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Olympic over/unders – The USA might be overrated – politicalbetting.com

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  • FF43FF43 Posts: 17,765
    Nigelb said:

    Doesn’t Morrison’s buy all its meat direct from the farmers ?
    Depends what you mean by "farm", I guess. This guy called himself a farmer, but clearly operates on a massive scale if he sells into several supermarkets.
  • BenpointerBenpointer Posts: 35,093

    No Good Brie?

    Crisis!
    I was going to home in on Brie but actually all the supermarkets seem to do Good Brie, so it's not much of a differentiator ;-)
  • TheScreamingEaglesTheScreamingEagles Posts: 121,168
    MaxPB said:

    It's a shit idea because this is a once in 4 year event.
    It's going to be even shitter in 2024 when Paris hosts the Olympics and the time zone is much friendlier to UK viewers than Tokyo.
  • kinabalukinabalu Posts: 44,288

    Monopoly's out of date though. Whitechapel is posh/bohemian these days. And as for the three cheap blue Islington streets - metropolitan elite or what? Meanwhile, the expensive Oxford Street is largely full of tat.
    And Hampstead's not even on the board!
  • SandpitSandpit Posts: 56,021
    MaxPB said:

    After this the IOC could easily go back to individual national deals and make more money from selling rights to the UK, France, Germany and Italy than it does from the Discovery deal. The BBC alone would probably be ok with £150-175m per cycle and the likes of RTL would probably pay more. The governments of Europe could also end paywall tyranny by legislating that the Olympics are a pic event and should be made fully available to the people.

    The current deal is a pile of wank for the people.
    That’s like the much-discussed Premier League rights deals, where in response to the EU ruling about exclusivity to Sky, they sold the rights to three companies - but with each match being exclusive to one channel, and each team featured on all of them several times a season.

    So as a fan wanting to watch your team every week, you now needed three subs instead of one.
  • Northern_AlNorthern_Al Posts: 8,707
    I see Waitrose has become the next key vector in the increasingly divisive culture war.

    Any moment now, I expect an article in Unherd (Why Waitrose deserves to Close), and some polling commentary from Matt Goodwin on the Red Wall's negative attitude to Waitrose. Meanwhile, no doubt Boris and his mates will continue to shop there.
  • MaxPBMaxPB Posts: 39,661

    It's going to be even shitter in 2024 when Paris hosts the Olympics and the time zone is much friendlier to UK viewers than Tokyo.
    It's completely ridiculous, honestly not sure what the IOC were thinking selling to a pay TV company. It's not as if they got a huge premium for it either.
  • Philip_ThompsonPhilip_Thompson Posts: 65,826
    Sandpit said:

    That’s like the much-discussed Premier League rights deals, where in response to the EU ruling about exclusivity to Sky, they sold the rights to three companies - but with each match being exclusive to one channel, and each team featured on all of them several times a season.

    So as a fan wanting to watch your team every week, you now needed three subs instead of one.
    That EU decision on football was one of the most infuriating things about the EU.

    If that ruling gets reversed post-Brexit then that would be a great victory for Brexit.
  • Sunil_PrasannanSunil_Prasannan Posts: 53,137
    MaxPB said:

    It's a shit idea because this is a once in 4 year event.
    The Winter Games say hello.
  • Northern_AlNorthern_Al Posts: 8,707
    kinabalu said:

    And Hampstead's not even on the board!
    Not central enough - all the Monopoly properties are closer to the West End. But if the Angel's in, which it is, you could make a good case for Camden Town. Difficult to price, though.
  • kinabalukinabalu Posts: 44,288
    MattW said:

    I was going to comment - my local Morrisons have a huge variety of cheese in the fresh cheese counter.

    Never counted the varieties but it is a walk from one end to the other.
    I like Morrisons. In fact I like all supermarkets if they're spacious.
  • MaxPBMaxPB Posts: 39,661

    The Winter Games say hello.
    If that gets even 20% of the ratings as the summer games I'd be shocked.
  • Fysics_TeacherFysics_Teacher Posts: 6,303
    Listening to someone complain angrily about the government and their refusal to reinstate fox-hunting…
  • SandpitSandpit Posts: 56,021

    That EU decision on football was one of the most infuriating things about the EU.

