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 Post subject: Fan Conduct
PostPosted: Thu Sep 29, 2011 10:42 am 
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Are you **** kidding me?

http://chronicle.northcoastnow.com/2011 ... -standing/

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Browns fan upset after being kicked out of game for ‘excessive standing’

ELYRIA — Rob Stipe is your typical, bleed orange-and-brown, season tickets in the Dawg Pound-holding Browns fan.

Rob Stipe, aka “Big R” attends a Cleveland Browns game recently. The Elyria man ran afoul of the team’s “excessive standing” policy at Sunday’s game and was kicked out of Cleveland Browns Stadium.

He wears a wig, paints his face like a helmet, dons shoulder pads and screams until his throat feels like sandpaper when his favorite team is on the field.

So you can imagine his feeling after being kicked out during Sunday’s game, missing a come-from-behind win, but not for being drunk, violent or disorderly. No, he says security was called to remove him because — get this — he was standing too much.

According to Stipe, “excessive standing” has become a bit of a no-no at Cleveland Browns Stadium over the last few seasons. Last year, he was also scolded for the offense and three sheriff’s deputies were sent to meet him outside the bathroom to tell him to use his seat more.

“We do not stand all the time,” the 35-year-old explained, referring to the as many as 12 friends and family who share season tickets. “We stand on first down, we stand at the beginning of this game, we stand at kickoff. We stand. We are standers, but we’re also courteous to other people. If somebody says, ‘Hey man, will you sit down?’ Sure, I will love to sit down for you. No problem.”

He said the head of security told him last year that fans can only stand during third and fourth downs and whenever there is a stoppage in the game, like a time out. That doesn’t sit well with the South Amherst resident, who has been sitting in Row 10 of the Dawg Pound for the last 25 seasons the Browns have played, but he tries to abide by the rules as best he can.

“I hate the people who sit down at a game,” he said. “It’s not that I try to stand and (expletive) everyone off. I want everyone to stand so that when we’re on national TV we don’t look like lumps on a log.”

His brother, Matt Stipe, who was also kicked out Sunday (he said security didn’t like when he complained about his brother’s treatment), said the clampdown on standing that day came early when the Browns got a first down. He said an usher ran down to their section, yelling at everyone to sit, even though the scoreboard told everyone to “Get Loud, Make Noise.”

Rob Stipe got his first warning to park his keister during a third down in that same first quarter, but said everyone behind him was also standing.

In the middle of the third quarter, Stipe said he was scolded again for standing, but this time it was during a TV timeout. He was asked to leave for what he learned from one of the stadium employees was a new policy enacted for this season that after the first warning, offenders are removed from the stadium.

Neal Gulkis, vice president of media relations for the team, said the policy on “excessive standing” can be somewhat subjective.

Security only becomes involved if a fan complains. He said personnel aren’t out scanning the crowd for excessive standers.

According to the “Fan Code of Conduct” on the Browns’ official website, a fan can be removed from a game for excessive standing. The policy explained: “Please be aware that when you stand, you block the view of the fans behind you. We do not wish to diminish your ability to cheer and enjoy the game; however, your continued standing can interfere with others’ ability to enjoy the game from their seats.”

The superfan also missed McCoy’s spectacular drive that ended in a game-winning touchdown with less than a minute left because he was filling out a complaint form.

“Somebody had to tell me what happened,” he said.

He said he wants a meeting with Browns President Mike Holmgren to inform him what is happening at the stadium and for a concrete excessive standing rule, so fans like him will know what to do. He said he hasn’t made a decision on whether to attend any more home games, but his brother, Matt, said he might be sitting at least the next one out.

“Why spend any more money on a team that doesn’t want me to be there? That doesn’t want me to cheer for them?” Matt Stipe said.


I know this to be true having been reprimanded for standing myself...

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PostPosted: Thu Sep 29, 2011 11:18 am 
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You'd think that as shitty as cleveland teams are, they'd be welcoming fans that had some goddamn enthusiasm.

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PostPosted: Thu Sep 29, 2011 11:47 am 
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Tough call.

I can understand why the rule is in place. Using Philadelphia Flyers games as an example, if you are returning from the concourse and the play is ongoing, the ushers WILL NOT let you come through the tunnel to return to your seat until the play comes to a stop so you don't block view of the play as it is happening.

