Lockyer4President!
First Grade
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- 7,975
I don't have one with you atm, I'm just curious about your behaviour.What's your beef with me...??
I don't have one with you atm, I'm just curious about your behaviour.What's your beef with me...??
Put aside your personal bias for or against poker machine revenues (something that 20th century society found legitimate) and have a read of this opinion piece in today's SMH:
At the end of the day less money from pokies makes rugby league the winner
http://smh.com.au/opinion/at-the-end-of-the-day-less-money-from-pokies-makes-rugby-league-the-winner-20090306-8r08.html
Worthwhile like your above comment..??
The quotes above are not from the news section, they are from the opinion section. Everyone is entitled to their opinion...even Lisa Prior from the Herald..
Opinion pieces are always going to ruffle a few feathers...That's the idea of them..
It still has nothing to do with bias..
If you think that piece is not bias, then you are thick and blind...especially after the highlighted quotes have also been presented.
In the bedroom, Julian obviously enjoys the cut and thrust ... of a strap on.
according to the (Reuben) Wikipedia.
Lisa Pryor
Born in Sydney in 1978, she was educated at Ravenswood, where she achieved a perfect TER score of 100, and the University of Sydney, where she graduated in arts and law.[1] She is a journalist and columnist with the Sydney Morning Herald,[2] where she has also edited the opinion page. She is married to Julian Morrow of The Chaser comedy team. Her 2008 book, The Pinstriped Prison, sceptically examines the recruitment processes of large law firms, management consulting firms and investment banks, and criticises the flow of talent into these fields.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lisa_Pryor
Lisa Pryor is biased in her opinion, but so what.?? You are biased in your opinion as am I...
It was in the opinion section....
Also a lot of truth to her opinion in a very harsh way...
The main point of her opinion to me, is that Rugby League should not rely on poker machine revenue to fund the game...
Any arguements???
Todays SMH has a lift out magazine title Sport & Style.
Its full of fluff pieces as you'd expect, but it also devotes 2 pages to the start of the AFL season, as well as 2 pages to 'memorable marks', without any coverage of the start of the NRL season next week.
There is a fluff piece on Jamal Idris from the Bulldogs (NRL), but that's balanced out with fluff by Tim Rogers (you am I) and his love the the Kangaroos (AFL).
It's a travesty that a Sydney news paper can publish a magazine on sport without mentioning Rugby League, expecially with 8 days to go to the start of the season.
You can write feedback to sportandstyle@fairfaxmedia.com.au
people should be making complaints here as i'm sure that a few principles are being broken http://www.presscouncil.org.au/pcsite/complaints/sop.html
Put aside your personal bias for or against poker machine revenues (something that 20th century society found legitimate) and have a read of this opinion piece in today's SMH:
At the end of the day less money from pokies makes rugby league the winner
[URL="http://smh.com.au/opinion/at-the-end-of-the-day-less-money-from-pokies-makes-rugby-league-the-winner-20090306-8r08.html"]http://smh.com.au/opinion/at-the-end-of-the-day-less-money-from-pokies-makes-rugby-league-the-winner-20090306-8r08.html[/URL]
Did you actually buy the newspaper involved?Todays SMH has a lift out magazine title Sport & Style.
Its full of fluff pieces as you'd expect, but it also devotes 2 pages to the start of the AFL season, as well as 2 pages to 'memorable marks', without any coverage of the start of the NRL season next week.
There is a fluff piece on Jamal Idris from the Bulldogs (NRL), but that's balanced out with fluff by Tim Rogers (you am I) and his love the the Kangaroos (AFL).
It's a travesty that a Sydney news paper can publish a magazine on sport without mentioning Rugby League, expecially with 8 days to go to the start of the season.
You can write feedback to sportandstyle@fairfaxmedia.com.au
AFL clubs make killing on pokies
http://www.theage.com.au/national/afl-clubs-make-killing-on-pokies-20090307-8rym.html
VICTORIAN AFL clubs reaped $245 million from poker machines in the past three financial years and are increasingly targeting Melbourne's most vulnerable communities.
With thanks to El Diablo who found this.
I wonder where he is getting these stats from?The other broad contention is that this is not just rugby league's problem, but society's problem, with the Herald reporting yesterday that in NSW there are 5000 sexual assault incidents each month.
Those figures are horrifying, and yet let's call it true: none of the other codes have as many claims of bad behaviour to women remotely close to that of league.
League's dummy and swerve
* March 13, 2009
IT TOOK them a while but finally they managed it. As rugby league's season opens tonight amid the steaming, malodorous wreckage of its publicity campaign, the code's bosses can at least be pleased they have pulled the Manly club into line, and ensured Brett Stewart is not part of its on-field line-up while the sexual assault case against him is pending. Even so, the episode suggests that values which are obvious to the rest of the community are still something of a mystery for some who administer the greatest game of all.
Manly has long thrived on, and motivated itself with, its status as the team others love to hate. An alone-against-the-world attitude may be useful for team bonding, but the same attitude at higher levels of the club becomes dangerous. It has worked to Manly's disadvantage in the Brett Stewart affair. Manly fans viewing their club management's truculent approach to the matter, as reported in yesterday's Herald, may perhaps shrug and say: 'That's just the rugby league culture - the tribe defending its own'. But if the code is to survive it must market itself more widely, and Manly's defensive and inept response will strike the general public as simply ludicrous - a dinosaur trying to tap dance its way out of quicksand.
The National Rugby League, which does not want to run a game for dinosaurs, should be praised for managing to get the club - eventually - to see sense. Its focus has rightly been on Manly's ill-managed season-opening event, where an abundance of alcohol appears to have been a factor in two alleged incidents - the second involving an altercation between Anthony Watmough and a club sponsor.
But the NRL deserves no praise for presiding over a code in which embarrassing incidents occur year after year. It has tried to address the behaviour issue, hiring consultants to educate players on how to conduct themselves off the field. Clearly, though, they have not been especially successful. League's defenders have argued it is society, not the game, that is at fault. Or that Brett Stewart has been hardly done by because others similarly accused have not been sidelined. Perhaps - but the fundamental problem is that, too often, significant sections within rugby league appear to say one thing about player behaviour and mean something else. A consistent response may not stop players' misbehaviour, but it will show league does not condone it.
Not onlyis You am I another sh*thouse OZ music group, and Tim Rogers is a sh*thouse musician, he's an AFL fan, just when i thought i couldn't hate the group anymore..
Not onlyis You am I another sh*thouse OZ music group, and Tim Rogers is a sh*thouse musician, he's an AFL fan, just when i thought i couldn't hate the group anymore..
Look at The Age's 'Favourite Sports Poll':
Sporting choices : What is your favourite sport?
Rugby Union - 4%
Motor racing - 2%
Basketball - 2%
Tennis - 4%
Swimming - 0%
Horse racing - 2%
Golf - 2%
Cricket - 20%
Soccer - 8%
AFL - 55%
Total Votes: 161 Poll date: 10/03/09
http://www.theage.com.au/polls/sport/results.html