    If that ruling gets reversed post-Brexit then that would be a great victory for Brexit.
    The problem is that the PL now make more money from ripping off the fans, and there’s no way Sky will pay what it would take to bring back their monopoly - they’re not really growing any more, and price rises result in cancelled subs and people watching in the pub.
  • TheScreamingEaglesTheScreamingEagles Posts: 121,168

    That EU decision on football was one of the most infuriating things about the EU.

    If that ruling gets reversed post-Brexit then that would be a great victory for Brexit.

    It won't be.

    That ruling allowed the PL to get even more money, making them sell to one bidder will ruin the league and clubs and wipe out most of the pyramid
  • LeonLeon Posts: 58,881

    Any of the big four supermarkets will now provide the range of niche and upmarket items which would only be found in posh places a decade or two back. The internet also provides an alternative for specialised food purchasing.

    Which leads the posh places with a narrower usp in niche and upmarket items.
    Judging by the responses on here, the reputation of Waitrose is higher with doddery provincial types than with swish sexy Londoners.

    This is quite explicable. All the major supermarkets go upmarket in London. My local M&S sells £25 wagyu rib eye steaks. I doubt they do that in "Leicester", wherever that is

    Also, Londoners have stores like Whole Foods (with no branches outside the capital, very sensibly) who stock superb ingredients, oils, seasonings, spirulina truffle essence, stuff that a Midlander or a Scotsman would probably put on his furniture, mistaking it for upmarket varnish, in that endearing but farcical way of theirs

    So, in the sticks, Waitrose is seen as a sainted outpost of London poshness, but in London, paradoxically, it's just another shop with nice balsamic vinegar and Brabantia bin bags
  • MrEdMrEd Posts: 5,578
    Good post Pip. Apparently, this is the first time the US has not won a Gold Medal on Day 1 since 1972
  • FoxyFoxy Posts: 50,394
    MattW said:

    I was going to comment - my local Morrisons (Mansfield) have a huge variety of cheese in the fresh cheese counter.

    Never counted the varieties but it is a walk from one end to the other. For shop size, the car park is 750-1000 cars roughly.

    They also have Fray Bentos pies and Grape Nuts :smile:
    Yes Morrisons is good. The best supermarket for fruit and veg, and cheese is reasonable, if not as good as Waitrose. Good ethinc selections too, at least in the one next to my hospital.
  • BenpointerBenpointer Posts: 35,093
    kinabalu said:

    I like Morrisons. In fact I like all supermarkets if they're spacious.
    Tbf the range of any given supermarket probably does depend on the size of the individual branch.
  • TheScreamingEaglesTheScreamingEagles Posts: 121,168
    edited July 2021
    I do think (and expect) by the time of the next auction of rights for 2025/26 onwards all 380 PL matches will be sold.

    That means more broadcasters joining the roster as Sky, BT, and Amazon weren't prepared to pay extra for the 180 matches not available for live coverage in the UK.

    So I'd expect DAZN to join the fray, if Newcastle do get bought out by the Saudis (unlikely I know) beIN may also join in for the LOLZ and protection.
  • Scott_xPScott_xP Posts: 37,062
    Leon said:

    This is quite explicable. All the major supermarkets go upmarket in London. My local M&S sells £25 wagyu rib eye steaks. I doubt they do that in "Leicester", wherever that is

    My local Waitrose, which is nearer "Leicester" than London, had wagyu burgers last week
  • SandyRentoolSandyRentool Posts: 22,558
    After using the excuse of 'it's far too hot for that sort of thing' all week, I can't put it off any longer.

    Time to mow the lawn...
  • MattWMattW Posts: 25,672
    edited July 2021
    Leon said:

    Judging by the responses on here, the reputation of Waitrose is higher with doddery provincial types than with swish sexy Londoners.