On one hand, it seems to really be taking away the right of something so simple. Alternatively, if done excessively, it certainly hampers the ability of other spectators to observe and enjoy the game. Their stadium, their rules. Like em or not, you buy the ticket, you have to abide by their rules.

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PostPosted: Thu Sep 29, 2011 12:42 pm 
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Safeco Field is probably the worst for this kind of stuff (or best depending on your take).

They are pretty strict about behavior in the stands, especially in the field level seats behind home plate. People have complained about getting warned for talking too loud (an exaggeration, I'm sure).

Safeco also stirred up a bit of controversy by having a peanut free day last year. This was partly done to draw attention to peanut allergies and give those afflicted a chance to see a game. Needless to say a lot of folks were miffed they couldn't munch on peanuts during the game.


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PostPosted: Thu Sep 29, 2011 12:50 pm 
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Come see the game, but don't cheer. Just sit there and watch. Don't eat, don't drink, don't talk. But be sure to have fun!

I really hate whiny ***** that ruin things for everyone.

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PostPosted: Thu Sep 29, 2011 1:11 pm 
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Oh no, they want you to eat and drink (but not get shitfaced), because they want your concession money. And don't forget to make a trip down to the team store and buy some merchandise.

Were supposedly going to make a play for Prince Fielder this off season. We need more of your money!


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PostPosted: Thu Sep 29, 2011 1:53 pm 
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Maybe we should go after Earl Pitcher, or Duke Shortstop.

They'd probably be cheaper than a Prince.

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PostPosted: Thu Sep 29, 2011 2:13 pm 
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Sounds good to me! Are they free agents? How many RBI's and Home Runs did they have last year?


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PostPosted: Thu Sep 29, 2011 2:21 pm 
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I hear the Marquis de Second base will be a free agent this year.

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PostPosted: Thu Sep 29, 2011 3:16 pm 
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Foamy wrote:
I hear the Marquis de Second base will be a free agent this year.


But he had trouble with that one nightclub incident. I'm not sure that we want that guy on our team. He's a bad influence in the locker room.

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PostPosted: Thu Sep 29, 2011 5:51 pm 
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Due to popular request, Magnetic Schedule night and Bobble Head night at the stadium will be replaced with Monocle night and Opera glasses night respectively.

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PostPosted: Thu Sep 29, 2011 8:22 pm 
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Foamy wrote:
Their stadium, their rules. Like em or not, you buy the ticket, you have to abide by their rules.


This, if the rules are not to your liking, do not attend the games

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PostPosted: Thu Sep 29, 2011 10:48 pm 
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darksiege wrote:
Foamy wrote:
Their stadium, their rules. Like em or not, you buy the ticket, you have to abide by their rules.


This, if the rules are not to your liking, do not attend the games


BS! If I'm paying $100+ per ticket to go watch my favorite football team play, I'll damn well stand up when they do something good! If Jack Sprat behind me can't see over all of my 5'6" then he damn well better stand up too...because I'm standing because Mr 6'+ 300LBs is blocking MY view! What the hell is wrong with people nowadays?? Making rules saying you can't stand and cheer your team on is now bad??

Guess they won't be getting my money anymore, and if everyone starts feeling the same way the teams aren't going to be able to pay their players, so guess what...no more sports!!!

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PostPosted: Thu Sep 29, 2011 10:59 pm 
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Ya know what it is? Maybe it's that that fan base, doesn't know when to stand? Since I don't actually go to more than one football game a decade, I'm trying to put it into the context of what I do know, which is baseball. Specifically, Dodger Stadium.

For baseball, we don't stand all the time, just at exciting moments. Thing is, the crowd largely knows when it's appropriate, I guess, to stand. At Dodger Stadium, that tends to be when there are two outs and we're cheering for a strikeout. Doesn't matter what inning, but especially in the 9th. And then there's the standing cheer for home runs or runs scored, etc. But, just random standing doesn't happen. I'm trying to picture that, and thinking that people would look at you strangely.

I don't know that they should legislate it, but it does seem like they're trying to create or change a culture of when to cheer. I dunno, this is a funny one. Different sports, I guess.

