itburnsso
itburnsso
itburnsso

I really hope you’re trolling. Admittedly I’m not the biggest NBA fan, but you’re delusional if you think some guy getting 20 minutes a game on a horrendous team is going to beat anything the Lakers (or Celtics) have to offer.

If the Warriors are without two of their four stars, I think Portland is only a slight underdog. That's assuming Draymond doesn't return to form of course.

As long as Klay doesn’t go there I’m very happy about the way the Lakers’ future is looking.

It’s one thing if you’re a professional athlete, but if you’re a professional blogger you really shouldn't be going anywhere where marijuana isn't legal.

Fine, but that's not really the point here. There's a path. I used the Uber example below. Similar idea. You can't say the same for women's hockey.

Uber has also never made a dime. Read what I said. Not the WNBA is a cash cow. The WNBA has shown that it can be a sustainable business. Likely at lower salaries, but it can be. Women's hockey has not shown that. 

They average something like 7,000 fans a game and 300,000 viewers on ESPN. That is big enough to survive. They are spending more than they should, but it's still can be a sustainable business in some way.

The difference is the WNBA has shown some level of sustainability, including marketability of stars. Even NHL players are unknowns outside of their markets.

They might, but they shouldn't. That's the party that's old-school. The people they're trying to get are looking at online banks, although those might not be there for business.

But they’re not doing it to split bank and cafe profits. I don’t think it will work, but it’s not a horrible idea.

The higher up you go in finance the more old school you get, so branches seem reasonable.

Or you don't have retirement, or (and this is the big one) you are working from there because you're staying a business and when it grows you need business banking.

Re: the cafes, they might ask, but the whole point is to get people in there so when they do need something they’ll use Capital One.

Against one of, if not the, best defenses of all time.

That’s also not how the law works. According to the ruling using chalk had always been unconstitutional. 

Did he catch it? Clearly still needs to work on his defense.

Once Knicks fans stop pretending that a once great player will be good again, the Knicks will stop going after them.

His much needed deep threes in Game 1 were great too.

If Kyrie (and obviously Durant) don't sign with the Knicks, the Thunder can, and should, trade him there.

People are tough to be around, and there’s a lot on buses. For some reason trains manage to be barely okay, but people just don't like buses