Eagles (NFL) Commerce: Pluralism Diary(?)

Abishai100

VIP Member
Sep 22, 2013
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Now that the Underdog NFL Team of the New Millennium (Philadelphia Eagles) has pulled off the greatest upset in Super Bowl history, defeating the seemingly-indomitable New England Patriots and preventing Goliath-like QB Tom Brady from winning his whopping 6th Vince Lombardi trophy, we can think about how sports-fanfare media will be conducive for business and merchants under our commerce-centric 'TrumpUSA.'

After all, isn't that what culture-aesthetics is all about in the Wall Street era?

So move over New England Clam Chowder and make room for Philadelphia Cream Cheese!




eagle.jpg

====

Chinatown, Philadelphia (Pennsylvania, USA) was a booming ethnic business district, offering travellers/consumers a zesty taste of Chinese food and some of the ornaments, architectural aesthetics, and designs of China itself. Chinatown features a myriad of restaurants, some Hunan and some Szechuan and some Cantonese and some...well, you get the picture! Chinatown, Philadelphia was getting more business now that Eagles fans flocked to the city for the Super Bowl victory parade!

f2.jpg

Nearby was the rival Little Italy, Philadelphia. Little Italy offered travellers a taste and glimpse of Italy, not China. Little Italy was arguably as popular as Chinatown and certainly as successful. Little Italy was where you went if you craved lasagna and not chow-mein. Little Italy offered an equally-brilliant presentation of culturally-authentic lights and decorations, and Eagles fans would flock there for Italian cuisine after enjoying the Super Bowl victory parade.

f3.jpg

A young business student from Wharton (University of Pennsylvania) named Kay Barnes was doing research about the market impact of ethnic business districts in commercially trafficked cities such as Philadelphia (Pennsylvania) and San Francisco (California). Barnes wanted to do a comparison of shopping/dining behaviors in Little Italy and Chinatown to see how immigration trends correlated with consumer trends. Barnes was interested in how urban commerce was 'imprinted' onto television advertisements (e.g., aesthetics), so you'd imagine she was curious about Super Bowl 52 ads and if they would 'tune' consumer-trends in Philly now that there was great urban excitement following the Eagles incredible upset-victory!

f5.jpg

Barnes completed her work and it was published and much-lauded. Barnes was so inspired by her detailed research that she decided to set up a small shop in Philadelphia called Eagles Stereo, which would feature all kinds of audio-video home-entertainment equipment but with special customizable Eagles colors and logos as print-on options for consumers/customers. Eagles fans could walk out with digital-discs and stereos with Eagles insignia printed on them, and in some cases, the discs/stereos were specially white-and-green colored(!). Barnes' Eagles Stereo became a huge hit on Black Friday.

audio1.jpg

The Eagles cheerleaders were present that day during the Super Bowl victory-parade in Philadelphia. The cheerleaders did not yet meet Kay Barnes, but one cheerleader, Meghan, learned that Barnes was inspired to open Eagles Stereo while studying the post-Super Bowl impact in Philadelphia on ethnic business districts. Meghan decided that sports-fanfare in the modern age was not merely superficial or human interest apathetic. Meghan realized that commerce was catalysing intriguing changes in pluralism, multiculturalism, and traffic-aesthetics and felt proud (truly proud!) to be an Eagles cheerleader in the time when they won their first-ever Vince Lombardi trophy.

3.jpg

Since American movie superstar Tom Hanks had made a movie called Philadelphia (which was actually set in that city!), he was intrigued by the consumer-chatter surrounding Eagles Stereo and decided to make a celebrity-cameo one day there (on New Year's Day!) signing autograph-copies of Flash (DC Comics) comic books for fans coming into the store and into Philadelphia on New Year's Day. Hanks explained that he felt that Flash represented commercial efficiency, and he wanted to 'cheer on' capitalism-related media-fanfare surrounding commerce-rich American cities such as Philadelphia, cities using sports-achievements to promote small-business values vital for the American Dream!

f1.jpg

U.S. President Donald Trump said of the Eagles upset-victory in Super Bowl 52 [2018] that "A culturally-vibrant and socially symbolic American city has reminded us why Americans love to cheer for the underdog, which is why my administration hopes this exciting NFL championship will draw in much-desired business and tourism for the wonderful City of Brotherly Love --- Philadelphia!" Eagles fans appreciated Trump's comments before scurrying out into the city to enjoy the victory-parade and maybe even some pizza or wontons! Eagles Stereo continued to be a commercial and cultural success for Philly. GO EAGLES!!!

