As an NBA fan, I hate how ads keep getting crammed into every piece of equipment on the court, the jerseys, etc.
At some marketing meeting this was brought up and was promptly considers a feature, not a bug.
see https://ca.sports.yahoo.com/news/nhl-fans-are-already-fed-up...
Wow. That statement is dripping with contempt for their viewers. It sucks that these huge sports leagues have little in the way of competition.
But then the NHL is just like "hey, away jerseys are white and the ice is white and the boards are white and we really dgaf".
I went through a stage of mourning for the first couple weeks of the season. Now I'm just at a loss of what to do with my time...
Auto flagging ads is pretty good, but even don't bother, just using kodi as a front end with the plugin and skipping forward 3 minutes when an ad comes on does most of the job. (sometimes you do another 30 seconds or 1 minute and you get really good at it).
Start watching your program 10-20 minutes late and no ads.
Live sport is the only place I see tv ads at all nowadays - hence the crush and cram maybe?
Everything you do to avoid ads, from blocking your ears, to ripping out magazine pages, running myth or equivalent, pi hole and similar adblockers must be made explicitly completely legal on the grounds of self-defence and proper care of your family. Regardless of the legality it's kind of your ethical duty.
I haven't had any luck explaining to my wife that advertisements are basically a sort of cancerous meme designed to deliver misinformation and manipulate you into wasting your money on products that focus more on self-promotion than quality or value. I just sound like a jerk and she somehow takes it as a personal attack
I originally thought of it as "subtracting out annoying people" but "subtracting out ads" is much more compelling.
You'd be amazed how un-annoying it is to watch commercials with the sound off. Sometimes you watch and wonder what it's actually an ad FOR.
So, 100% of the time?
You do realize that you’re an enthusiastic and active participant in what is the marketing and advertising project of a VC firm, right?
I think what you mean to say is that the advertising you like isn’t a blight and the advertising you don’t like is a blight.
There may or may not be groups of people doing this already and posting about it in certain venues...
So fitting!
Video is available when I want it. The amount of content seems almost endless.
> After thinking about it for a bit, Godsey agreed to let me tell that story.
> After thinking about it for a bit, Godsey agreed to let me tell that story.
Also at first e.g. people having loud conversations in public or on the train and not having a clue what they are saying meant they were much less distracting.
Gutenberg opened a huge can of worms. Day 1 bibles, day 2 pamphlets, and sooner than you know it, there's a whole internet popping cookies all over.
No, I don't like it much either, and maybe we should charge advertisers high fees for the privilege of messing with the collective mind, which is in none too good shape from all their ministrations. Perhaps that would dial it down.
Obviously some people would disagree, but therein lies the problem; if one group of people wants to have professional sports and saturate society with ads, and the other group doesn't want to be saturated with ads, then society is saturated with ads. It's the same as the noisy neighbor problem; if one neighbor is noisy, and the other is quiet, life is perfect for the noisy neighbor and hell for the quiet neighbor.
The closest I've seen is Miami Heat's Vice unis https://www.nba.com/heat/2021-heat-vice-uniform-collection.
... and what was told privately is now public...
Can somebody that journalisms tell me what just happened?
The author got permission
> “I’m not sure I want to deal with the can of worms it will open, so I’ll tell you privately,” he wrote back.
And then the author published it. WTF? They won't have a good relationship now!
> After thinking about it for a bit, Godsey agreed to let me tell that story.
All that outrage for nothing.
> After thinking about it for a bit, Godsey agreed to let me tell that story. Here’s a transcript of a Zoom conversation I had with him a few days ago, edited for length and clarity.