OT: This Ain't Right

Deeringfish

All-Conference
Jun 23, 2008
21,172
1,400
63
yep and it starts with super pac manipulation of our elections. Priorities are set to please powerful people who are already set. gotta please the big money.
 
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Cat In The Cradle

Sophomore
May 29, 2014
1,112
123
0
We all know eventually what's going to happen: the music is going to stop and somebody will be without a chair. These set of circumstances breed a whole lot of corruption.
 

techtim72

Senior
May 10, 2010
7,126
628
113
I think the music is starting to at least slow. ESPN is now being crippled by long term sports broadcasting contracts while their golden egg, dominance of cable bundle packages, is starting to tarnish. People are opting out of ESPN and the bundled packages.
 

Eurocat

All-Conference
May 29, 2001
18,147
1,026
113
First of all, the Alabama strength coach is very very well regarded in the industry. Kind of a legend. 60 Minutes did a profile on him while doing a piece on college football.

http://www.al.com/alabamafootball/index.ssf/2013/11/what_we_learned_from_60_minute_1.html

Secondly one of the reasons money is so crazy in college football -
tax breaks.

http://www.nytimes.com/2015/08/26/b...tion=keypress&region=FixedLeft&pgtype=article

At Texas, Michigan, Auburn, Alabama, Georgia, Florida, Penn State, Notre Dame, Louisiana State University and Arkansas, revenues have increased to $762 million from $229 million from 1999 to 2012. That is a whopping 233 percent increase. Mr. Gaul observes that during this period “profit margins had ballooned to hedge-fund levels,” generated by television broadcast rights, luxury suites, seat donations and corporate advertising. Mr. Gaul reports that the big universities “have netted 90 percent of all the new money that has flowed into college football the last decade or two.”

That has not stopped “have-nots” like Florida Atlantic University and others from engaging in what Mr. Gaul characterizes as magical thinking: “Why not us?” When college presidents see the wealth that the winning programs create, Mr. Gaul says, they develop “football envy.” He asks, “How else do you explain why so many otherwise smart men and women with ‘Ph.D.’ appended to the end of their names would risk economic ruin in hopes of winning the football jackpot?”

And get this: Virtually all that big money is tax free. Because Congress regards football as part and parcel of the educational apparatus, it lets colleges collect untaxed surcharges on so-called seat donations, which bring in an estimated $500 million collectively from football alone each year for the powerhouse programs. Legislators from football obsessed states have also propped up this revenue ploy by permitting fans to deduct 80 percent of the cost of their seat donations from their taxes as a charitable contribution.

How can college football be looked upon as a charity if you, the fan, receive a tangible asset in return for your donation? Good question. Historically, the tax laws have prohibited this sort of quid pro quo arrangement. Mr. Gaul observes: “Calling college football a charity effectively turns the very idea of charity upside down, confusing its power and purpose.” But Mr. Gaul concedes there is no political advantage to challenging the tax breaks college football receives, which include television broadcast rights, bowl game payments and corporate sponsorships.

Such tax breaks have unleashed what Mr. Gaul characterizes as “a tsunami of spending that has transformed once-modest state universities into sports entertainment factories.” In addition to construction of luxury suites, state-of-the-art training facilities and academic support centers, the “irrational exuberance” that pervades college football has ushered in the era of the celebrity coach
 

shakes3858

All-Conference
Aug 28, 2009
22,143
1,079
0
The Alabama Strength & Conditioning coach will make $600,000 a year in 2016.

The President of the United States makes $400,000.

Football players get paid zippo.

Something is wrong here........

http://sports.yahoo.com/news/meet-alabama-s--600-000-strength-coach-221929617.html
Supply and demand. There are few strength coaches at the level of Alabama's.

There are literally people fighting and spending millions if not billions trying to be president. (And most people I've talked to don't want any of them).

There are thousands of kids that are willing to play for zippo... And by zippo I mean a full ride scholarship, travel opportunities, medical insurance, training, clothing... But we'll use your word "zippo"
 

curtis b.

Freshman
Dec 12, 2012
19,997
51
0
give the kids a contract topped out at $35-$40,000 per year. then make them pay for their own schooling, tutoring, clothes, dorms, electric bill, and food.