    This is quite explicable. All the major supermarkets go upmarket in London. My local M&S sells £25 wagyu rib eye steaks. I doubt they do that in "Leicester", wherever that is

    Also, Londoners have stores like Whole Foods (with no branches outside the capital, very sensibly) who stock superb ingredients, oils, seasonings, spirulina truffle essence, stuff that a Midlander or a Scotsman would probably put on his furniture, mistaking it for upmarket varnish, in that endearing but farcical way of theirs

    So, in the sticks, Waitrose is seen as a sainted outpost of London poshness, but in London, paradoxically, it's just another shop with nice balsamic vinegar and Brabantia bin bags
    In Leicester that £25 Wagyu Rib-Eye stake would probably be about £17, so no they wouldn't do that.

    I'd get it from one of my local butchers or farm shops, or online.

    Certainly (having lived in Hampstead for a few years) around here there are fewer gullibles with more money than sense. :smile:
  • FoxyFoxy Posts: 50,394
    Leon said:

    Judging by the responses on here, the reputation of Waitrose is higher with doddery provincial types than with swish sexy Londoners.

    This is quite explicable. All the major supermarkets go upmarket in London. My local M&S sells £25 wagyu rib eye steaks. I doubt they do that in "Leicester", wherever that is

    Also, Londoners have stores like Whole Foods (with no branches outside the capital, very sensibly) who stock superb ingredients, oils, seasonings, spirulina truffle essence, stuff that a Midlander or a Scotsman would probably put on his furniture, mistaking it for upmarket varnish, in that endearing but farcical way of theirs

    So, in the sticks, Waitrose is seen as a sainted outpost of London poshness, but in London, paradoxically, it's just another shop with nice balsamic vinegar and Brabantia bin bags
    3 M and S foods in Leicester, but I have never been a fan. Overpriced and the quality has been sliding for years. Mrs Foxy still goes there for a few things.
  • LeonLeon Posts: 58,881

    I see Waitrose has become the next key vector in the increasingly divisive culture war.

    Any moment now, I expect an article in Unherd (Why Waitrose deserves to Close), and some polling commentary from Matt Goodwin on the Red Wall's negative attitude to Waitrose. Meanwhile, no doubt Boris and his mates will continue to shop there.

    No no no no no. Again, a northern prole misunderstands poshness.

    Waitrose is owned by John Lewis. Remember what Carrie thought of John Lewis furniture. Boris and Carrie will think the same of Waitrose. They will use it for essentials but they will equally use M&S or Sainsburys, even Tesco. In London Waitrose is not high status, it is for lower/middle middle class people nervous of their status.

    For posh stuff they will go to Whole Foods, Planet Organic, specialist food halls, delis
  • BenpointerBenpointer Posts: 35,093
    Leon said:

    Judging by the responses on here, the reputation of Waitrose is higher with doddery provincial types than with swish sexy Londoners.

    This is quite explicable. All the major supermarkets go upmarket in London. My local M&S sells £25 wagyu rib eye steaks. I doubt they do that in "Leicester", wherever that is

    Also, Londoners have stores like Whole Foods (with no branches outside the capital, very sensibly) who stock superb ingredients, oils, seasonings, spirulina truffle essence, stuff that a Midlander or a Scotsman would probably put on his furniture, mistaking it for upmarket varnish, in that endearing but farcical way of theirs

    So, in the sticks, Waitrose is seen as a sainted outpost of London poshness, but in London, paradoxically, it's just another shop with nice balsamic vinegar and Brabantia bin bags
    Lol! Mistaking spirulina truffle essence for furniture polish takes me back to life as a kid in the 60s...

    My mum, bless her, liked to get a tan, as was the fashion then.