====


:dance:
 
Isn't it funny that Philly has a statue of an actor who played an ACTUAL sports hero who was from Massachusetts? :D Lol. Don't worry, Pogo. The Pats will be contenders again next year, just like they have for the past 10 or so years, and the Eagles? Probably not so much. ;)
 
Now that the Underdog NFL Team of the New Millennium (Philadelphia Eagles) has pulled off the greatest upset in Super Bowl history, defeating the seemingly-indomitable New England Patriots and preventing Goliath-like QB Tom Brady from winning his whopping 6th Vince Lombardi trophy, we can think about how sports-fanfare media will be conducive for business and merchants under our commerce-centric 'TrumpUSA.'

After all, isn't that what culture-aesthetics is all about in the Wall Street era?

So move over New England Clam Chowder and make room for Philadelphia Cream Cheese!




View attachment 175047

====

Chinatown, Philadelphia (Pennsylvania, USA) was a booming ethnic business district, offering travellers/consumers a zesty taste of Chinese food and some of the ornaments, architectural aesthetics, and designs of China itself. Chinatown features a myriad of restaurants, some Hunan and some Szechuan and some Cantonese and some...well, you get the picture! Chinatown, Philadelphia was getting more business now that Eagles fans flocked to the city for the Super Bowl victory parade!

View attachment 175048

Nearby was the rival Little Italy, Philadelphia. Little Italy offered travellers a taste and glimpse of Italy, not China. Little Italy was arguably as popular as Chinatown and certainly as successful. Little Italy was where you went if you craved lasagna and not chow-mein. Little Italy offered an equally-brilliant presentation of culturally-authentic lights and decorations, and Eagles fans would flock there for Italian cuisine after enjoying the Super Bowl victory parade.

View attachment 175049

A young business student from Wharton (University of Pennsylvania) named Kay Barnes was doing research about the market impact of ethnic business districts in commercially trafficked cities such as Philadelphia (Pennsylvania) and San Francisco (California). Barnes wanted to do a comparison of shopping/dining behaviors in Little Italy and Chinatown to see how immigration trends correlated with consumer trends. Barnes was interested in how urban commerce was 'imprinted' onto television advertisements (e.g., aesthetics), so you'd imagine she was curious about Super Bowl 52 ads and if they would 'tune' consumer-trends in Philly now that there was great urban excitement following the Eagles incredible upset-victory!

View attachment 175050

Barnes completed her work and it was published and much-lauded. Barnes was so inspired by her detailed research that she decided to set up a small shop in Philadelphia called Eagles Stereo, which would feature all kinds of audio-video home-entertainment equipment but with special customizable Eagles colors and logos as print-on options for consumers/customers. Eagles fans could walk out with digital-discs and stereos with Eagles insignia printed on them, and in some cases, the discs/stereos were specially white-and-green colored(!). Barnes' Eagles Stereo became a huge hit on Black Friday.

View attachment 175051

The Eagles cheerleaders were present that day during the Super Bowl victory-parade in Philadelphia. The cheerleaders did not yet meet Kay Barnes, but one cheerleader, Meghan, learned that Barnes was inspired to open Eagles Stereo while studying the post-Super Bowl impact in Philadelphia on ethnic business districts. Meghan decided that sports-fanfare in the modern age was not merely superficial or human interest apathetic. Meghan realized that commerce was catalysing intriguing changes in pluralism, multiculturalism, and traffic-aesthetics and felt proud (truly proud!) to be an Eagles cheerleader in the time when they won their first-ever Vince Lombardi trophy.

View attachment 175052

Since American movie superstar Tom Hanks had made a movie called Philadelphia (which was actually set in that city!), he was intrigued by the consumer-chatter surrounding Eagles Stereo and decided to make a celebrity-cameo one day there (on New Year's Day!) signing autograph-copies of Flash (DC Comics) comic books for fans coming into the store and into Philadelphia on New Year's Day. Hanks explained that he felt that Flash represented commercial efficiency, and he wanted to 'cheer on' capitalism-related media-fanfare surrounding commerce-rich American cities such as Philadelphia, cities using sports-achievements to promote small-business values vital for the American Dream!

View attachment 175053

U.S. President Donald Trump said of the Eagles upset-victory in Super Bowl 52 [2018] that "A culturally-vibrant and socially symbolic American city has reminded us why Americans love to cheer for the underdog, which is why my administration hopes this exciting NFL championship will draw in much-desired business and tourism for the wonderful City of Brotherly Love --- Philadelphia!" Eagles fans appreciated Trump's comments before scurrying out into the city to enjoy the victory-parade and maybe even some pizza or wontons! Eagles Stereo continued to be a commercial and cultural success for Philly. GO EAGLES!!!

====


:dance:
That was a very very long post, but I stopped reading after “...greatest upset in Super Bowl history...” The spread was 4.5 points. Which means it is not in the top 5, and likely not even in the top 10.
 
Now that the Underdog NFL Team of the New Millennium (Philadelphia Eagles) has pulled off the greatest upset in Super Bowl history, defeating the seemingly-indomitable New England Patriots and preventing Goliath-like QB Tom Brady from winning his whopping 6th Vince Lombardi trophy, we can think about how sports-fanfare media will be conducive for business and merchants under our commerce-centric 'TrumpUSA.'

