The NFL Fan Manifesto

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  • Flasteel
    Hall of Famer
    • May 2008
    • 4004

    The NFL Fan Manifesto

    Well, with little feedback and even less chance of actually having an impact, here is the NFL Fan Manifesto.

    I will leave it up here for a couple of days, before sending it to a bunch of people via email. If you believe that this is something you want to get behind, then pass it along yourself. By passing it along, you take an oath to only do the best you can in following the tenets outlined...nobody expects complete adherence.

    I can make this into a single .pdf document as well, but I don't know how to upload documents to the web. Any direction would be appreciated.




    sigpic
  • MeetJoeGreene
    Hall of Famer
    • May 2008
    • 3221

    #2
    Re: The NFL Fan Manifesto

    I like it. How can we propagate?

    I will only have problems with not watching the draft (on ESPN though) and Old Spice (drives the wifey crazey).

    .. just kidding about the Old Spice
    Cleveland spelled backwards is DNA Level C
    http://i225.photobucket.com/albums/d...itty29/mjg.jpg
    another AA/AS original.

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    • Flasteel
      Hall of Famer
      • May 2008
      • 4004

      #3
      Re: The NFL Fan Manifesto

      Originally posted by MeetJoeGreene
      I like it. How can we propagate?

      I will only have problems with not watching the draft (on ESPN though) and Old Spice (drives the wifey crazey).

      .. just kidding about the Old Spice
      I'm sure there will be more than a few people who will not be able to stay away from the draft. I'll follow on the web or something myself. I'd just love for the draft to get the worst ratings ever. Not only would it be an early message, but maybe they'd start considering moving the damn thing back to the weekend and cover only 2 days.

      I'm going to send this out via email mostly. I'll also publish a .pdf link, but you could also just copy the code and post the pics on other message boards. I think I'll do it over at Pittsburgh Sports Tavern now.
      sigpic

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      • Flasteel
        Hall of Famer
        • May 2008
        • 4004

        #4
        Re: The NFL Fan Manifesto

        Here's the .pdf link:

        [url="http://www.mediafire.com/?hwmccb65yerunnq"]http://www.mediafire.com/?hwmccb65yerunnq[/url]
        sigpic

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        • NKySteeler
          Hall of Famer
          • May 2008
          • 3111

          #5
          Re: The NFL Fan Manifesto

          Thanx for sending this to me, Fla... I took care of it...
          http://i43.tinypic.com/24lub7t.jpg

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          • fordfixer
            Legend
            • May 2008
            • 10921

            #6
            Re: The NFL Fan Manifesto

            Nicely done

            Molon labe

            People sleep peaceably in their beds at night only because rough men stand ready to do violence on their behalf. George Orwell

            ?We're not going to apologize for winning.?
            Mike Tomlin

            American metal pimped by asiansteel
            Only two defining forces have ever offered to die for you 1. Jesus Christ, 2.The American G.I., One died for your soul, the other for your freedom.

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            • hawaiiansteel
              Legend
              • May 2008
              • 35649

              #7
              Re: The NFL Fan Manifesto

              Six industries hurt by an NFL lockout

              By Angela Daidone, Investopedia.com


              Since 1985, professional football has steadily led the field as the most popular sport in the United States. In fact, the most recent Harris poll shows that it’s earned a double-digit lead over baseball, long considered America’s pastime. So it’s no wonder that companies are sweating over the owner/player dispute that is threatening to cancel the 2011-12 NFL season. Here is a sampling of industries that will be affected by the lockout.

              Television

              DirecTV could be the big loser if the National Football League cancels the 2011 season. According to a report by Bloomberg News, the largest U.S. satellite-television provider could lose more than $600 million in revenue this year.

              DirecTV’s NFL Sunday Ticket, which allows viewers to watch every NFL game, generated between $600 million and $750 million in subscription revenue last season. The football package is not offered by any other satellite-program operator. DirecTV also stands to lose an estimated $100 million in ad sales without NFL games.

              But a canceled season would also impact other television and broadcast companies, including CBS’s CBS Network, News Corporation’s Fox, Comcast’s NBC and Walt Disney’s ESPN, all of which broadcast games throughout the season, and would likely see reduced advertising revenue if there are no games to air. ESPN may be especially antsy about a quick settlement; it is reportedly close to a $2 billion renewal for the rights to Monday Night Football beyond 2020, Sports Business Daily reported.

              In 2010, 65 of the top 100 watched sporting events in the United States were NFL games, and every TV ad spot for the Super Bowl (which cost as much as $2.8 million for a 30-second-spot last season) was sold out months before the big game.

