FIFA
#121
Posted 2015-June-03, 21:36
and if i can continue my terrible analogy, fosters is to subway or nandos or whatever ubiquitous chain is regional to you as bud is to mcdonalds. it's a different product but the experience is the same. it's not trying to be good. it's trying to be not bad to everyone.
but please, tell us more about how your steakhouse is great and mcdonalds is terrible.
bed
#122
Posted 2015-June-03, 21:39
bed
#123
Posted 2015-June-03, 22:41
jjbrr, on 2015-June-03, 21:36, said:
and if i can continue my terrible analogy, fosters is to subway or nandos or whatever ubiquitous chain is regional to you as bud is to mcdonalds. it's a different product but the experience is the same. it's not trying to be good. it's trying to be not bad to everyone.
but please, tell us more about how your steakhouse is great and mcdonalds is terrible.
This would be fine if they didn't try to present it as so great, and there weren't large queues of Americans coming to countries with excellent beer who won't try it and just want a Bud. There was also a huge sour taste left when they tried to stop the original Budweiser being sold under its name that it had for 400 years.
#125
Posted 2015-June-04, 00:13
Cyberyeti, on 2015-June-03, 22:41, said:
i'm not sure what to tell you except that these people simply see the world differently than you and i. is it really a surprise that when the lowest common denominator from a country with wacky alcohol laws/culture are presented with possibly unfamiliar alternatives that they stick with what they're familiar and with what they've been conditioned to think is good/patriotic/ooooh look at the clydesdale and the cute dalmation?
diana_eva, on 2015-June-03, 22:57, said:
!H and thanks for all you do for BBF.
bed
#126
Posted 2015-June-04, 05:40
jjbrr, on 2015-June-04, 00:13, said:
I think it's cultural, people from many other countries go abroad to experience foreign culture. Brits are not immune to this, going to Benidorm on holiday then drinking LCD British beer and having fish and chips every evening (usually while acquiring a colour only normally seen on a lobster), but this has reduced over the years, it was extremely common 30 years ago. The US seems to have a higher proportion that if they want to go abroad at all, want to have McDonalds then a Bud.
#127
Posted 2015-June-04, 08:01
Cyberyeti, on 2015-June-04, 05:40, said:
I know this is the FIFA thead but this interests me so maybe I will be forgiven.
I agree with the above comments, particularly the "extremely common 30 years ago" part. This has a lot to do with age. I always enjoy traveling, but I don't do it all that often. Growing up in Minnesota I regarded a trip to Wisconsin as traveling. Once, when I was eight, we even went to Chicago.
It takes effort to change habits of thought.
As to beer, you might find this amusing. As I started drinking beer (illegally) in the 1950s Hamm's was the big beer on the block. In fact "have a Hamm's" was sort of like "Xerox this article", the latter not always being done with a machine made by Xerox. Anyway, in the early 60's some bars started serving Lowenbrau. No one knew how to pronounce it (this was before Lowenbrau moved to St. Louis and, so to speak, took out American citizenship), but we understood it had snob appeal. I was in a bar with friends, we were all ordering Lowenbrau and commenting on its superiority. I had more of a "beer is beer" attitude. As we were leaving, the bartender confided to me that they had run out of Lowenbrau hours ago and had been serving Hamm's. He figured, correctly, no one would notice.
When I travel I have little interest in guided tours and I mostly stay out of chain outlets, US based or otherwise. The Starbucks in Paris was an exception. French coffee is fine but it is, or was, served in cups that hold maybe 2 ounces. I want a grande, Or a vente. Apparently the French agree, the Starbucks was crowded and by no means was everyone chattering in English.
#128
Posted 2015-June-04, 09:12
#129
Posted 2015-June-04, 09:37
Fluffy, on 2015-June-04, 09:12, said:
I sure as hell hope not.
#130
Posted 2015-June-04, 10:43
Fluffy, on 2015-June-04, 09:12, said:
And give them all to the team who can most act like a victim? "Evil Real Madrid, they're all about the profits. They are not as pure and innocent as us since we only take in 230 million dollars every year."
George Carlin
#131
Posted 2015-June-04, 15:45
bed
#132
Posted 2015-June-04, 17:05
jjbrr, on 2015-June-04, 15:45, said:
The cricket world cup has happened on that basis, but I suspect the stadia wouldn't really be big enough or have the right facilities, and unlike Qatar, the islands don't have the money to build a load of white elephant huge stadia.