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 Post subject: Re: Fan Conduct
PostPosted: Thu Sep 29, 2011 11:09 pm 
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Any game I've ever gone to, no matter what sport, fans only stood up when something big happened. I can't imagine being told to sit down when there was a TD, home run, or goal scored by the home team! Absolutely ridiculous!

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PostPosted: Fri Sep 30, 2011 7:11 am 
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Jasmy wrote:
darksiege wrote:
Foamy wrote:
Their stadium, their rules. Like em or not, you buy the ticket, you have to abide by their rules.


This, if the rules are not to your liking, do not attend the games


BS! If I'm paying $100+ per ticket to go watch my favorite football team play, I'll damn well stand up when they do something good! If Jack Sprat behind me can't see over all of my 5'6" then he damn well better stand up too...because I'm standing because Mr 6'+ 300LBs is blocking MY view! What the hell is wrong with people nowadays?? Making rules saying you can't stand and cheer your team on is now bad??

Guess they won't be getting my money anymore, and if everyone starts feeling the same way the teams aren't going to be able to pay their players, so guess what...no more sports!!!

It is too bad they don't make their money off of the ticket sales or even vending revenue :(

It is all TV rights and merchandise :(

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PostPosted: Fri Sep 30, 2011 10:50 am 
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Jasmy wrote:
BS! If I'm paying $100+ per ticket to go watch my favorite football team play, I'll damn well stand up when they do something good! If Jack Sprat behind me can't see over all of my 5'6" then he damn well better stand up too...because I'm standing because Mr 6'+ 300LBs is blocking MY view! What the hell is wrong with people nowadays?? Making rules saying you can't stand and cheer your team on is now bad??

Guess they won't be getting my money anymore, and if everyone starts feeling the same way the teams aren't going to be able to pay their players, so guess what...no more sports!!!


I may not think it is right, but since it is a private venue... try starting a mosh pit at a Barbara Streisand concert and see how fast the "I spent $300+ a ticket" rationale will get you. The venue can set any rules it deems appropriate, regardless of the dickishness of it... as long as it is not in violation of a law.

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PostPosted: Fri Sep 30, 2011 11:43 am 
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No no DS. It'd be like being told you can't have a pit at a Slayer concert. Or Carcass or whoever. I don't know.

People stand up and cheer at games, that's just the thing.

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PostPosted: Fri Sep 30, 2011 11:49 am 
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I think that teams like the Mariners are trying to make the stadium a family friendly experience. In the last few years they have added all kinds of attractions inside the stadium for younger kids, trying to encourage people to bring their family to the games.

I think discouraging drunken rowdiness is part of that goal, although I think there is a some gray area in between an "enthusiastic fan" and a drunken ******* screaming profanities at the umpires.

The teams and stadiums are running a business, and just like any other business, they have every right to establish and enforce rules and standards of behavior in the stadiums.

Hopwin wrote:
It is too bad they don't make their money off of the ticket sales or even vending revenue

It is all TV rights and merchandise


While TV revenue is certainly the primary income driver for pro sports teams, having a modern stadium that caters to luxury suites and catered boxes is also very important. They probably don't make a lot of money off of the 'bums' in the nosebleeds, but there is money to be made in the luxury seating areas.

And merchandise can be a money driver if you sell a lot of it, but don't forget that the league takes a cut off of all licensed merchandise sales.


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PostPosted: Fri Sep 30, 2011 12:28 pm 
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I don't mind so much the discouraging of the drunken ******* fan. Its the throwing out of a loyal dude that just "stood up too much".

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PostPosted: Fri Sep 30, 2011 12:42 pm 
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Midgen wrote:
While TV revenue is certainly the primary income driver for pro sports teams, having a modern stadium that caters to luxury suites and catered boxes is also very important. They probably don't make a lot of money off of the 'bums' in the nosebleeds, but there is money to be made in the luxury seating areas.

And merchandise can be a money driver if you sell a lot of it, but don't forget that the league takes a cut off of all licensed merchandise sales.