After all, isn't that what culture-aesthetics is all about in the Wall Street era?

So move over New England Clam Chowder and make room for Philadelphia Cream Cheese!




View attachment 175047

====

Chinatown, Philadelphia (Pennsylvania, USA) was a booming ethnic business district, offering travellers/consumers a zesty taste of Chinese food and some of the ornaments, architectural aesthetics, and designs of China itself. Chinatown features a myriad of restaurants, some Hunan and some Szechuan and some Cantonese and some...well, you get the picture! Chinatown, Philadelphia was getting more business now that Eagles fans flocked to the city for the Super Bowl victory parade!

View attachment 175048

Nearby was the rival Little Italy, Philadelphia. Little Italy offered travellers a taste and glimpse of Italy, not China. Little Italy was arguably as popular as Chinatown and certainly as successful. Little Italy was where you went if you craved lasagna and not chow-mein. Little Italy offered an equally-brilliant presentation of culturally-authentic lights and decorations, and Eagles fans would flock there for Italian cuisine after enjoying the Super Bowl victory parade.

View attachment 175049

A young business student from Wharton (University of Pennsylvania) named Kay Barnes was doing research about the market impact of ethnic business districts in commercially trafficked cities such as Philadelphia (Pennsylvania) and San Francisco (California). Barnes wanted to do a comparison of shopping/dining behaviors in Little Italy and Chinatown to see how immigration trends correlated with consumer trends. Barnes was interested in how urban commerce was 'imprinted' onto television advertisements (e.g., aesthetics), so you'd imagine she was curious about Super Bowl 52 ads and if they would 'tune' consumer-trends in Philly now that there was great urban excitement following the Eagles incredible upset-victory!

View attachment 175050

Barnes completed her work and it was published and much-lauded. Barnes was so inspired by her detailed research that she decided to set up a small shop in Philadelphia called Eagles Stereo, which would feature all kinds of audio-video home-entertainment equipment but with special customizable Eagles colors and logos as print-on options for consumers/customers. Eagles fans could walk out with digital-discs and stereos with Eagles insignia printed on them, and in some cases, the discs/stereos were specially white-and-green colored(!). Barnes' Eagles Stereo became a huge hit on Black Friday.

View attachment 175051

The Eagles cheerleaders were present that day during the Super Bowl victory-parade in Philadelphia. The cheerleaders did not yet meet Kay Barnes, but one cheerleader, Meghan, learned that Barnes was inspired to open Eagles Stereo while studying the post-Super Bowl impact in Philadelphia on ethnic business districts. Meghan decided that sports-fanfare in the modern age was not merely superficial or human interest apathetic. Meghan realized that commerce was catalysing intriguing changes in pluralism, multiculturalism, and traffic-aesthetics and felt proud (truly proud!) to be an Eagles cheerleader in the time when they won their first-ever Vince Lombardi trophy.

View attachment 175052

Since American movie superstar Tom Hanks had made a movie called Philadelphia (which was actually set in that city!), he was intrigued by the consumer-chatter surrounding Eagles Stereo and decided to make a celebrity-cameo one day there (on New Year's Day!) signing autograph-copies of Flash (DC Comics) comic books for fans coming into the store and into Philadelphia on New Year's Day. Hanks explained that he felt that Flash represented commercial efficiency, and he wanted to 'cheer on' capitalism-related media-fanfare surrounding commerce-rich American cities such as Philadelphia, cities using sports-achievements to promote small-business values vital for the American Dream!

View attachment 175053

U.S. President Donald Trump said of the Eagles upset-victory in Super Bowl 52 [2018] that "A culturally-vibrant and socially symbolic American city has reminded us why Americans love to cheer for the underdog, which is why my administration hopes this exciting NFL championship will draw in much-desired business and tourism for the wonderful City of Brotherly Love --- Philadelphia!" Eagles fans appreciated Trump's comments before scurrying out into the city to enjoy the victory-parade and maybe even some pizza or wontons! Eagles Stereo continued to be a commercial and cultural success for Philly. GO EAGLES!!!

====


:dance:
That was a very very long post, but I stopped reading after “...greatest upset in Super Bowl history...” The spread was 4.5 points. Which means it is not in the top 5, and likely not even in the top 10.

Clearly, the Pats defense lost that game, considering that Tom Brady threw for the most passing yardage ever in a super bowl.

They should have put Malcolm Butler in there. We needed him. Our defense just let Filthydelphia walk all over the field.
 
The Eagles are going to be a completely different team next year, while the Pats will more than likely still have the Brady/Belichick team, as well as most of our other key players. We will probably definitely not have Malcolm Butler though. Obviously there is some friction between him and upper management of the Pats, and it seems like neither side is handling it very well. So they need to cut him loose before this shit starts to affect the team morale, IMO. One player is not worth all the trouble has been the Pats motto so far, and it has worked for us.
 
