
Eastern Oregon Bear said:I heard yesterday before the game that if the Rams won, they were planning to set off fireworks at Dodger Stadium, the Coliseum and West Hills Mall. I don't live down there or know the geography that well, but it could have seemed like fireworks were going off all around you. Supposedly if the Bengals won, the Bengal fans after party was going to be in Hollywood.okaydo said:
I live about 11 miles from Sofi Stadium.
I was sick and exhausted all day and made it to halftime before I fell asleep.
At about 7 p.m., I was awoken to the sound of fireworks.
I said to myself, "wow, those Sofi Stadium fireworks are loud."
Then I noticed that the fireworks were coming from all different directions.
So my second thought was, "wow, I had no idea there were so many Bengals fans in my neck of the woods."
So, what can you say? Obviously, it couldn't have gone any worse for Goff. I didn't think the Rams were the best team all season because, well, they struggled against Goff and the Lions.
Anyway, I'm glad this season is over...I have increasingly less interested in college football and the NFL. I mean the games. The odd thing is I think I'm more interested these days in the behind-the-scenes stuff than the actual games themselves. I'm not giving up on football, obviously, but I'm so glad this season is over. And I hate that it ended a week later than usual. Hopefully, they don't add another week....but if they do, at least a lot of people will have President's Day off.
Oski87 said:
9 bay area counties: Marin, Sonoma, Solano, Alameda, Contra Costa, San Francisco, San Mateo, Santa Clara, San Jose.
Dgoldnbaer said:
Oski87's map is considered the "Immediate" bay area. The "Greater" Bay area extends to Sacramento north & Saratog/Los Gatos south. As an exec in the ad agency in the 80's & '90's, the term "Greater Bay Area" for these areas was always used by my peers.
Does Napa count? You could argue it also touches the bay, and it's on the map.Big C said:Dgoldnbaer said:
Oski87's map is considered the "Immediate" bay area. The "Greater" Bay area extends to Sacramento north & Saratog/Los Gatos south. As an exec in the ad agency in the 80's & '90's, the term "Greater Bay Area" for these areas was always used by my peers.
The nine Bay Area counties are named as such because each one touches the bay (at least a little).
Just goes to show you, there are no official boundaries, borders or exact definitions for "areas" such as the Midwest, the Deep South, the Bay Area and LA. (folks from SoCal may take issue on that last one).
Interesting, actually. I've always found it especially interesting how people's definitions of the Midwest differ.
@THrants You visited SoCal and were treated with a warm welcome.. but you forgot something… It’s hailing/snowing in Pasadena 🤣 pic.twitter.com/6TwPr9NyAU
— David Mendoza (@DMendoza1227) February 16, 2022
The Hollywood sign has been temporarily changed to read RAMSHOUSE. pic.twitter.com/MWq0Knpmn9
— Gennefer Gross (@Gennefer) February 15, 2022
Our un-L.A. weather wreaked havoc with the RAMS HOUSE banners being hung over the Hollywood Sign.
— Mike Roe (he/him) (@MikeRoe) February 16, 2022
They still haven't been able to complete the process yet, but are HOPING to have things done in time for tomorrow's victory parade.
My story for @LAist:https://t.co/WnljQ8Lzzj
Bengals coach Zac Taylor said Joe Burrow played through a sprained MCL during Super Bowl LVI. pic.twitter.com/E7W0lVMsOF
— ESPN (@espn) February 16, 2022
AunBear89 said:
This thread. . .
Unfortunately I fractured my spine https://t.co/LeDjF4EJnp
— Kelly Smiley (@kellysmiley23) February 17, 2022
bearister said:
My favorite hiding place is in a used SUV in the back of the lot furthest from the lights.
Rtkbear said:
That was a jerk move - walks away after she falls while his wife is the only one that is concerned. Shows what kind of person he really is.
DiabloWags said:Rtkbear said:
That was a jerk move - walks away after she falls while his wife is the only one that is concerned. Shows what kind of person he really is.
A total ******.
That was pathetic.
I dont care how hammered he may have been.
calumnus said:DiabloWags said:Rtkbear said:
That was a jerk move - walks away after she falls while his wife is the only one that is concerned. Shows what kind of person he really is.
A total ******.
That was pathetic.
I dont care how hammered he may have been.
Wow. Now I have an actual reason to dislike Stafford. He showed ZERO concern or empathy and did nothing.
Chapman_is_Gone said:
As an ex-Chargers fan, I hate the NFL. For other reasons, too.
But I just don't get it. I watched maybe 15 minutes of the Super Bowl and I am annoyed by so many things.
