halfcenturyup
Well-Known Member
- Joined
- 12 Oct 2009
- Messages
- 14,890
"I see people who reply to their own posts. They don't even know they are replying to their own posts".
You got that right!
Oh Damn. :(
"I see people who reply to their own posts. They don't even know they are replying to their own posts".
I can't state this any stronger but FUCK SIMON JORDAN.I don't always agree with Simon Jordan, but he's right when he says that the wage bills for the players are unsustainable (and unjustifiable?). This fact and agents' fees are a major factor in clubs' demise.
I'm waiting for certain clubs' bubbles to burst...
That’s right but don’t call me surely againSurely!
Then the 19 clubs each need to release a statement counter to Pep’s claims. They can’t say his words are libellous without backing up their belief is the entire opposite. We know they want us punished, they know it too so no chance we get Liverpool or Arsenal releasing statements suggesting they feel City should be treated innocent until proven guilty. Ergo it’s not liable as he’s stated fact, it’s for them to prove they believe so etching different to what Pep stated.Nope, the papers are not wrong. It is libel when broadcast.
What rules, has she made this up.I caught Reddy saying that the charges don't relate to breaking FFP rules but PL rules without highlighting which rules have been broken, with a tone that we're guilty because we've been accused.
I keep seeing this “the first bit is true” but where does said first bit end? After the first sentence or??? While I realise it’s bullshit, it’d be handy to know the exact bits that are true.This is a made up quote. The first bit I think he said but the rest is not true.
Then the 19 clubs each need to release a statement counter to Pep’s claims. They can’t say his words are libellous without backing up their belief is the entire opposite. We know they want us punished, they know it too so no chance we get Liverpool or Arsenal releasing statements suggesting they feel City should be treated innocent until proven guilty. Ergo it’s not liable as he’s stated fact, it’s for them to prove they believe so etching different to what Pep stated.
Cause without an apostrophe is perfectly acceptable in informal British English.Yep that's what I mean
Cause here makes no sense
'Cause or 'cos would have been correct
Dont mean to be pedantic but other fans will just see it as an error and not the point of it
I bet their English school reports started with the line "Johnny has a very good imagination but donesn't know how to spell integriti .....,"This exposes a wider point around sports journalists and their sources. Historically, when it was a profession which operated under an ethical code of sorts, when a journalist quoted an anonymous source, it was reasonable to conclude that it was bona fide. These sources served a genuine purpose, as it meant people with inside knowledge of a given situation could provide a degree of insight without revealing their identity. The sanctity of a journalist not revealing their sources meant people could whistle-blow without the consequences that would flow from that if their identity was disclosed. This meant information got into the press that would otherwise not. It wasn’t perfect, because people with an agenda could exploit it, but the public could read the article and accept that the source was genuine, even if the motives of the source were not.
These days, given the cesspit that sports journalism has descended into in an unedifying chase for clicks, I think most of these quotes we see are completely made up. My default position is that everything these cunts say is rooted in running a particular click-driven narrative and they will do anything, including making quotes up, to support that narrative.
So now, whenever I see an anonymous quote from a sport journalist, I simply assume it’s made up, and discount it, which is the only sensible and logical approach to follow.
OK it's The Sun but that writer makes a really good point. There were five clubs behind the scrapping of the gate-sharing agreement and the setting up of the PL - Liverpool, united, Spurs, Everton & Arsenal.Don’t know if anyone has already posted this but here is an alternative view from, of all places, The Sun.
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City owners arguably the most loved in football, jealous rivals should pipe down
IT HAS always been the most tribal of sports. One where the mood of an entire week can be shaped by 90 minutes. Eternally driven by emotion. And over the past few days we have had further proof of …www.thesun.co.uk
They all know what they’re doing. The PL, the other clubs and the media.Could the Premier League have not just come to us privately and sorted this all out guilty or not?
Dragging it out in public is very suss it's not them behind it all.
That is fucking brilliant. The way he squirms in his chair when she calls him out is a great watch.
Our PR team could learn a thing or 2 from that presenter, she’s ace.
It came later than all the allegations and investigation but before the charges.That came later and is a bit of a mystery. We do not know to whom the foreshadowed sale of shares is directed. They say they want to raise over £800m but we do not know its purpose.
But it's true what they say about you!This exposes a wider point around sports journalists and their sources. Historically, when it was a profession which operated under an ethical code of sorts, when a journalist quoted an anonymous source, it was reasonable to conclude that it was bona fide. These sources served a genuine purpose, as it meant people with inside knowledge of a given situation could provide a degree of insight without revealing their identity. The sanctity of a journalist not revealing their sources meant people could whistle-blow without the consequences that would flow from that if their identity was disclosed. This meant information got into the press that would otherwise not. It wasn’t perfect, because people with an agenda could exploit it, but the public could read the article and accept that the source was genuine, even if the motives of the source were not.
These days, given the cesspit that sports journalism has descended into in an unedifying chase for clicks, I think most of these quotes we see are completely made up. My default position is that everything these cunts say is rooted in running a particular click-driven narrative and they will do anything, including making quotes up, to support that narrative.
So now, whenever I see an anonymous quote from a sport journalist, I simply assume it’s made up, and discount it, which is the only sensible and logical approach to follow.
I think the scrapping of the gate receipts came in the early 80s and I think it was United Liverpool and Arsenal who pushed for that.OK it's The Sun but that writer makes a really good point. There were five clubs behind the scrapping of the gate-sharing agreement and the setting up of the PL - Liverpool, united, Spurs, Everton & Arsenal.
All those clubs have owners who are hated, to a greater of lesser degree, by their fans. At least two of those (Liverpool & united) are actively seeking a sale and two others (Spurs & Everton) might be open to one. Arsenal seem to be stable at the moment but their fans have no great love for Kroenke.
Does make you think that maybe this PL case is deflection pure and simple.
What rules, has she made this up.
So who did write it, because that is libellous.This is a made up quote. The first bit I think he said but the rest is not true.
Martin Lipton making stuff up, surely not....