I am pretty sure this disproves your theory:

Quote:
One reason NFL action is so competitive is the league has a hard salary cap. The new collective bargaining agreement adds a hard salary floor, mandating that nearly all cap space be spent each year -- as cash, not as amortization of past bonuses. This is a provision NFL players are going to like quite a bit. Fans of perennial cheapskate teams will like the provision, too.

But the must-spend clause does not take effect until 2013. The result is that many NFL teams have oodles of unused cap space, yet made few if any moves in free agency. The Chiefs have nearly $33 million of unused cap space. The Bucs, Jaguars, Bengals, Bills, Broncos and Browns have at least $20 million each. Another six teams have at least $10 million unused. And cap space is not cellphone minutes. It doesn't roll over to next season.

Cash flow is no problem for any of the teams with ample salary-cap space. The $125 million each NFL club will receive this season from the league's many national television contracts will cover player expenses, while ticket sales and local marketing cover overhead, and then some, even for small-market clubs. That leaves mucho grande greenbacks. Yet many NFL teams are not spending anywhere near as much as they could.

Player expense might not equate to wins, of course. But there's something more basic happening. In the NFL structure, a cheap team that loses might have more profits than an expensive team that wins. Victory is nice, to be sure, but losing cheap can be remunerative. As all NFL teams save the Packers are privately held, and of those all save the Raiders are family businesses, money that is not spent on players goes into the pockets of the owner and his relatives.

Each NFL team gets exactly the same national TV payment whether it's winning big on "Monday Night Football" or losing badly and never aired nationally. Ticket sales can vary and generally are where the profit resides. But the revenue swing between packing the house and having a poor gate just isn't that great.

Most teams go into the season knowing they will sell about 90 percent of their seats no matter how they perform; a few know every seat will sell regardless of performance. In 2010, even given a slack economy, the league average was 94 percent of seats sold, and every team except Oakland and City of Tampa sold at least 80 percent of its home seats. Winning can help sell tickets, but even a clunker season will fill most of the house.

According to a financial officer for an NFL team, after ticket price, concessions and parking are added up, and then the visitor's share, overhead and taxes are deducted, each sold home seat represents around $30 in profit. This jibes with the numbers reported by Green Bay, the sole NFL club that discloses financial data. For 2010, the Packers sold 566,362 tickets and reported an operating profit of $10 million -- about $18 per occupied seat. The Packers' expenses were high in 2010, as they appeared in four road playoff games. Had they not, the profit per seat would have risen to $25 or $30.

The $30 estimate is a simplified number, but suppose it's roughly accurate.
That suggests the 2010 attendance leader, Dallas, had a $21 million profit on seat sales, while 2010's worst-drawing team, Oakland, had a ticket profit of $11 million. That's a $10 million swing between the best case and the worst case for filling the stadium. Because most teams are in the middle of that calculation, going all-out to win with player and coaching salaries will add considerably less than $10 million in profit on packing the stadium. Contrast that with not spending up to the cap, which can add $20 million to $30 million to the bottom line. If your first goal is financial results, losing cheap can look a lot sweeter than winning expensive.

When this is taken into account, seeming nonsense suddenly makes sense. The Bengals, a low-spending team, are refusing to trade Carson Palmer, who says he retired but actually wants out of the Queen City. What's the point of getting nothing for Palmer? The point is to shed Palmer's large salary while creating an excuse for another bad season. When in this situation, teams with winning mindsets shrug and trade the unhappy star for whatever they can get -- think Green Bay with Brett Favre or Philadelphia with Donovan McNabb. Cincinnati management does not make winning its first priority. Losing cheap is fine, and getting nothing for Palmer generates a nifty excuse for a weak 2011 season.

Buffalo, 11 consecutive years out of the playoffs, just traded one of its few established performers, Lee Evans, to the Ravens for a middling draft pick. Unloading Evans and replacing him with a minimum-salary young player cuts the Bills' costs by about $3 million this season, which is more than profits would rise if every seat were sold. Trading Evans makes a winning season less likely, but the odds of a profitable season go up -- and a built-in excuse is created. How long until a Buffalo team official says, "We knew we'd have an off year when we lost Lee Evans," as if he had been swept from the practice field by helicopter-borne commandos, rather than deliberately traded away.