    She swore by a mixture of vinegar and olive oil (only available from the chemists back then) as a 'sun tan lotion'. It was years later before I realised she'd been dressing herself in vinaigrette. Happy days!
  • LeonLeon Posts: 58,881
    Scott_xP said:

    My local Waitrose, which is nearer "Leicester" than London, had wagyu burgers last week
    Steaks, mate, steaks. Not "burgers",

    Steaks, for £30 each
  • kinabalukinabalu Posts: 44,288
    edited July 2021

    Not central enough - all the Monopoly properties are closer to the West End. But if the Angel's in, which it is, you could make a good case for Camden Town. Difficult to price, though.
    Yes that has a better claim. Although come to think of it - which this is forcing me to - the board is all streets and squares and mainline railway stations rather than residential areas. The exception being Mayfair. Mayfair should NOT be on there.
  • MaxPBMaxPB Posts: 39,661

    I do think (and expect) by the time of the next auction of rights for 2025/26 onwards all 380 PL matches will be sold.

    That means more broadcasters joining the roster as Sky, BT, and Amazon weren't prepared to pay extra for the 180 matches not available for live coverage in the UK.

    So I'd expect DAZN to join the fray, if Newcastle do get bought out by the Saudis (unlikely I know) beIN may also join in for the LOLZ and protection.

    DAZN simply don't have the scale to get involved with domestic EPL rights. They have revenues of what £230m per year? Even with some level of growth you're talking about entering a rights auction where the minimum bid will be a 2-3x multiple of their current revenue. Setanta tried that model and fucked it. DAZN will be happy to just bid for overseas EPL rights in smaller markets as they currently do. The wildcards are ESPN/Disney+ and Discovery/WB because the Olympics aren't going to be anywhere near the audience draw they think it will be.
  • TheScreamingEaglesTheScreamingEagles Posts: 121,168

    After using the excuse of 'it's far too hot for that sort of thing' all week, I can't put it off any longer.

    Time to mow the lawn...

    Don't you have staff for that?
  • MattWMattW Posts: 25,672
    edited July 2021
    Scott_xP said:

    My local Waitrose, which is nearer "Leicester" than London, had wagyu burgers last week
    My local Aldi regularly have "wagyu" things.

    Though I'd grant that that might not be wagyu of the "earwax removed by houris in lilly-white robes using extra-Virgin olive oil" sort of thing that passes for added-value in Chelsea.

    On Carrie and John Lewis furniture, isn't that to do with following the Hyacinth Bouquet snobbery tradition, and a photo of a huge delivery from JL to Downing Street emerged within hours?
  • FoxyFoxy Posts: 50,394
    Leon said:

    Steaks, mate, steaks. Not "burgers",

    Steaks, for £30 each
    Bloody hell. Talk about inflation. Up 20% in a half hour...
  • ClippPClippP Posts: 1,956
    bigben said:

    Holocaust survivors have come forward and said what is happening now parallels the rise of the nazis
    How many "Holocaust survivors" are there who remember Germany in the 1930s and who are aware of what is happening in the UK in the 2020s? Just wondering...
  • CarlottaVanceCarlottaVance Posts: 60,281
    Europe vaccine stats:

    Hmm.
    100.0%s. Lots of them.
    A lot in the >80s. The ECDC are claiming that there weren't 0.05% of >80s for whom vaccines were not contraindicated?
    (See this effect in highly vaxxed countries like Sweden and Finland, where 70-79s come out higher.)
    Hmm.


    https://twitter.com/PaulMainwood/status/1418907992582406146?s=20
  • TheScreamingEaglesTheScreamingEagles Posts: 121,168
    edited July 2021
    MaxPB said:

    DAZN simply don't have the scale to get involved with domestic EPL rights. They have revenues of what £230m per year? Even with some level of growth you're talking about entering a rights auction where the minimum bid will be a 2-3x multiple of their current revenue. Setanta tried that model and fucked it. DAZN will be happy to just bid for overseas EPL rights in smaller markets as they currently do. The wildcards are ESPN/Disney+ and Discovery/WB because the Olympics aren't going to be anywhere near the audience draw they think it will be.
    Don't tell anyone this but they had the funding in place for the 2022-25 cycle if it had gone to auction, (probably going for the smaller Amazon package as a starter.)

