Photo 1 Jun With 66 points this season, at the age of 41, Teemu Selanne was still able to outscore:

Brad Richards (tie) 66 
Patrick Kane (tie) 66 
Alex Ovechkin - 65 
Logan Couture - 65 
Patrick Marleau - 64 
Patrice Bergeron - 64 
Mike Ribeiro - 63 
Corey Perry - 60 
Rick Nash - 59 
Bobby Ryan - 57
Jonathan Toews - 57
Ryan Gezlaf - 57
Alexander Semin - 54
Taylor Hall - 53
Alex Burrows - 52
Jordan Stall - 50
Ryan Kesler - 49
Vincent Lecavalier - 49
Mike Cammalleri - 41
Columbus Blue Jackets - 65

With 66 points this season, at the age of 41, Teemu Selanne was still able to outscore:

Brad Richards (tie) 66 

Patrick Kane (tie) 66 

Alex Ovechkin - 65 

Logan Couture - 65 

Patrick Marleau - 64 

Patrice Bergeron - 64 

Mike Ribeiro - 63 

Corey Perry - 60 

Rick Nash - 59 

Bobby Ryan - 57

Jonathan Toews - 57

Ryan Gezlaf - 57

Alexander Semin - 54

Taylor Hall - 53

Alex Burrows - 52

Jordan Stall - 50

Ryan Kesler - 49

Vincent Lecavalier - 49

Mike Cammalleri - 41

Columbus Blue Jackets - 65

Link 27 May A quarter of defeated Tory candidates landing public jobs after election»

This needs to stop. End of story.

Photo 12 May captainlatte:

MLB Faces Antitrust Suit Regarding Its TV Blackout Policies. May 12, 2012 
I’m pasting some of this here in case the article “disappears” again:
Major League Baseball’s television blackout policies are the subject of a class action antitrust lawsuit that was filed on Wednesday in the Southern District of New York. The plaintiffs in Garber v. MLB allege that the league has violated Sections One and Two of the Sherman Act by unfairly restricting its fans’ ability to watch out-of-market broadcasts in two primary ways. First, through its MLB Extra Innings cable package and MLB.tv Internet package, MLB refuses to offer fans the ability to purchase just their favorite team’s games, instead requiring consumers to purchase a package including all out-of-market MLB broadcasts. Second, both the Extra Innings and MLB.tv packages blackout any games broadcast locally via a regional sports network (RSN), meaning that fans cannot use those packages to watch their local team play, but must instead purchase a cable subscription to watch the games on their local RSN. The complaint alleges that these exclusive broadcasting policies drive up subscription fees for all cable consumers by enabling the RSNs to charge monopoly prices for their highly desirable sports programming. 
…Interestingly, the Garber suit does not name all 30 MLB teams as defendants, instead suing only the Chicago Cubs, Chicago White Sox, Colorado Rockies, New York Yankees, Oakland A’s, Philadelphia Phillies, Pittsburgh Pirates, San Francisco Giants, and Seattle Mariners, along with the Office of the Commissioner, MLB Advanced Media, DirecTV, Comcast, and various RSNs. 
…It will also be interesting to see if the Garber lawsuit finally motivates MLB to update its antiquated television blackout policies. The rules have been frequently criticized by baseball fans, and can lead to absurd outcomes such as fans in Iowa being unable to watch any game involving the Twins, Royals, White Sox, Brewers, Cubs, or Cardinals on either the MLB Extra Innings or MLB.tv packages, even though in many cases none of those teams’ games are available from their local cable provider. MLB has reportedly been considering updating the rules for years, but has yet to act. Perhaps this threat to its cherished antitrust exemption, along with potential treble damages, will finally force the league to act.
Complete article in Sports Law Blog:
http://sports-law.blogspot.ca/2012/05/done-mlb-faces-antitrust-suit-regarding.html

captainlatte:

MLB Faces Antitrust Suit Regarding Its TV Blackout Policies. May 12, 2012

I’m pasting some of this here in case the article “disappears” again:

Major League Baseball’s television blackout policies are the subject of a class action antitrust lawsuit that was filed on Wednesday in the Southern District of New York. The plaintiffs in Garber v. MLB allege that the league has violated Sections One and Two of the Sherman Act by unfairly restricting its fans’ ability to watch out-of-market broadcasts in two primary ways. First, through its MLB Extra Innings cable package and MLB.tv Internet package, MLB refuses to offer fans the ability to purchase just their favorite team’s games, instead requiring consumers to purchase a package including all out-of-market MLB broadcasts. Second, both the Extra Innings and MLB.tv packages blackout any games broadcast locally via a regional sports network (RSN), meaning that fans cannot use those packages to watch their local team play, but must instead purchase a cable subscription to watch the games on their local RSN. The complaint alleges that these exclusive broadcasting policies drive up subscription fees for all cable consumers by enabling the RSNs to charge monopoly prices for their highly desirable sports programming.

Interestingly, the Garber suit does not name all 30 MLB teams as defendants, instead suing only the Chicago Cubs, Chicago White Sox, Colorado Rockies, New York Yankees, Oakland A’s, Philadelphia Phillies, Pittsburgh Pirates, San Francisco Giants, and Seattle Mariners, along with the Office of the Commissioner, MLB Advanced Media, DirecTV, Comcast, and various RSNs.

It will also be interesting to see if the Garber lawsuit finally motivates MLB to update its antiquated television blackout policies. The rules have been frequently criticized by baseball fans, and can lead to absurd outcomes such as fans in Iowa being unable to watch any game involving the Twins, Royals, White Sox, Brewers, Cubs, or Cardinals on either the MLB Extra Innings or MLB.tv packages, even though in many cases none of those teams’ games are available from their local cable provider. MLB has reportedly been considering updating the rules for years, but has yet to act. Perhaps this threat to its cherished antitrust exemption, along with potential treble damages, will finally force the league to act.

Complete article in Sports Law Blog:

http://sports-law.blogspot.ca/2012/05/done-mlb-faces-antitrust-suit-regarding.html

Link 21 Apr Almost too funny... Hamilton News Channel Airs Gay Porn Instead of Morning News»
Video 11 Apr

Best ad I’ve seen in a while…

Photo 27 Mar Mayor of Calgary, Naheed Nenshi.

Mayor of Calgary, Naheed Nenshi.

Video 15 Mar
Link 7 Mar Expostulations of orange juice: Happy Omnibus Crime Bill, er'ybody!»

octothorp:

Hey, er’ybody (Shout out to the 100,000+ signatories of the Avaaz.org petition, the people who sent 448,000+ messages to the Senate, you rascals), I know there was enormous public backlash, a public struggle between the provinces and the federal government on cost, well-publicized publication of…

Woooooo! Take that, criminals/non-criminals/taxpayers/Canada…

Photo 4 Mar reagan-was-a-horrible-president:

Mitt Romney or Mr. Burns?

reagan-was-a-horrible-president:

Mitt Romney or Mr. Burns?

(Source: samuraifuckingfrog)

Photo 2 Mar Comparative analysis of the theme of war in Slaughterhouse-Five and A Farewell to Arms.
I’m going to call it:
Vonnegut vs. Hemmingway: A Comparative Analysis of the Theme of War in Slaughterhouse-Five and A Farewell to Arms.

Comparative analysis of the theme of war in Slaughterhouse-Five and A Farewell to Arms.

I’m going to call it:

Vonnegut vs. Hemmingway: A Comparative Analysis of the Theme of War in Slaughterhouse-Five and A Farewell to Arms.


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