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Ah, I love how you monetized the work of me (the OP, /u/JewishDoggy on Reddit, also nbaplayertweets on imgur) for your own personal gain. To be fair, that is your job, to report on things. But what is wrong with putting a little work into it, so you are actually contributing? I don't have the platform you do, but that

And how does this compare to "native advertising" and Kotaku's use of it? I know there's a particular online movement that has invoked 'journalistic ethics' as the main driving force behind their cause, citing journalists and developer colluding; however, this, if even true, is nothing compared to the vast breach of

You know he was on the DL for half the season, and struggled upon his return (while still healing, like most batters recovering from a hand injury). But let's keep saying the guy that hit more HR's than the majority of the league, while only having about 2 months of healthy play, doesn't know how to hit.

THIS IS A SOCCER BLOG AND WHAT THE HELL IS HOCKEY

A race to the bottom.

This is BEAUTIFULLY edited. The creator should make full-length Sim features.

So now you've sued the only business that needs punters and slammed the only media that follows punters. You're a real fucking genius.

A brief note about the continued discussion about Kotaku's approach to reporting. We've long been wary of the potential undue influence of corporate gaming on games reporting, and we've taken many actions to guard against it. The last week has been, if nothing else, a good warning to all of us about the pitfalls of

Its actually Ray Albers, apparently:

This.
One of the first objectives in the main questline is to take a break from the main questline and go get some experience and make some contacts.

Caius even outright gives you some cash to spend on training or equipment and tells you to go toughen up.

If by "The Man" you mean "Thousands of people just trying to get groceries," then yes, it IS a great way to stick it to The Man

And to anybody needing to get anywhere in the city! Fuck those people! I hope they missed their flights, or they got fired for being late to work, or their dates went horribly, or their kids where scared when nobody picked them up from school! I mean, why shouldn't thousands of people be severely inconvenienced so we

Here's my problem: You can't launch rockets out of civilian areas and then yell civilian casualties. Not that I'm okay with civilian casualties. I hate them. I hate that they happen, I hate what they make us into, I hate what we become when they happen. But, let it be said, I hate that Hamas is so committed to

Tell it to Jordon and Egypt — they took a HUUUUGE majority of the spliced up land. Time for the Palestinians to move on and starting trying to live instead of celebrating misery and death.

Your sarcasm is clear. But by its nature it suggests that you are shocked at positive coverage of MMA by Tucker and Deadspin, and I'm pointing out that such coverage is more common than you might think.

Here's a piece by Josh about Jon Jones that talks about how he brings beauty to the sport:

All I can is I sympathise. The only people who ever say "man up" or "it's the internet" are the people who don't see the private hate mail.

I'm not sure you understand what "nationalism" (and you're using the word in the context of jingoism; nationalism in and of itself carries no moral component—it's only when that nationalistic tendency is turned toward a sense of superiority over other nationalities that it picks up a negative connotation) actually is.

You called tasteskindasalty's comment ignorant, yet you ignored to answer his overall question.

You're spot on, Kevin. A major part of stories is the mechanism of they actually get reported and, in a lot of ways, it's more fascinating than the story itself. The first thing I thought when the Lebron story broke was "Wow, how did Jenkins get this scoop?". The second thing was "ESPN must be PISSED". A distant