    I suspect they may have been rejected on the grounds they don't have the ability to produce matches/shows to a suitable standard. Buying the rights is one thing, delivering them is another.
  • LeonLeon Posts: 58,881
    kinabalu said:

    Yes that has a better claim. Although come to think of it - which this is forcing me to - the board is all streets and squares and stations rather than residential areas. The exception being Mayfair. Mayfair should NOT be on there.
    The urban myth is that these errors (the stations are odd, as well) derive from the British game's American source.

    The original US version was Jersey City, I think? Then it made a million so they expanded - to London. And they sent some Yank to the Smoke to map out a London edition. As he had no native sense for the city you get anomalies like "Mayfair"
  • Sunil_PrasannanSunil_Prasannan Posts: 53,137
    Leon said:


    Also, Londoners have stores like Whole Foods (with no branches outside the capital, very sensibly)

    There is such a thing as delivery, you know!

    https://www.buywholefoodsonline.co.uk/
  • LeonLeon Posts: 58,881
    Foxy said:

    Bloody hell. Talk about inflation. Up 20% in a half hour...
    I underplayed my original statement so I wouldn't frighten anyone north of Arnos Grove
  • Andy_JSAndy_JS Posts: 33,884
    First time on the site since I posted that unexpected opinion poll at 2 in the morning. Looking forward to reading the comments!
  • AlistairAlistair Posts: 23,670
    Leon said:

    Judging by the responses on here, the reputation of Waitrose is higher with doddery provincial types than with swish sexy Londoners.

    This is quite explicable. All the major supermarkets go upmarket in London. My local M&S sells £25 wagyu rib eye steaks. I doubt they do that in "Leicester", wherever that is
    Do people really buy fake wagyu steaks from M&S?
  • CarlottaVanceCarlottaVance Posts: 60,281
    Okaaaay.

    So Rideout expects people to transfer their savings into a currency widely expected to depreciate, while leaving their debts in a currency which may well grow stronger?

    Surely it would be the other way round?

    As there is no change to Sterling debts until such time as people and business ask for their banks to exchange them into the S£, then it is expected that the exchange of debts into S£ will lag significantly behind the exchange of deposits and cash.

    https://twitter.com/RideoutTim/status/1418628729123770371?s=20
  • LeonLeon Posts: 58,881
    Alistair said:

    Do people really buy fake wagyu steaks from M&S?
    Yes. I do. But - tbh - sporadically

    The supply comes and goes. I guess even affluent north London is a tricky place to sell a single steak for thirty quid

    But my God when you can get them they are amazing. Certainly not fake - I've had wagyu around the world and the M&S cuts are some of the best
  • MaxPBMaxPB Posts: 39,661
    Alistair said:

    Do people really buy fake wagyu steaks from M&S?
    You have to respect the hustle, though.
  • Andy_JSAndy_JS Posts: 33,884
    edited July 2021
    Sean_F said:

    It's not. The Lib Dems are only on 9%.
    I need to see what the other minor parties are on.

    Edit: Greens on 8%.
  • LeonLeon Posts: 58,881

    Okaaaay.

    So Rideout expects people to transfer their savings into a currency widely expected to depreciate, while leaving their debts in a currency which may well grow stronger?

    Surely it would be the other way round?

    As there is no change to Sterling debts until such time as people and business ask for their banks to exchange them into the S£, then it is expected that the exchange of debts into S£ will lag significantly behind the exchange of deposits and cash.

    https://twitter.com/RideoutTim/status/1418628729123770371?s=20

    lol!

    If there is ever another indyref (and I begin to doubt this) then all the NO campaign has to do is show that thread to any Scottish voter, and they will run a fucking hundred miles away from YES. It's a sketch for an insane new currency written on a haggis-stained napkin by a "cartographer".

    And this is the SNP's big plan for the Scottish £??
  • kinabalukinabalu Posts: 44,288
    Leon said:

    The urban myth is that these errors (the stations are odd, as well) derive from the British game's American source.