For Buffalo, this is a recent pattern. Just before the 2009 season began, the Bills waived their starting left tackle, Langston Walker, and the team's highest-paid offensive player. Two games into the 2010 season, the Bills waived their starting quarterback, Trent Edwards, their second-highest-paid offensive player. Both actions increased profits while setting up an excuse for a losing season.

Walt Disney Pictures Scrooge would be right at home with salary cap decisions for the 2011 season. There is a way most NFL teams could enhance the bottom line while also spending freely on players: reduce front-office costs. But some teams are loath to do that, as the front office is populated by family members and cronies with senior titles, hefty salaries and few if any duties.

For example: The Bears, who are $19 million below the salary cap, have four senior managers with the last name McCaskey. Chicago has a chairman of the board, a secretary, a president and CEO, a general manager, seven senior directors and numerous people with the title director or manager. The team masthead lists 38 people in the front office, and that's not including clerical and sales personnel. If Apple had the same ratio of senior titles to revenue as the Chicago Bears, it would have 244 presidents and 1,708 senior directors.

The story repeats at other NFL clubs. Revenue will be about the same whether the team wins or loses; profit will be a lot higher if salary-cap money isn't spent; family members would rather the team lose with them in cushy front-office roles than win with streamlined management. Some NFL owners go all-out to win anyway. But until 2013, there's considerable incentive to lose cheap.

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 Post subject: Re: Fan Conduct
PostPosted: Sat Oct 01, 2011 8:37 pm 
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Heh.. the OP is from Elyria. That's where we used to live before moving to Texas!

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PostPosted: Sat Oct 01, 2011 8:58 pm 
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Buffalo, 11 consecutive years out of the playoffs, just traded one of its few established performers, Lee Evans, to the Ravens for a middling draft pick. Unloading Evans and replacing him with a minimum-salary young player cuts the Bills' costs by about $3 million this season, which is more than profits would rise if every seat were sold. Trading Evans makes a winning season less likely, but the odds of a profitable season go up -- and a built-in excuse is created. How long until a Buffalo team official says, "We knew we'd have an off year when we lost Lee Evans," as if he had been swept from the practice field by helicopter-borne commandos, rather than deliberately traded away.

For Buffalo, this is a recent pattern. Just before the 2009 season began, the Bills waived their starting left tackle, Langston Walker, and the team's highest-paid offensive player. Two games into the 2010 season, the Bills waived their starting quarterback, Trent Edwards, their second-highest-paid offensive player. Both actions increased profits while setting up an excuse for a losing season.


This is why no one should ever pay attention to the blow-hard talking heads as if their opinion somehow matters, or is grounded in reality. They aren't scouts. They aren't coaches. They aren't football-people. What they are is part of a new-media culture that places the "reporter" (read editorializer) personality and popularity at or above the importance of the game itself; peddling their product as if it were the event they purport to cover.

This is the stuff of a national scale headline battle like the petty one played between teams like the Mets and the Yankees, in which a faux battle ensues over who can have the largest press release, and aggrandizes morons like Jim Rome, Dan Shaunessy, and Skip Bayless as if their opinions actually matter and people should care who they are.

Football-people could tell you that Buffalo cut Walker and Edwards because they were ineffective and over-paid for their low levels of production and lack of success. They could also tell you that the players who filled their roles once they vacated them were younger, better, and more suited to the systems they were being used in. Football-people could also tell you about the wealth of young receiving talent on the Bills roster who's development and emergence was being stunted by the presence of Evans, whose role as a deep-threat and play-maker was already better filled by Stevie Johnson. What was needed was an underneath threat who was prepared to make plays in the middle of the field, which was a role much better suited for David Nelson.

Football-people could tell you that. All this idiot, and many like him, could give you was his malformed ill-informed diatribe which was nothing more than an attempt to sell you his own sense of self-importance.

I'm not buying.

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PostPosted: Sat Oct 01, 2011 10:16 pm 
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Müs wrote:
I don't mind so much the discouraging of the drunken ******* fan. Its the throwing out of a loyal dude that just "stood up too much".


I'm going to go with this.

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 Post subject: Fan Conduct
PostPosted: Sun Oct 02, 2011 12:43 am 
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I have the sneaking suspicion we aren't getting the whole story

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