- Football is meant to be played outdoors, on grass, in the elements. Like we all played on the neighborhood lot when we were 11 years old. The playoff games of the past couple of weeks prior to the Super Bowl were absolute classics, and most visually looked fantastic. Grass. Snow. Mud. Rain. I find it very odd that Beckham Jr hurts his knee, which to me (I'm biased) clearly was a result of artificial turf, yet the narrative is that Sofi Stadium is sooooooo coooooooool, so nobody says a damn thing about playing indoors on fake grass in freaking sunny and warm Los Angeles. And do fans really want a GIANT replay board hovering over their head, showing tweets and various ****ing smile cams? If this is what fans want, then I guess I no longer fit in. Fans truly want Jerry Jones domes around the nation? SMH.
- I happened to turn the game on during the halftime show and turned off the TV after literally laughing out loud and shaking my head. What I saw was Mary J Blige and about six other black women sticking their asses out in as prolonged and provocative a pose as imaginable. Have some class, ladies. I ask: When will self respect and the "me-too" movement make it unacceptable for such blatantly disgusting and misogynistic displays to be blasted across America? I am a huge music fan, and I go to see tons of live music (mostly rock and Americana), and I have tremendous respect for the talented females who make it in the music business without whoring themselves out. Today's pop music ****ing sucks. SMH.
- To me, the game always feels like a letdown, and I know many other people feel the same way. The solution? Quit taking a week off between the conference championship game and the Super Bowl. And the game should be played at the home stadium of whichever team had the better record. In the outdoors. Rant off.
It's time to rip up all turf fields and use grass and only grass, in every NFL stadium. https://t.co/TAsGv1qY5j
— ProFootballTalk (@ProFootballTalk) February 19, 2022
Big C said:
The fact that host cities prepare for *years* in order to host the event is emblematic of the problem: The Super Bowl is an over-hyped, over-commercialized extravaganza that has fooled millions of gullible Americans with no taste into thinking they enjoy it. But hey, to each his own: Many would find my interest in Cal Football and Basketball to be ridiculous, too.
You seem to have a strange idea of what the Me Too movement was actually about. It had nothing to do with scantily-clad performers. It was about exposing harassment and assault towards women (well, really everyone, but mostly women).Chapman_is_Gone said:
- I happened to turn the game on during the halftime show and turned off the TV after literally laughing out loud and shaking my head. What I saw was Mary J Blige and about six other black women sticking their asses out in as prolonged and provocative a pose as imaginable. Have some class, ladies. I ask: When will self respect and the "me-too" movement make it unacceptable for such blatantly disgusting and misogynistic displays to be blasted across America? I am a huge music fan, and I go to see tons of live music (mostly rock and Americana), and I have tremendous respect for the talented females who make it in the music business without whoring themselves out. Today's pop music ****ing sucks. SMH.
sycasey said:You seem to have a strange idea of what the Me Too movement was actually about. It had nothing to do with scantily-clad performers. It was about exposing harassment and assault towards women (well, really everyone, but mostly women).Chapman_is_Gone said:
- I happened to turn the game on during the halftime show and turned off the TV after literally laughing out loud and shaking my head. What I saw was Mary J Blige and about six other black women sticking their asses out in as prolonged and provocative a pose as imaginable. Have some class, ladies. I ask: When will self respect and the "me-too" movement make it unacceptable for such blatantly disgusting and misogynistic displays to be blasted across America? I am a huge music fan, and I go to see tons of live music (mostly rock and Americana), and I have tremendous respect for the talented females who make it in the music business without whoring themselves out. Today's pop music ****ing sucks. SMH.
You talk about the Mary J. Blige performance. Who do you think approved those outfits and that choreography? You think any of that was forced on Blige? It seems pretty obvious to me that it was her choice to dress that way and to have the dancers look like that. Nothing misogynist about a woman making her own choices here, whether you like those choices or not.
And of course, none of this was "today's" music. Most of these songs are decades old. Mary J. Blige has been a popular artist since 1992 . . . 30 years ago.
calumnus said:sycasey said:You seem to have a strange idea of what the Me Too movement was actually about. It had nothing to do with scantily-clad performers. It was about exposing harassment and assault towards women (well, really everyone, but mostly women).Chapman_is_Gone said:
- I happened to turn the game on during the halftime show and turned off the TV after literally laughing out loud and shaking my head. What I saw was Mary J Blige and about six other black women sticking their asses out in as prolonged and provocative a pose as imaginable. Have some class, ladies. I ask: When will self respect and the "me-too" movement make it unacceptable for such blatantly disgusting and misogynistic displays to be blasted across America? I am a huge music fan, and I go to see tons of live music (mostly rock and Americana), and I have tremendous respect for the talented females who make it in the music business without whoring themselves out. Today's pop music ****ing sucks. SMH.