    The original US version was Jersey City, I think? Then it made a million so they expanded - to London. And they sent some Yank to the Smoke to map out a London edition. As he had no native sense for the city you get anomalies like "Mayfair"
    It's a really bad error because Park Lane is already there and that's representing Mayfair.

    What they've done is like having Cheyne Walk AND Chelsea.
  • CandyCandy Posts: 51



    I do wonder if each supermarket varies more around the country and we're all talking at cross purposes.

    Certainly the Waitrose in Sheffield is nothing special.

    For it's British produce, Waitrose has a 30 mile rule, as in the food is sourced from within 30 miles of the supermarket. And Morrisons have a 35 mile rule.

    So local brands in their supermarkets vary massively, as in you'll find stuff in their Cornish stores that you won't find in their Scottish stores and vice versa.
  • SandpitSandpit Posts: 56,021
    edited July 2021

    Okaaaay.

    So Rideout expects people to transfer their savings into a currency widely expected to depreciate, while leaving their debts in a currency which may well grow stronger?

    Surely it would be the other way round?

    As there is no change to Sterling debts until such time as people and business ask for their banks to exchange them into the S£, then it is expected that the exchange of debts into S£ will lag significantly behind the exchange of deposits and cash.

    https://twitter.com/RideoutTim/status/1418628729123770371?s=20

    The biggest mistake, is in thinking that savings customers will be given the choice by their banks.

    The second biggest mistake, is in thinking the debtors will be given the choice.

    It’ll be savings in S£, and debts in GB£, unless they want hundreds of billions of S£ to be sold to buy GB£, overnight on day 1 - with the resultant price movement that might be expected.
  • MaxPBMaxPB Posts: 39,661
    edited July 2021

    Don't tell anyone this but they had the funding in place for the 2022-25 cycle if it had gone to auction, (probably going for the smaller Amazon package as a starter.)

    I suspect they may have been rejected on the grounds they don't have the ability to produce matches/shows to a suitable standard. Buying the rights is one thing, delivering them is another.
    It was probably a good decision not to bother. The Amazon pack was a pile of wank, two matchdays all matches live was a bit poor. If they had just one matchday or ca. 10-30 matches it would just be a pointless exercise as not many people are going to subscribe for that small number.

    BT found this out the hard way which is why they've retreaded from sports and TV. Their EPL package was never enough to get people in and Champion's League and Europa League rights appeal to far too few fans.

    I do wonder whether the future is going to be club streaming packages offered by ESPN on a revshare basis with the clubs themselves.
  • MattWMattW Posts: 25,672
    edited July 2021
    ..
  • another_richardanother_richard Posts: 27,266

    Europe vaccine stats:

    Hmm.
    100.0%s. Lots of them.
    A lot in the >80s. The ECDC are claiming that there weren't 0.05% of >80s for whom vaccines were not contraindicated?
    (See this effect in highly vaxxed countries like Sweden and Finland, where 70-79s come out higher.)
    Hmm.


    https://twitter.com/PaulMainwood/status/1418907992582406146?s=20

    The Ireland and Portugal numbers are surprising.
  • Sunil_PrasannanSunil_Prasannan Posts: 53,137
    From the Huff Post:

    image
  • MaxPBMaxPB Posts: 39,661

    From the Huff Post:

    image

    Sneering liberal media.
  • Stark_DawningStark_Dawning Posts: 9,925
    kinabalu said:

    It's a really bad error because Park Lane is already there and that's representing Mayfair.

    What they've done is like having Cheyne Walk AND Chelsea.
    Bit of trivia; The Old Kent Road is the only Monopoly property set south of the river.
  • TheScreamingEaglesTheScreamingEagles Posts: 121,168

    Okaaaay.

    So Rideout expects people to transfer their savings into a currency widely expected to depreciate, while leaving their debts in a currency which may well grow stronger?

    Surely it would be the other way round?