Isn't it funny that Philly has a statue of an actor who played an ACTUAL sports hero who was from Massachusetts? :D Lol. Don't worry, Pogo. The Pats will be contenders again next year, just like they have for the past 10 or so years, and the Eagles? Probably not so much. ;)

Let's see..... Monday... Tuesday... Wednesday.... Thursday... Friday FIVE DAYS it took you to come out of hiding.
:safetocomeoutff:

That's grate expectations for ya. Welcome back from the abyss. Drop any footballs lately?

That statue is an embarrassment. It should be -- 'ow you say --- removed. An obvious paean to the Lost Cause of the Movie Industry, full of sound and fury signifying nothing. And by the way our team's owner is from Baaaahston too. We love him for his taste in buying football teams.

In the actual sport though, we are the Embarassors. Bow before us for we own you.

I do wish you and your 87-year-old weirdo quarterback and your incoherently mumbling coach who looks like he spent the night sleeping on a park bench luck in contesting next year though. We'll meet right here and do it all over again. :meow:

By then it'll be just like old times.
 
The Eagles are going to be a completely different team next year, while the Pats will more than likely still have the Brady/Belichick team, as well as most of our other key players. We will probably definitely not have Malcolm Butler though. Obviously there is some friction between him and upper management of the Pats, and it seems like neither side is handling it very well. So they need to cut him loose before this shit starts to affect the team morale, IMO. One player is not worth all the trouble has been the Pats motto so far, and it has worked for us.

There is no reason in the world to expect the Iggles will be 'completely different' other than all the injuries that will have healed, including the starting QB and the starting kicker. Oh yeah did you know that was our second string that ran roughshod over that old-lady-crossing-the-street you call a "defense"?

On the other hand as I said to somebody else about Butler while you were in hiding ----- if the absence of one player caves your team, you don't have a team; you have a player.

We on the other hand have a team. Wentz goes down? Enter Foles. kaCHING.
 
Now that the Underdog NFL Team of the New Millennium (Philadelphia Eagles) has pulled off the greatest upset in Super Bowl history, defeating the seemingly-indomitable New England Patriots and preventing Goliath-like QB Tom Brady from winning his whopping 6th Vince Lombardi trophy, we can think about how sports-fanfare media will be conducive for business and merchants under our commerce-centric 'TrumpUSA.'

After all, isn't that what culture-aesthetics is all about in the Wall Street era?

So move over New England Clam Chowder and make room for Philadelphia Cream Cheese!


View attachment 175047

====

Chinatown, Philadelphia (Pennsylvania, USA) was a booming ethnic business district, offering travellers/consumers a zesty taste of Chinese food and some of the ornaments, architectural aesthetics, and designs of China itself. Chinatown features a myriad of restaurants, some Hunan and some Szechuan and some Cantonese and some...well, you get the picture! Chinatown, Philadelphia was getting more business now that Eagles fans flocked to the city for the Super Bowl victory parade!

View attachment 175048

Nearby was the rival Little Italy, Philadelphia. Little Italy offered travellers a taste and glimpse of Italy, not China. Little Italy was arguably as popular as Chinatown and certainly as successful. Little Italy was where you went if you craved lasagna and not chow-mein. Little Italy offered an equally-brilliant presentation of culturally-authentic lights and decorations, and Eagles fans would flock there for Italian cuisine after enjoying the Super Bowl victory parade.

View attachment 175049

A young business student from Wharton (University of Pennsylvania) named Kay Barnes was doing research about the market impact of ethnic business districts in commercially trafficked cities such as Philadelphia (Pennsylvania) and San Francisco (California). Barnes wanted to do a comparison of shopping/dining behaviors in Little Italy and Chinatown to see how immigration trends correlated with consumer trends. Barnes was interested in how urban commerce was 'imprinted' onto television advertisements (e.g., aesthetics), so you'd imagine she was curious about Super Bowl 52 ads and if they would 'tune' consumer-trends in Philly now that there was great urban excitement following the Eagles incredible upset-victory!

View attachment 175050

Barnes completed her work and it was published and much-lauded. Barnes was so inspired by her detailed research that she decided to set up a small shop in Philadelphia called Eagles Stereo, which would feature all kinds of audio-video home-entertainment equipment but with special customizable Eagles colors and logos as print-on options for consumers/customers. Eagles fans could walk out with digital-discs and stereos with Eagles insignia printed on them, and in some cases, the discs/stereos were specially white-and-green colored(!). Barnes' Eagles Stereo became a huge hit on Black Friday.

