Archive: January, 2010

POSTED: Thursday, January 7, 2010, 4:50 PM

What and where is the best bar to watch
the Eagles during the playoffs?

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Posted by Askadelphia. @ 4:50 PM  Permalink | Post a comment
POSTED: Wednesday, January 6, 2010, 7:45 PM

Well, folks, it's game on: the House is debating the table games bill as we speak (my understanding was that it can't be voted on until about 5:00 tonight; will report back on that).

I'll be covering the discussion (or whatever's left of it) and vote today via Twitter and on the Clog – simultaneously in this case!

My Twitter coverage (PhillyfrScratch) will be streamed below.



Under the Tables: debate underway, live twitter coverage here – Philadelphia Citypaper | Best Twitter Income Systems
Posted 2010-01-06 15:41:27
[...] Post By Google News Click Here For The Entire Article  Best Twitter Income Systems- January 6th, 2010 | Category: Twitter Traffic Machine [...] 

Under the Tables: debate underway, live twitter coverage here – Philadelphia Citypaper | Review Twitter Traffic Systems
Posted 2010-01-06 15:44:52
[...] Post By Google News Click Here For The Entire Article  Twitter Traffic Machine Review- January 6th, 2010 | Category: Twitter Traffic Machine [...] 

Under the Tables: debate underway, live twitter coverage here – Philadelphia Citypaper | Twitter Traffic Experts
Posted 2010-01-06 16:26:27
[...] Post By Google News Click Here For The Entire Article  Twitter Traffic Machine Review- January 6th, 2010 | Category: Twitter Traffic Machine [...] 
Posted by Isaiah Thompson @ 7:45 PM  Permalink | Post a comment
POSTED: Wednesday, January 6, 2010, 6:32 PM
Isaiah Thompson

Tonight, the state House of Representatives is set to vote on the table games bill – a bill that contains more shady clauses than a Santa convention.

Does it matter? Do I spit into the wind?

Maybe so: but at least I'm spittin'.

This bill is about much more than whether or not you can play blackjack at a casino.

The list goes on.

Meanwhile, Governor Rendell – the same who refused to tax the massive gas drilling operations underway in Pennsylvania – maintains his hostage tactic over the small pot of money tied to table games, threatening to lay off 1,000 workers if the bill isn't passed by Friday.

His office argues that, because the projected – key word, there – revenues from table games were included in the budget to the tune of $250 million, the state legislature simply must pass this bill.

Perhaps Rendell – and, indeed, the state legislature – ought not to have included money in the budget that would come from an activity not yet legal! Rendell signed off on a budget that expected money from table games without having seen the actual law that would provide for table game in the first place.

When, lo and behold, the law turned out to be riddled with earmarks, casino giveaways, and greedy in-fighting among the legislature, and therefore got held up – Rendell is all the more to blame for allowing such provisions in his budget in the first place.

Yet it seems to me that the media has played easily into Rendell's hands, covering all sorts of issues – even a natural history exhibit – in a context of something terrible happening "if the House doesn't pass table games," – as if passing table games was some sort of abstract bureaucratic hurdle that simply must be overcome; as if Rendell's bullying and threatening layoffs is somehow more reasonable than the delay of a thoroughly corrupted law.

Example: "Rendell: Might have to close Pa. museum, parks" – Inquirer

Example: "Rendell: Without table gaming, the state budget is ruined." – Business Insider

Example: "Rendell: Layoffs to come if no table games by Jan 8" – Inquirer

Example: "At last, a table games deal" – Allentown morning Call

I've made my personal opinion clear before and, in the interest of disclosure – an, frankly, as an appeal to readers who trust my reporting – I state it again. This bill is a disgrace. It expands the power of a predatory industry, and it reeks of pay-for-play politics.

If you'd like to contact your representatives to urge them to vote either way, you can look them up here by zipcode.

Coming up: table games' shady provisions explored.




Elizabeth Gutman
Posted 2010-01-07 19:01:13
Gov Rendell: What do you plan to do if the casinos don't earn your projected money in the state budget???

Tate Perazzelli
Posted 2010-01-07 19:03:33
Thank you for continuing to uphold justice for the unheard & unseen citizens of Philadelphia. Thank you to CP for not being run by corporate America.

banster adams
Posted 2010-01-07 19:38:15
@Elizabeth Gutman:



Rendell could always push through legalized prostitution and cocaine sales, threatening to close Pennsylvania's elementary schools.

The stuggle goes on - with honesty and principle | Casino-Free Philadelphia
Posted 2010-01-07 23:17:15
[...] way it passed was by threats and bribery of pet projects to buy legislators' votes.  Read this insightful commentary by Isaiah Thompson of the CityPaper. And of course, as we learned late Monday evening, this bill exempts the [...] 

Rich Garella
Posted 2010-01-08 13:16:02
What's really weird is that presumably to prevent casinos from competing with normal lenders, they are only allowed to lend for the purpose of gambling. What does that mean? 



It would seem to imply that after getting such a loan you either have to win (always unlikely) or gamble it away.



Walk in with nothing, walk out with a debt. The beauty part is that the casino need not charge usurious rates for these loans, since the gamblers will normally lose the money right back to the casino, and then have to pay it back too.