    As there is no change to Sterling debts until such time as people and business ask for their banks to exchange them into the S£, then it is expected that the exchange of debts into S£ will lag significantly behind the exchange of deposits and cash.

    https://twitter.com/RideoutTim/status/1418628729123770371?s=20

    BIB - This is my day job, he's talking bollocks.
  • kinabalukinabalu Posts: 44,288
    MrEd said:

    Good post Pip. Apparently, this is the first time the US has not won a Gold Medal on Day 1 since 1972

    Where are you now on The Man running again Ed? The drums seem to be beating a bit louder.
  • LeonLeon Posts: 58,881
    kinabalu said:

    It's a really bad error because Park Lane is already there and that's representing Mayfair.

    What they've done is like having Cheyne Walk AND Chelsea.
    Look like I'm wrong, but not entirely wrong

    The original American version was Atlantic City, not Jersey City, and the reason the choice of London streets is so eccentric - to Londoners - is because two guys from Leeds came down to map it out in a day


    https://www.theguardian.com/lifeandstyle/2010/dec/28/how-have-london-monopoly-streets-changed
  • SandpitSandpit Posts: 56,021

    Bit of trivia; The Old Kent Road is the only Monopoly property set south of the river.
    The people mapping it out, were going around in a taxi?
  • OnlyLivingBoyOnlyLivingBoy Posts: 16,256

    Bit of trivia; The Old Kent Road is the only Monopoly property set south of the river.
    Typical anti South London bias.
    My commute used to take me from near to the cheapest property on the board to near to the most expensive. Now I get to slum it 24/7.
  • kinabalukinabalu Posts: 44,288

    Bit of trivia; The Old Kent Road is the only Monopoly property set south of the river.
    That's why it's the cheapest, I guess.
  • TheScreamingEaglesTheScreamingEagles Posts: 121,168
    MaxPB said:

    It was probably a good decision not to bother. The Amazon pack was a pile of wank, two matchdays all matches live was a bit poor. If they had just one matchday or ca. 10-30 matches it would just be a pointless exercise as not many people are going to subscribe for that small number.

    BT found this out the hard way which is why they've retreaded from sports and TV. Their EPL package was never enough to get people in and Champion's League and Europa League rights appeal to far too few fans.

    I do wonder whether the future is going to be club streaming packages offered by ESPN on a revshare basis with the clubs themselves.
    I don't expect full streaming to happen this decade.

    Ultimately the broadband network isn't good enough to cope with streaming every match over a season. Back in 2019 when Amazon showed the Merseyside derby there were problems in Liverpool as most of the city was trying to watch the match.

    Imagine relying on Virgin Media to watch an entire season.

    The other issue with streaming/app based matches is that revenues might take a hit due to login details being shared. It is possible for one person to have an account and let three others have a profile and share the account.

    Cannot do that with Sky and others.

    Also it is easier to cancel/default with a subscription/app like this, do that with Sky and the PL still get the money the default is a Sky issue not a PL/app issue.
  • another_richardanother_richard Posts: 27,266
    Leon said:

    No no no no no. Again, a northern prole misunderstands poshness.

    Waitrose is owned by John Lewis. Remember what Carrie thought of John Lewis furniture. Boris and Carrie will think the same of Waitrose. They will use it for essentials but they will equally use M&S or Sainsburys, even Tesco. In London Waitrose is not high status, it is for lower/middle middle class people nervous of their status.

    For posh stuff they will go to Whole Foods, Planet Organic, specialist food halls, delis
    So am I right that the yearningly desperate wannabe poshos go to Waitrose but are laughed at by the swishly sophisticated wannabe poshos who go to Whole Foods etc ?

    Now is there an even higher level of wannabe poshos who are laughing at the swishly sophisticated wannabe poshos ? And if so where do they shop ?

    Finally where do the genuine poshos go ? Do they even exist ?
  • TheScreamingEaglesTheScreamingEagles Posts: 121,168

    NEW THREAD

  • SandpitSandpit Posts: 56,021
    edited July 2021
    Del
  • AslanAslan Posts: 1,673

    So am I right that the yearningly desperate wannabe poshos go to Waitrose but are laughed at by the swishly sophisticated wannabe poshos who go to Whole Foods etc ?

