Sports Interview
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This has to be one if the most unoriginal premises for a joke. It's been done to death
"I hate sportsball"
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You can make almost anything sound ridiculous like this though.
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I take issue with the public funds granted to team owners- who are insanely wealthy already.
Pay for your own fucking stadiums, if it's so goddamn important.
Yes, but i also get it. If you want to build a stadium very near the city, thats going to cost more than if you build out in the middle of no where. The city, and surrounding businesses want the stadium close to them becuase it drives business at the local shops/hotels/restaurants, which then also drives increased tax revenue.
The way the city incentivizes the owners to build near them is with tax incentives, which ultimately gets passed on to the local community. But the community does also benefit from those other things i mentioned above, but how much isnt as tangible as "my property tax went up x% to pay for their stadium"
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You can make almost anything sound ridiculous like this though.
Let's see it. Eating Oreos with your grandkids. Go!
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And I've thought I've seen every key and peele skit
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I don't begrudge professional athletes their income, as it's proportional to the amount of revenue their sport brings in. I do take issue with how much money the big three sports make, and how much less athletes who work just as hard or harder get paid.
Capitalism and what people choose to do with their money am I right
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This has to be one if the most unoriginal premises for a joke. It's been done to death
You're right, the "I hate sportsball" thing has been done to death, and hating on something other people enjoy is pretty lame.
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You're right, the "I hate sportsball" thing has been done to death, and hating on something other people enjoy is pretty lame.
Also those same people are usually big into videogames and don't see the irony
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Yes, but i also get it. If you want to build a stadium very near the city, thats going to cost more than if you build out in the middle of no where. The city, and surrounding businesses want the stadium close to them becuase it drives business at the local shops/hotels/restaurants, which then also drives increased tax revenue.
The way the city incentivizes the owners to build near them is with tax incentives, which ultimately gets passed on to the local community. But the community does also benefit from those other things i mentioned above, but how much isnt as tangible as "my property tax went up x% to pay for their stadium"
Based on everything I've seen and read, there is not much benefit to funding a stadium, and that's without the owners' constant threats of leaving if they dont get more blackmail money.
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Yes, but i also get it. If you want to build a stadium very near the city, thats going to cost more than if you build out in the middle of no where. The city, and surrounding businesses want the stadium close to them becuase it drives business at the local shops/hotels/restaurants, which then also drives increased tax revenue.
The way the city incentivizes the owners to build near them is with tax incentives, which ultimately gets passed on to the local community. But the community does also benefit from those other things i mentioned above, but how much isnt as tangible as "my property tax went up x% to pay for their stadium"
Ever walk around outside the stadium and by shit? Food, items, things?
I recently walked around Mercedes stadium in Atlanta and that isn't the best neighborhood...
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Ever walk around outside the stadium and by shit? Food, items, things?
I recently walked around Mercedes stadium in Atlanta and that isn't the best neighborhood...
Yea when i travel to different cities for games, i buy a ton of shit and stay in their hotels. Ever been to a game? All restaurants and bars are absolutely packed before, after, and during the games
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Yes, but i also get it. If you want to build a stadium very near the city, thats going to cost more than if you build out in the middle of no where. The city, and surrounding businesses want the stadium close to them becuase it drives business at the local shops/hotels/restaurants, which then also drives increased tax revenue.
The way the city incentivizes the owners to build near them is with tax incentives, which ultimately gets passed on to the local community. But the community does also benefit from those other things i mentioned above, but how much isnt as tangible as "my property tax went up x% to pay for their stadium"
I think it has been found time and again that the math doesn't work out. Like other businesses, they get cities to bid each other under the table to the point that the increase in tax revenue doesn't even come close to the cost. See Amazon and the Olympics for large-scale examples.