View attachment 175051

The Eagles cheerleaders were present that day during the Super Bowl victory-parade in Philadelphia. The cheerleaders did not yet meet Kay Barnes, but one cheerleader, Meghan, learned that Barnes was inspired to open Eagles Stereo while studying the post-Super Bowl impact in Philadelphia on ethnic business districts. Meghan decided that sports-fanfare in the modern age was not merely superficial or human interest apathetic. Meghan realized that commerce was catalysing intriguing changes in pluralism, multiculturalism, and traffic-aesthetics and felt proud (truly proud!) to be an Eagles cheerleader in the time when they won their first-ever Vince Lombardi trophy.

View attachment 175052

Since American movie superstar Tom Hanks had made a movie called Philadelphia (which was actually set in that city!), he was intrigued by the consumer-chatter surrounding Eagles Stereo and decided to make a celebrity-cameo one day there (on New Year's Day!) signing autograph-copies of Flash (DC Comics) comic books for fans coming into the store and into Philadelphia on New Year's Day. Hanks explained that he felt that Flash represented commercial efficiency, and he wanted to 'cheer on' capitalism-related media-fanfare surrounding commerce-rich American cities such as Philadelphia, cities using sports-achievements to promote small-business values vital for the American Dream!

View attachment 175053

U.S. President Donald Trump said of the Eagles upset-victory in Super Bowl 52 [2018] that "A culturally-vibrant and socially symbolic American city has reminded us why Americans love to cheer for the underdog, which is why my administration hopes this exciting NFL championship will draw in much-desired business and tourism for the wonderful City of Brotherly Love --- Philadelphia!" Eagles fans appreciated Trump's comments before scurrying out into the city to enjoy the victory-parade and maybe even some pizza or wontons! Eagles Stereo continued to be a commercial and cultural success for Philly. GO EAGLES!!!

====


:dance:
That was a very very long post, but I stopped reading after “...greatest upset in Super Bowl history...” The spread was 4.5 points. Which means it is not in the top 5, and likely not even in the top 10.

All of his posts are long and loquaccious -- like novels. They're erudite because he's a Philadelphian.

Up to now I think I'm the only poster who's ever responded in his threads.
 
Isn't it funny that Philly has a statue of an actor who played an ACTUAL sports hero who was from Massachusetts? :D Lol. Don't worry, Pogo. The Pats will be contenders again next year, just like they have for the past 10 or so years, and the Eagles? Probably not so much. ;)

Let's see..... Monday... Tuesday... Wednesday.... Thursday... Friday FIVE DAYS it took you to come out of hiding.
:safetocomeoutff:

That's grate expectations for ya. Welcome back from the abyss. Drop any footballs lately?

That statue is an embarrassment. It should be -- 'ow you say --- removed. An obvious paean to the Lost Cause of the Movie Industry, full of sound and fury signifying nothing. And by the way our team's owner is from Baaaahston too. We love him for his taste in buying football teams.

In the actual sport though, we are the Embarassors. Bow before us for we own you.

I do wish you and your 87-year-old weirdo quarterback and your incoherently mumbling coach who looks like he spent the night sleeping on a park bench luck in contesting next year though. We'll meet right here and do it all over again. :meow:

By then it'll be just like old times.

You won't be meeting the Pats at the Super Bowl next year! The Beagles won't make it again. Lol! Honestly though, do you think they are going to make it again next year??? That was a fluke. They aren't the Patriots! :D
 
The Eagles are going to be a completely different team next year, while the Pats will more than likely still have the Brady/Belichick team, as well as most of our other key players. We will probably definitely not have Malcolm Butler though. Obviously there is some friction between him and upper management of the Pats, and it seems like neither side is handling it very well. So they need to cut him loose before this shit starts to affect the team morale, IMO. One player is not worth all the trouble has been the Pats motto so far, and it has worked for us.

There is no reason in the world to expect the Iggles will be 'completely different' other than all the injuries that will have healed, including the starting QB and the starting kicker. Oh yeah did you know that was our second string that ran roughshod over that old-lady-crossing-the-street you call a "defense"?

On the other hand as I said to somebody else about Butler while you were in hiding ----- if the absence of one player caves your team, you don't have a team; you have a player.

We on the other hand have a team. Wentz goes down? Enter Foles. kaCHING.

Hiding? I guess that is what you call it when someone has a LIFE going on. :113:
 
The Eagles are going to be a completely different team next year, while the Pats will more than likely still have the Brady/Belichick team, as well as most of our other key players. We will probably definitely not have Malcolm Butler though. Obviously there is some friction between him and upper management of the Pats, and it seems like neither side is handling it very well. So they need to cut him loose before this shit starts to affect the team morale, IMO. One player is not worth all the trouble has been the Pats motto so far, and it has worked for us.

There is no reason in the world to expect the Iggles will be 'completely different' other than all the injuries that will have healed, including the starting QB and the starting kicker. Oh yeah did you know that was our second string that ran roughshod over that old-lady-crossing-the-street you call a "defense"?

On the other hand as I said to somebody else about Butler while you were in hiding ----- if the absence of one player caves your team, you don't have a team; you have a player.