#133
Posted 2015-June-04, 23:49
The world cup belongs to Fifa.
It does not deserve to exist.
Let the competition in; be it one or ten thingy===
-------------------------------
With all of that suggested I predict fans. the customers who pay billions to Fifa and its sponsors will continue to funnel billions upon billions to Fifa
they will forget and forgive
the world cup must exist no matter what
no matter what
#134
Posted 2015-June-05, 18:01
mike777, on 2015-June-04, 23:49, said:
The world cup belongs to Fifa.
It does not deserve to exist.
Let the competition in; be it one or ten thingy===
-------------------------------
With all of that suggested I predict fans. the customers who pay billions to Fifa and its sponsors will continue to funnel billions upon billions to Fifa
they will forget and forgive
the world cup must exist no matter what
no matter what
You are talking about a game which its roots go way back to 2nd century BC. And you are talking about a world cup that actually all nations on earth participates. Do not confuse it with what we call "World Series" here in USA. You are talking about the real world series of a sport. A sport that is THE MOST popular and loved by HUGE majority of the world.
You have been repeating this nonsense god knows how many times in same thread.
We had corrupted cops, still have, but we do not terminate the law enforcement do we?
We had much more corruption than FIFA, which probably makes FIFA look like a "nun", in all branches of government, justice system, but we do not terminate the country now do we?
Yes The World Cup must exist and it will. You better get used to it Mike.
"It's only when a mosquito lands on your testicles that you realize there is always a way to solve problems without using violence!"
"Well to be perfectly honest, in my humble opinion, of course without offending anyone who thinks differently from my point of view, but also by looking into this matter in a different perspective and without being condemning of one's view's and by trying to make it objectified, and by considering each and every one's valid opinion, I honestly believe that I completely forgot what I was going to say."
#135
Posted 2015-June-05, 20:35
MrAce, on 2015-June-05, 18:01, said:
We had much more corruption than FIFA, which probably makes FIFA look like a "nun", in all branches of government, justice system, but we do not terminate the country now do we?
Maybe we should.
As for tv, screw it. You aren't missing anything. -- Ken Berg
I have come to realise it is futile to expect or hope a regular club game will be run in accordance with the laws. -- Jillybean
#136
Posted 2015-June-06, 03:33
blackshoe, on 2015-June-05, 20:35, said:
Senor, senor, can you tell me where we're headin ?
Lincoln County Road or Armageddon ?
...
Senor, senor, let's overturn these tables
Disconnect these cables
This place don't make sense to me no more
Can you tell me what we're waiting for, senor ?
#137
Posted 2015-June-06, 11:27
MrAce, on 2015-June-05, 18:01, said:
You have been repeating this nonsense god knows how many times in same thread.
We had corrupted cops, still have, but we do not terminate the law enforcement do we?
We had much more corruption than FIFA, which probably makes FIFA look like a "nun", in all branches of government, justice system, but we do not terminate the country now do we?
Yes The World Cup must exist and it will. You better get used to it Mike.
FIFA is not a government agency. YOur analogy is silly.
Companies fail all the time. Companies go out of business all the time.
Yet you insist on comparing FIFA to the police force is silly.
btw countries do at times cease to exist, even in our lifetimes. INdeed countries have been terminated and replaced.
Let FIFA cease to exist and it will be replaced by something or perhaps ten somethings. Let the competition in.
-----
With all of the above said, clearly the fans and customers will continue to funnel billions into the pockets of FIFA, they will forgive and forget.
#138
Posted 2015-June-06, 17:10
As for tv, screw it. You aren't missing anything. -- Ken Berg
I have come to realise it is futile to expect or hope a regular club game will be run in accordance with the laws. -- Jillybean
#139
Posted 2015-June-07, 00:04
blackshoe, on 2015-June-06, 17:10, said:
I must be dense. I don't see the distinction between FIFA the organization and the people who make up FIFA.
If the organization is so corrupt that it is impossible to clean it up, it should be done away with. That may be the case here.
#140
Posted 2015-June-07, 03:12
blackshoe, on 2015-June-06, 17:10, said:
FIFA the organization IS the problem due to its structure which encourages corruption. It requires not only getting rid of the people but completely reorganising how FIFA works. This is effectively scrapping FIFA and starting again.