              Video games

              Yes, fans are always ready for some football – even the computer-generated version. Electronic Arts, the maker of the popular “Madden” football franchise video games, recently said it is going ahead with its Madden NFL 12 edition, despite the NFL owners and players still squaring off at the negotiations table. But a lockout could result in real-life losses of about $165 million for EA, which analysts say could suffer a 50 percent drop in sales. Madden 12 is due on the shelves in August, just weeks before the NFL season usually kicks off.

              Vendors, souvenir merchants, tourism

              Games bring fans; fans mean sales, whether it’s foam fingers, cheese heads or bobble-head dolls. Fans also need a place to stay, especially out-of-towners who travel to watch their favorite team on the road. But with the owners and players in a deadlock, many stadium cities could become ghost towns. The Minneapolis Downtown Council estimates a $9 million loss per home game if the Vikings don’t play. Multiply that by eight games, and we’re talking big bucks. (And that’s for a team that went 6-10 last season.)

              The trickle-down effect could be even worse. Without customers, stores, hotels, stadium concessions and crews for clean-up and security would not be needed, accounting for countless jobs lost.

              Food

              An NFL lockout is making the food industry cluck with anxiety. According to the National Chicken Council, football fans consume about 5-10 million pounds of chicken wings during Thursday, Sunday and Monday games in each of the 17 weeks of the NFL season. On Super Bowl Sunday alone, an estimated 450 million wings were consumed.

              Beer/beverages

              Soft drink companies, including Gatorade (the official dumped-on-the-head-coach beverage), hawk their products in TV ads and on stadium billboards, resulting in multi-billion sales each year, not to mention moneys spent on exclusive rights to associate their brand with the NFL.

              A few examples: Pepsi paid $560 million over eight years; Gatorade forks over $45 million a year, plus marketing costs and free supplies for teams. Companies wouldn’t spend those kinds of dollars if the returns weren’t worth it, right?

              But beer sales would suffer big time, especially for Anheuser-Busch InBev, which is paying $1.2 billion over six years to make Bud Light the NFL’s official beer sponsor, starting with the 2011 season, according to Advertising Age. One lost season may translate to an awful lot of suds down the drain.

              Sporting goods

              After inking a deal reportedly worth $1.1 billion to become the NFL’s official outfitter, Nike bigwigs are probably breathing a sigh of relief that the contract doesn’t go into effect until April 2012. Meanwhile, Reebok, the current outfitter, stands to lose a hefty sum if this season is canceled. And those deals only apply to apparel and uniforms worn by the players and coaches.

              Americans spent more than $8 billion on sports logo apparel in 2009 (the most recent data) with pro football claiming a big chunk of those sales approximately $2.5 billion. The recession took a bite out of the retail market in 2010 analysts estimate U.S. NFL merchandise sales dropped to $2.1 billion, and there’s no telling what consumers will do if they can’t show off their team colors.

              The bottom line

              Players and owners are the ones that make the news stories in this NFL mess. But no matter whose side you’re on, the real losers are the businesses that count on those headline grabbers to make their living. There’s a lot more at stake than collective bargaining issues.

              [url="http://sports.yahoo.com/nfl/news?slug=ys-investopedia-who_else_suffers_from_nfl_lockout_040811"]http://sports.yahoo.com/nfl/news?slug=y ... out_040811[/url]

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              • _SteeL_CurtaiN_
                Backup
                • Sep 2008
                • 258

                #8
                Re: The NFL Fan Manifesto

                Sunday ticket subscription CANCELLED! One more voice to the masses. I did get a bonus from DirecTV...They are sending me a free HD DVR, the wife says heck we should cancell HBO and see what they give us !!!!

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                • Djfan
                  Legend
                  • May 2008
                  • 5184

                  #9
                  Re: The NFL Fan Manifesto

                  I'm in on this. Hope the hacks notice.
                  Steel City Mafia
                  So Cal Boss (Ret)
                  [URL]http://www.anewsong.com[/URL]

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                  • Flasteel
                    Hall of Famer
                    • May 2008
                    • 4004

                    #10
                    Re: The NFL Fan Manifesto

                    Originally posted by Djfan
                    I'm in on this. Hope the hacks notice.
                    Ha!! I forgot about sending that out. I gave it to a bunch of people...even a buddy of mine who is an ESPN anchor. I have yet to hear a peep. I never expected it would make a ripple, but it was slightly cathartic to just to write it down.

                    I'm still following the manifesto to the best of my abilities. I did however break down and get a new Steelers coffee mug for the Jeep. Hopefully it's not an officially licensed product.
                    sigpic

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                    • BradshawsHairdresser
                      Legend
                      • Dec 2008
                      • 7056

                      #11
                      Re: The NFL Fan Manifesto

                      Gonna be hard to give up my Pepsi...but count me in, too.

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                      • _SteeL_CurtaiN_
                        Backup
                        • Sep 2008
                        • 258

                        #12
                        Re: The NFL Fan Manifesto

                        Bump

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