We on the other hand have a team. Wentz goes down? Enter Foles. kaCHING.

Do you think you are going to keep Foles as a backup??? Bwa ha ha! :D
 
Now that the Underdog NFL Team of the New Millennium (Philadelphia Eagles) has pulled off the greatest upset in Super Bowl history, defeating the seemingly-indomitable New England Patriots and preventing Goliath-like QB Tom Brady from winning his whopping 6th Vince Lombardi trophy, we can think about how sports-fanfare media will be conducive for business and merchants under our commerce-centric 'TrumpUSA.'

After all, isn't that what culture-aesthetics is all about in the Wall Street era?

So move over New England Clam Chowder and make room for Philadelphia Cream Cheese!


View attachment 175047

====

Chinatown, Philadelphia (Pennsylvania, USA) was a booming ethnic business district, offering travellers/consumers a zesty taste of Chinese food and some of the ornaments, architectural aesthetics, and designs of China itself. Chinatown features a myriad of restaurants, some Hunan and some Szechuan and some Cantonese and some...well, you get the picture! Chinatown, Philadelphia was getting more business now that Eagles fans flocked to the city for the Super Bowl victory parade!

View attachment 175048

Nearby was the rival Little Italy, Philadelphia. Little Italy offered travellers a taste and glimpse of Italy, not China. Little Italy was arguably as popular as Chinatown and certainly as successful. Little Italy was where you went if you craved lasagna and not chow-mein. Little Italy offered an equally-brilliant presentation of culturally-authentic lights and decorations, and Eagles fans would flock there for Italian cuisine after enjoying the Super Bowl victory parade.

View attachment 175049

A young business student from Wharton (University of Pennsylvania) named Kay Barnes was doing research about the market impact of ethnic business districts in commercially trafficked cities such as Philadelphia (Pennsylvania) and San Francisco (California). Barnes wanted to do a comparison of shopping/dining behaviors in Little Italy and Chinatown to see how immigration trends correlated with consumer trends. Barnes was interested in how urban commerce was 'imprinted' onto television advertisements (e.g., aesthetics), so you'd imagine she was curious about Super Bowl 52 ads and if they would 'tune' consumer-trends in Philly now that there was great urban excitement following the Eagles incredible upset-victory!

View attachment 175050

Barnes completed her work and it was published and much-lauded. Barnes was so inspired by her detailed research that she decided to set up a small shop in Philadelphia called Eagles Stereo, which would feature all kinds of audio-video home-entertainment equipment but with special customizable Eagles colors and logos as print-on options for consumers/customers. Eagles fans could walk out with digital-discs and stereos with Eagles insignia printed on them, and in some cases, the discs/stereos were specially white-and-green colored(!). Barnes' Eagles Stereo became a huge hit on Black Friday.

View attachment 175051

The Eagles cheerleaders were present that day during the Super Bowl victory-parade in Philadelphia. The cheerleaders did not yet meet Kay Barnes, but one cheerleader, Meghan, learned that Barnes was inspired to open Eagles Stereo while studying the post-Super Bowl impact in Philadelphia on ethnic business districts. Meghan decided that sports-fanfare in the modern age was not merely superficial or human interest apathetic. Meghan realized that commerce was catalysing intriguing changes in pluralism, multiculturalism, and traffic-aesthetics and felt proud (truly proud!) to be an Eagles cheerleader in the time when they won their first-ever Vince Lombardi trophy.

View attachment 175052

Since American movie superstar Tom Hanks had made a movie called Philadelphia (which was actually set in that city!), he was intrigued by the consumer-chatter surrounding Eagles Stereo and decided to make a celebrity-cameo one day there (on New Year's Day!) signing autograph-copies of Flash (DC Comics) comic books for fans coming into the store and into Philadelphia on New Year's Day. Hanks explained that he felt that Flash represented commercial efficiency, and he wanted to 'cheer on' capitalism-related media-fanfare surrounding commerce-rich American cities such as Philadelphia, cities using sports-achievements to promote small-business values vital for the American Dream!

View attachment 175053

U.S. President Donald Trump said of the Eagles upset-victory in Super Bowl 52 [2018] that "A culturally-vibrant and socially symbolic American city has reminded us why Americans love to cheer for the underdog, which is why my administration hopes this exciting NFL championship will draw in much-desired business and tourism for the wonderful City of Brotherly Love --- Philadelphia!" Eagles fans appreciated Trump's comments before scurrying out into the city to enjoy the victory-parade and maybe even some pizza or wontons! Eagles Stereo continued to be a commercial and cultural success for Philly. GO EAGLES!!!

====


:dance:
That was a very very long post, but I stopped reading after “...greatest upset in Super Bowl history...” The spread was 4.5 points. Which means it is not in the top 5, and likely not even in the top 10.

All of his posts are long and loquaccious -- like novels. They're erudite because he's a Philadelphian.