Unless they can bet it all and break even, and then walk away and use the money for something else? It makes no sense at all. Money is fungible, or it used to be.



This really is a strategy for the casinos to go beyond the empty pockets of destitute gambling addicts, and seize their other assets as well.



We'd best start building more homeless shelters.

PoliticsPA’s Up & Down: 1/8 Edition | Politics PA
Posted 2010-01-08 13:35:07
[...] The 1000 state employees whose jobs are secure now that the table games bill has been signed by the governor are breathing easier.  Still, we’re not crazy about the Governor using them as pawns in his battle with the legislature. [...] 
Posted by Isaiah Thompson @ 6:32 PM  Permalink | Post a comment
POSTED: Tuesday, January 5, 2010, 10:58 PM
Filed Under: The CLOG



In the bumfuck burg of Kingston — not to be confused with Kensington, where cops have actual crime with which to concern themselves — which is over near Pittsburgh (this story says that it's in northeastern Penn., but Google Maps begs to differ), pop. 13,855, the long arm of the local law has reached into that scourge of iniquity known as a middle school teacher's lounge, where teachers were allegedly — get a load of this — GAMBLING ON THE SUPER BOWL. The school superintendent even confiscated $45 from this vile gambling pool, and the cops say that, had this evil ring been allowed to continue, some $3,000 might have been wagered, in a friendly manner.

This shall not stand.The cops who investigated this very important crime are going to talk with prosecutors next week; with any luck, these gambling deviants will all be fired and jailed by the end of the month, and Kingston kids can go back to learning that the earth is 6,000 years old, or whatever it is they teach the youngins over in Pennsyltucky, free from the pernicious influence of small-time, behind-closed-door betting.


Kim
Posted 2010-01-07 15:50:57
There is a Kingston in NEPA. It's not far from Wilkes-Barre. And it wouldn't surprise me if cops there would horridly arrest middle school teachers for a $45 bet on the Super Bowl, either.
Posted by Jeffrey Billman @ 10:58 PM  Permalink | Post a comment
POSTED: Tuesday, January 5, 2010, 8:18 PM
Filed Under: Askadelphia.

Which bar in the city has the best
Happy Hour on Thursdays?

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Posted by Askadelphia. @ 8:18 PM  Permalink | Post a comment
POSTED: Tuesday, January 5, 2010, 5:17 PM
Filed Under: Design

Last week we told you about a little impromptu contest Technically Philly/CP contributor Christopher Wink was putting on to come up with new branding ideas for the city in the wake of the slogo that was just announced and widely meh'ed.

There were three contenders.

The winner was chosen by Tweetstorming and commenting.

And that winner is: Sara DeMarco, with an entry that appears to incorporate the same font as the city's version, a more stately use of ye olde Liberty Bell, incorporates some designerly specificity for each department's version, and loses that whole "Life, Libery, (don't even think about the pursuit of happiness) and You" junk. See her entire presentation here.

Sara Demarco
Click to enlarge

Posted by Brian Howard @ 5:17 PM  Permalink | Post a comment
POSTED: Monday, January 4, 2010, 6:00 PM
Filed Under: Greenstorming

Yes, the needles on your dead non-denominational holiday shrub are turning brown and falling all over your floor, getting stuck in your socks and making your life a living hell. You're just itching to kick that thing to the curb on garbage day, right?

Not so fast. It's estimated that as much as 20 percent of waste that goes into landfills is organic and compostable, so you definitely don't want to add to that by chucking your tree onto the pile. There are a bunch of TREECYCLING events happening this coming weekend, so hold onto that "ever"green a few more days.

From 10 a.m. till 4 p.m. on Sat., Jan. 9., at at NoLibs' Liberty Lands park (900 block of N. Third) and a Manayunk location TBD and from 10 a.m. till 4 p.m., Sun., Jan. 10, at Mount Airy's Allens Lane Arts Center (601 Allens Lane) and Passyunk Square's Columbus Square (13th and Reed, not at Capitolo Garden as noted on the above flier).

Remove all decorations and please bring a $5 donation to cover wood chipper rentals.



Five apples
Posted 2010-01-04 14:29:41
Just a note, the pick-up for the Passyunk Square area is Saturday at Columbus Square, not Capitolo or Sunday as the attached flyer says.
Posted by Brian Howard @ 6:00 PM  Permalink | Post a comment
POSTED: Monday, January 4, 2010, 4:51 PM
Filed Under: Askadelphia.

Am I allowed to hang event posters in public paces such as telephone poles, bus stops, etc? If so, why do they keep being taken down?

I am the promotional and marketing director for Xtreme Caged Combat, and the owner of Xtreme Prmotional Entertainment. We promote local MMA events, and other fun event. I have recently posted several of our 8 1/2 by 11 posters on telephone poles at busy intersections, SEPTA stops, and other public places. The poster features two of our girls who are competing in the 2010 Foxy Boxing tournament. While I do understand that the girls are wearing bikinis in the picture, and it may be a bit risque, why are the posters disappearing?

There's one answer so far from Larry West, anybody else have experience with this? Answer here.

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