is to watch the game on TV. Don't act like this interpretation hasn't occurred to you. Your act is a provocation to Royals fans, and when anyone in KC treats you

There was a simmering anger about people like me — "Social Justice Warriors", as they call us — who are asking for change in the game industry: a better, broader representation of characters, among other things. We're "the cancer that's killing games", and Kotaku is seen as the key enemy site, with Polygon a close

sockdolager, my friday word of the day!

I'm pretty sure he's banging some surly 13-year old's mom, and he definitely calls the kid "champ" when he sends him to get another Milwaukee's Best.

Nah.

Oh, certainly you're right about that. The networks have to compare it to the acquisition or production costs of the alternatives as well. But the key point is, like most economics questions, about what happens on the margin not the average, and there's no guarantee that X is worth the same to ESPN as to CBS.

You're not considering things on the margin. The consideration isn't "how much money per eyeball," it's "how much money per additional eyeball compared to what the networks would put on that timeslot instead." ESPN pays a lot more for the NFL too, as you note, in fact something that ends up being much closer to the