Up to now I think I'm the only poster who's ever responded in his threads.

They aren't necessarily all that long, but most of the time they are based on some comic book fantasy world. :D
 
Isn't it funny that Philly has a statue of an actor who played an ACTUAL sports hero who was from Massachusetts? :D Lol. Don't worry, Pogo. The Pats will be contenders again next year, just like they have for the past 10 or so years, and the Eagles? Probably not so much. ;)

Let's see..... Monday... Tuesday... Wednesday.... Thursday... Friday FIVE DAYS it took you to come out of hiding.
:safetocomeoutff:

That's grate expectations for ya. Welcome back from the abyss. Drop any footballs lately?

That statue is an embarrassment. It should be -- 'ow you say --- removed. An obvious paean to the Lost Cause of the Movie Industry, full of sound and fury signifying nothing. And by the way our team's owner is from Baaaahston too. We love him for his taste in buying football teams.

In the actual sport though, we are the Embarassors. Bow before us for we own you.

I do wish you and your 87-year-old weirdo quarterback and your incoherently mumbling coach who looks like he spent the night sleeping on a park bench luck in contesting next year though. We'll meet right here and do it all over again. :meow:

By then it'll be just like old times.

You won't be meeting the Pats at the Super Bowl next year! The Beagles won't make it again. Lol! Honestly though, do you think they are going to make it again next year??? That was a fluke. They aren't the Patriots! :D

Thank the football gods for that.

Ain't weren't no fluke though. I told you before, get used to the green. You know how it goes.
 
The Eagles are going to be a completely different team next year, while the Pats will more than likely still have the Brady/Belichick team, as well as most of our other key players. We will probably definitely not have Malcolm Butler though. Obviously there is some friction between him and upper management of the Pats, and it seems like neither side is handling it very well. So they need to cut him loose before this shit starts to affect the team morale, IMO. One player is not worth all the trouble has been the Pats motto so far, and it has worked for us.

There is no reason in the world to expect the Iggles will be 'completely different' other than all the injuries that will have healed, including the starting QB and the starting kicker. Oh yeah did you know that was our second string that ran roughshod over that old-lady-crossing-the-street you call a "defense"?

On the other hand as I said to somebody else about Butler while you were in hiding ----- if the absence of one player caves your team, you don't have a team; you have a player.

We on the other hand have a team. Wentz goes down? Enter Foles. kaCHING.

Do you think you are going to keep Foles as a backup??? Bwa ha ha! :D

Yeah actually I do.
Not to worry, odds are you won't get him next year (if you make it). You'll have to deal with Carson Wentz. Rotsa ruck wit DAT. Wentz is the reason the Iggles were in the position to slip Foles in for the postseason in the first place.

There are a lot of armchair quarterbacks waxing loquacious on how the Iggles "must" trade Foles because his value will never be higher. Guess what --- he got put on the team so he'd be available to do exactly what he did do. Why would you throw that away? Same for other positions that went down. The assembly worked --- why fix what weren't broke?

Besides which, with a torn ACL, that's a 6 to 9 month recovery --- there's no guarantee (right now) that Wentz is ready for opening day.

Besides which, what would you trade Foles for? That scenario is for a losing team that has this one guy they can get a draft pick for and build on. The Iggles are already BUILT. You of all teams should know that.
 
Now that the Underdog NFL Team of the New Millennium (Philadelphia Eagles) has pulled off the greatest upset in Super Bowl history, defeating the seemingly-indomitable New England Patriots and preventing Goliath-like QB Tom Brady from winning his whopping 6th Vince Lombardi trophy, we can think about how sports-fanfare media will be conducive for business and merchants under our commerce-centric 'TrumpUSA.'

After all, isn't that what culture-aesthetics is all about in the Wall Street era?

So move over New England Clam Chowder and make room for Philadelphia Cream Cheese!


View attachment 175047

====

Chinatown, Philadelphia (Pennsylvania, USA) was a booming ethnic business district, offering travellers/consumers a zesty taste of Chinese food and some of the ornaments, architectural aesthetics, and designs of China itself. Chinatown features a myriad of restaurants, some Hunan and some Szechuan and some Cantonese and some...well, you get the picture! Chinatown, Philadelphia was getting more business now that Eagles fans flocked to the city for the Super Bowl victory parade!

View attachment 175048

Nearby was the rival Little Italy, Philadelphia. Little Italy offered travellers a taste and glimpse of Italy, not China. Little Italy was arguably as popular as Chinatown and certainly as successful. Little Italy was where you went if you craved lasagna and not chow-mein. Little Italy offered an equally-brilliant presentation of culturally-authentic lights and decorations, and Eagles fans would flock there for Italian cuisine after enjoying the Super Bowl victory parade.

