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#46 | |
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Registered User
Join Date: Oct 2003
Location: Great Smoky Mountains, TN USA
Posts: 6,512
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If the German prosecutor has his way ,it will be Jan's execution.
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Whenever I can't get excited about riding I just fantasize about someone else's bike. |
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#47 |
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Registered User
Join Date: Oct 2004
Posts: 1,292
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Presently MLB and cycling for the most part are sharing the spotlight for athletes using PED's, but it seems like cycling seems far more scandalous than any other sport by the way information is released to the public.
I am not saying one sport is more right than another, but from my reading perspective in the media it seems like cycling is the one that will be hurt the worst. MLB is not dependent on sponsors and like jhuskey states where will the support come from once the sponsors pull out of cycling? It seems like to me that the authorities for cycling could have been a bit more discreet in trying to implement testing programs and punishing those who break the rules, but the way all of this is being played out in the public eye it seems like too risky for big corporate sponsors and they don't need their corporate names trashed along with the team that is in violation.
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#48 | |
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Registered User
Join Date: Jul 2006
Location: usa
Posts: 1,895
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"Bait in 08" --nns1400 |
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#49 | |
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Registered User
Join Date: Apr 2006
Posts: 90
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#50 |
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Registered User
Join Date: Aug 2006
Location: Upstate NY
Posts: 22
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I am far from an over enthusiastic bible thumpin conservative. I am probably one of the most liberal reformist minded Americans you will ever meet. I believe that the facts in this case point toward Floyd's innocence. Perhaps there is some masterminded conspiracy aimed at Damning the TDF and Floyd is just a pawn! Ever think of that??????? Maybe the Americans are trying to bring down the french by destroying the tour while throwing off the scent by Damining one of there own!!!!!!
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#51 | |
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Registered User
Join Date: Jun 2006
Location: Metro Boston Area
Posts: 31
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One more addition to this...If you are below the L.A. times and aren't selling anything either, then you get fired. Its called revenue! You need it to pay the bills. Everything in a capitalistic society is designed and needs to make a profit! So, the media wouldn't even carry this story if it wasn't going to get ratings, sell papers, or create an advantagous market some how. |
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#52 | |
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Registered User
Join Date: Sep 2005
Posts: 3,456
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I can confirm jhuskeys post. Something must have happened, people get very nervous if i ask questions about the samples and the rumour is getting louder and louder. It's different from the Hamilton case were a lot of insiders made jokes about his defence, this time people get nervous (they also get nervous if you ask the right questions about Puerto....)
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#53 | |
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Registered User
Join Date: Jul 2006
Location: usa
Posts: 1,895
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It's an overly simplistic explanation for hearing news you don't want to hear. Look, if you've ever spent any time inside a newsroom you'd drop this, "it's all about selling newspapers" crap. It doesn't happen. No one in the newsroom cares about how many newspapers are being sold. It doesn't enter into the equation. Media-conspiracy is a cop out. It just doesn't exist. Here's where people get confused. Many believe that, since the LATimes has no interest in running cycling results and stories about the classics or the Vuelta or anything less than the Tour, but they will run a story about Armstrong doping, then the paper is trying to make money off Armstrong's good name. The fact is, the general public at large doesn't care about cycling. They have an interest in Armstrong. Knowing their audience, why would the LAT run stories about things their audience could care less about. They're not catering to a niche market. That's for Velonews and the like. The LAT and all other newspapers, big or small, identify their audience and deliver what they believe their audience wants and sometimes needs to know. Sports is entertainment, so that last bit doesn't apply. Believe me, no one sits down in any editorial meeting and decides to run a story -- any story -- because they think it's going to sell newspapers or because they think it's going to further a political agenda. The reason is, morally ethical people would get up and walk out. In most the newsrooms I've worked at, that would be just about everyone. Every journalist knows that it's wrong to have those types of discussion and do those types of things. Media conspiracy bias: it does not happen.