    Now is there an even higher level of wannabe poshos who are laughing at the swishly sophisticated wannabe poshos ? And if so where do they shop ?

    Finally where do the genuine poshos go ? Do they even exist ?
    Genuine poshos shop at Fortnum & Mason, now that Harrods is owned by cheap new money.
  • SandpitSandpit Posts: 56,021
    edited July 2021

    So am I right that the yearningly desperate wannabe poshos go to Waitrose but are laughed at by the swishly sophisticated wannabe poshos who go to Whole Foods etc ?

    Now is there an even higher level of wannabe poshos who are laughing at the swishly sophisticated wannabe poshos ? And if so where do they shop ?

    Finally where do the genuine poshos go ? Do they even exist ?
    The genuine poshos in London shop at Harrods, Fortnums, and Selfridges. Or rather, their butler does.
  • kinabalukinabalu Posts: 44,288

    Okaaaay.

    So Rideout expects people to transfer their savings into a currency widely expected to depreciate, while leaving their debts in a currency which may well grow stronger?

    Surely it would be the other way round?

    As there is no change to Sterling debts until such time as people and business ask for their banks to exchange them into the S£, then it is expected that the exchange of debts into S£ will lag significantly behind the exchange of deposits and cash.

    https://twitter.com/RideoutTim/status/1418628729123770371?s=20

    In a free and perfect and liquid market something can't be widely expected to depreciate. If it were it would immediately crash to a level where it was widely expected to stay the same. It's always by definition fair value.
  • TheuniondivvieTheuniondivvie Posts: 42,955
    Leon said:

    Judging by the responses on here, the reputation of Waitrose is higher with doddery provincial types than with swish sexy Londoners.

    This is quite explicable. All the major supermarkets go upmarket in London. My local M&S sells £25 wagyu rib eye steaks. I doubt they do that in "Leicester", wherever that is

    Also, Londoners have stores like Whole Foods (with no branches outside the capital, very sensibly) who stock superb ingredients, oils, seasonings, spirulina truffle essence, stuff that a Midlander or a Scotsman would probably put on his furniture, mistaking it for upmarket varnish, in that endearing but farcical way of theirs

    So, in the sticks, Waitrose is seen as a sainted outpost of London poshness, but in London, paradoxically, it's just another shop with nice balsamic vinegar and Brabantia bin bags
    Are you a swish sexy Londoner by any chance?
  • kinabalukinabalu Posts: 44,288

    Are you a swish sexy Londoner by any chance?
    He meant me, I think.
  • MalmesburyMalmesbury Posts: 53,424

    Europe vaccine stats:

    Hmm.
    100.0%s. Lots of them.
    A lot in the >80s. The ECDC are claiming that there weren't 0.05% of >80s for whom vaccines were not contraindicated?
    (See this effect in highly vaxxed countries like Sweden and Finland, where 70-79s come out higher.)
    Hmm.


    https://twitter.com/PaulMainwood/status/1418907992582406146?s=20

    So people are surprised that elderly people, who could expect to die 40%+* of the time if they contracted COVID, were really, really keen on the vaccine?

    *Which is Black Death CFR....
  • RogerRoger Posts: 20,103
    edited July 2021
    Someone sent me this rather charming letter to Private Eye.

    Sir,

    It's unkind to use a classics degree as shorthand for "Bluster Lies and Deceit" that characterise the current government and I say that writing from my office in a university bioscience department. The sciences can and will save lives, especially in the face of climate change and current and future pandemics, but classics and the other humanities are going to be what makes those lives worth living afterwards.

    The problem with Boris Johnson's response to the pandemic isn't that he studied classics: It's that he's a twat.

    John Boswell.
    Durham
  • https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=aFdBcYN3sNw

    Possibly the best Top Gear segment ever
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