You talk about the Mary J. Blige performance. Who do you think approved those outfits and that choreography? You think any of that was forced on Blige? It seems pretty obvious to me that it was her choice to dress that way and to have the dancers look like that. Nothing misogynist about a woman making her own choices here, whether you like those choices or not.
And of course, none of this was "today's" music. Most of these songs are decades old. Mary J. Blige has been a popular artist since 1992 . . . 30 years ago.
Yeah, I laugh at the people talking about this year's half time show being "young people's music" when it is music/ artists from the 80s and early 90s mostly. It would be like a Super Bowl in the 1980s talking about Elvis or Frank Sinatra in the same way.
calumnus said:sycasey said:You seem to have a strange idea of what the Me Too movement was actually about. It had nothing to do with scantily-clad performers. It was about exposing harassment and assault towards women (well, really everyone, but mostly women).Chapman_is_Gone said:
- I happened to turn the game on during the halftime show and turned off the TV after literally laughing out loud and shaking my head. What I saw was Mary J Blige and about six other black women sticking their asses out in as prolonged and provocative a pose as imaginable. Have some class, ladies. I ask: When will self respect and the "me-too" movement make it unacceptable for such blatantly disgusting and misogynistic displays to be blasted across America? I am a huge music fan, and I go to see tons of live music (mostly rock and Americana), and I have tremendous respect for the talented females who make it in the music business without whoring themselves out. Today's pop music ****ing sucks. SMH.
You talk about the Mary J. Blige performance. Who do you think approved those outfits and that choreography? You think any of that was forced on Blige? It seems pretty obvious to me that it was her choice to dress that way and to have the dancers look like that. Nothing misogynist about a woman making her own choices here, whether you like those choices or not.
And of course, none of this was "today's" music. Most of these songs are decades old. Mary J. Blige has been a popular artist since 1992 . . . 30 years ago.
Yeah, I laugh at the people talking about this year's half time show being "young people's music" when it is music/ artists from the 80s and early 90s mostly. It would be like a Super Bowl in the 1980s talking about Elvis or Frank Sinatra in the same way. Dre is 57. Snoop is 50.
dimitrig said:calumnus said:sycasey said:You seem to have a strange idea of what the Me Too movement was actually about. It had nothing to do with scantily-clad performers. It was about exposing harassment and assault towards women (well, really everyone, but mostly women).Chapman_is_Gone said:
- I happened to turn the game on during the halftime show and turned off the TV after literally laughing out loud and shaking my head. What I saw was Mary J Blige and about six other black women sticking their asses out in as prolonged and provocative a pose as imaginable. Have some class, ladies. I ask: When will self respect and the "me-too" movement make it unacceptable for such blatantly disgusting and misogynistic displays to be blasted across America? I am a huge music fan, and I go to see tons of live music (mostly rock and Americana), and I have tremendous respect for the talented females who make it in the music business without whoring themselves out. Today's pop music ****ing sucks. SMH.
You talk about the Mary J. Blige performance. Who do you think approved those outfits and that choreography? You think any of that was forced on Blige? It seems pretty obvious to me that it was her choice to dress that way and to have the dancers look like that. Nothing misogynist about a woman making her own choices here, whether you like those choices or not.
And of course, none of this was "today's" music. Most of these songs are decades old. Mary J. Blige has been a popular artist since 1992 . . . 30 years ago.
Yeah, I laugh at the people talking about this year's half time show being "young people's music" when it is music/ artists from the 80s and early 90s mostly. It would be like a Super Bowl in the 1980s talking about Elvis or Frank Sinatra in the same way.
It is in Super Bowl terms.
The Super Bowl had the Rolling Stones on as recently as 2006.
That is about 40 years after their peak.
Chapman_is_Gone said:
You seriously think I'm not aware of the silly argument that women whoring themselves out on stage is liberating and an expression of their freedom and their power?
So, I'll stop on this topic. Enjoy your **** pop music with that fat black ass poppin'. Cuz that's what it's all about -- that's quality.
Chapman_is_Gone said:
Enjoy your **** pop music with that fat black ass poppin'.
B.A. Bearacus said:Chapman_is_Gone said:
Enjoy your **** pop music with that fat black ass poppin'.
Would you write that sentence differently if you had a do over?
"Super Bowl LVI was remembered for just two things: Matthew Stafford and his wife walked away from a photographer who could have just died and Chapman_is_Gone used 'black ass' in a sentence without any second thoughts. It was the first time that phrase had ever been used on BI."Big C said:B.A. Bearacus said:Chapman_is_Gone said:
Enjoy your **** pop music with that fat black ass poppin'.
Would you write that sentence differently if you had a do over?
Would Juwan Howard have kept his hands to himself, if he had a do over?