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"Bait in 08" --nns1400 |
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#54 | |
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Registered User
Join Date: Sep 2005
Posts: 3,456
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There is no media conspiracy. There are media that were taking over by other companies, re-organized (less personell) and a lot of journalists are under pressure (time is money) and that's mostly the reason that stories are published without enough research (at least in Germany that's the case..).
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#55 | |
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Registered User
Join Date: Aug 2006
Posts: 53
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#56 | |
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Registered User
Join Date: Jul 2006
Location: usa
Posts: 1,895
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And your examples of this 100 percent bias would be? Would it be, "It's just common knowledge, dude. Come on!" And the war? What a mess. And this coming from a someone who actually served on the ground in the middle east (82nd AB, 3rd Ranger Bat., 46Q attached -- JTF Somalia) I'm sure my boys are enjoying themselves over there, sleeping on the ground, eating MREs, watching their buddys get their arms and legs blown off and killed, rotating in for up to 18 months and then rotating back out for six then back for 12. It's great watching your kids grow up via video tape. Boys who never had the balls to go down to the recruiter station and sign up are always the biggest hawks. Our veep is the perfect example. I signed up because I needed a fucking job, not because I was a hero or patriotic. There were a few whack jobs who were the exception, but most everyone I served with fit into that category. I don't suppose you served in the military, but you probably wish you had. Guys like you don't even make it past basic, much less jump school, air assult school, AIT... Never met a rich kid in the military. Not enlisted anyway. Don't get me started on that goddamn war.
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"Bait in 08" --nns1400 Last edited by helmutRoole2 : 16-09.-2006 at 07:36 AM. |
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#57 | |
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Registered User
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I never worked in a newsroom...but I was a bartender where journalists hung out. They are not men of morality. They are men of opinion. Most people around them saw the journalists as pariahs.... {And excessivly cheap ] The world of journalistic morality can be summed up with the following two words.....Jason Blair. I studied advertising during my university years. We used to laugh and call ourselves the "propagandists." Many of the articles written about todays hot story of "doping" are pieces of propaganda to sell newspapers. The references to Armstrong are being used to sell newspapers. Armstrong sells, "Frankie" does not. No one gives a shit about Frankie and if he doped. What they care about is an attempt to tie him to Armstrong and dope. The majority of cyclists in America could not even pick "Frankie" out in a police line-up. So why did the NYT's run his story. They knew by using the tie-in to Armstrong the story would play. And it has. Frankie is not a good guy. He cheated. He only came forward under the pressure of being called on the carpet by the lawyers representing Armstrong. His wife was protrayed in the trial and media as she is ...a nutcase..... Frankie needs to be used as an example..... he should be banned pernmantly from the world of professional cycling. He needs to be sued by Motorola to re-gain the financial rewards he recieved during an act of fraud. Possibly felony fraud.
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#58 |
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Registered User
Join Date: Oct 2003
Location: Great Smoky Mountains, TN USA
Posts: 6,512
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Gentlemen,there is a fine line between facts and truth and it is up to us to decide what exemplifies a preponderance of evidence that is defined only by careful examination of individual items presented as factual and authentic proof as they may relate to pertinent revelance.
In my estimation...............we should flip a coin and see who buys the next round. I am staunch on my position and will not yield to adverse persuasion. I hope I have had success in my effort to say nothing as I do not have definitive answer that will satisfy everyone. Lets hope pro cycling survives this mess!
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Whenever I can't get excited about riding I just fantasize about someone else's bike. |
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#59 | |
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Registered User
Join Date: Aug 2003
Location: arlington, VA
Posts: 1,208
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If you're going to hang stage 16 out as a litmus test, Floyd's stage 16 bonking performance suggest no PED. |
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#60 | |
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Registered User
Join Date: Aug 2006
Location: Scotland
Posts: 216
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Yeah, I'm sure that was Elvis Presley's Caddy parked at the local store as well ... |
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