View attachment 175049

A young business student from Wharton (University of Pennsylvania) named Kay Barnes was doing research about the market impact of ethnic business districts in commercially trafficked cities such as Philadelphia (Pennsylvania) and San Francisco (California). Barnes wanted to do a comparison of shopping/dining behaviors in Little Italy and Chinatown to see how immigration trends correlated with consumer trends. Barnes was interested in how urban commerce was 'imprinted' onto television advertisements (e.g., aesthetics), so you'd imagine she was curious about Super Bowl 52 ads and if they would 'tune' consumer-trends in Philly now that there was great urban excitement following the Eagles incredible upset-victory!

View attachment 175050

Barnes completed her work and it was published and much-lauded. Barnes was so inspired by her detailed research that she decided to set up a small shop in Philadelphia called Eagles Stereo, which would feature all kinds of audio-video home-entertainment equipment but with special customizable Eagles colors and logos as print-on options for consumers/customers. Eagles fans could walk out with digital-discs and stereos with Eagles insignia printed on them, and in some cases, the discs/stereos were specially white-and-green colored(!). Barnes' Eagles Stereo became a huge hit on Black Friday.

View attachment 175051

The Eagles cheerleaders were present that day during the Super Bowl victory-parade in Philadelphia. The cheerleaders did not yet meet Kay Barnes, but one cheerleader, Meghan, learned that Barnes was inspired to open Eagles Stereo while studying the post-Super Bowl impact in Philadelphia on ethnic business districts. Meghan decided that sports-fanfare in the modern age was not merely superficial or human interest apathetic. Meghan realized that commerce was catalysing intriguing changes in pluralism, multiculturalism, and traffic-aesthetics and felt proud (truly proud!) to be an Eagles cheerleader in the time when they won their first-ever Vince Lombardi trophy.

View attachment 175052

Since American movie superstar Tom Hanks had made a movie called Philadelphia (which was actually set in that city!), he was intrigued by the consumer-chatter surrounding Eagles Stereo and decided to make a celebrity-cameo one day there (on New Year's Day!) signing autograph-copies of Flash (DC Comics) comic books for fans coming into the store and into Philadelphia on New Year's Day. Hanks explained that he felt that Flash represented commercial efficiency, and he wanted to 'cheer on' capitalism-related media-fanfare surrounding commerce-rich American cities such as Philadelphia, cities using sports-achievements to promote small-business values vital for the American Dream!

View attachment 175053

U.S. President Donald Trump said of the Eagles upset-victory in Super Bowl 52 [2018] that "A culturally-vibrant and socially symbolic American city has reminded us why Americans love to cheer for the underdog, which is why my administration hopes this exciting NFL championship will draw in much-desired business and tourism for the wonderful City of Brotherly Love --- Philadelphia!" Eagles fans appreciated Trump's comments before scurrying out into the city to enjoy the victory-parade and maybe even some pizza or wontons! Eagles Stereo continued to be a commercial and cultural success for Philly. GO EAGLES!!!

====


:dance:
That was a very very long post, but I stopped reading after “...greatest upset in Super Bowl history...” The spread was 4.5 points. Which means it is not in the top 5, and likely not even in the top 10.

All of his posts are long and loquaccious -- like novels. They're erudite because he's a Philadelphian.

Up to now I think I'm the only poster who's ever responded in his threads.

They aren't necessarily all that long, but most of the time they are based on some comic book fantasy world. :D

True. It's not hard to guess why nobody posts in his threads..........
 
Isn't it funny that Philly has a statue of an actor who played an ACTUAL sports hero who was from Massachusetts? :D Lol. Don't worry, Pogo. The Pats will be contenders again next year, just like they have for the past 10 or so years, and the Eagles? Probably not so much. ;)

Let's see..... Monday... Tuesday... Wednesday.... Thursday... Friday FIVE DAYS it took you to come out of hiding.
:safetocomeoutff:

That's grate expectations for ya. Welcome back from the abyss. Drop any footballs lately?

That statue is an embarrassment. It should be -- 'ow you say --- removed. An obvious paean to the Lost Cause of the Movie Industry, full of sound and fury signifying nothing. And by the way our team's owner is from Baaaahston too. We love him for his taste in buying football teams.

In the actual sport though, we are the Embarassors. Bow before us for we own you.

I do wish you and your 87-year-old weirdo quarterback and your incoherently mumbling coach who looks like he spent the night sleeping on a park bench luck in contesting next year though. We'll meet right here and do it all over again. :meow:

By then it'll be just like old times.

You won't be meeting the Pats at the Super Bowl next year! The Beagles won't make it again. Lol! Honestly though, do you think they are going to make it again next year??? That was a fluke. They aren't the Patriots! :D

Thank the football gods for that.

Ain't weren't no fluke though. I told you before, get used to the green. You know how it goes.

Fluke. Green sucks. Nobody likes it. :D
 
Now that the Underdog NFL Team of the New Millennium (Philadelphia Eagles) has pulled off the greatest upset in Super Bowl history, defeating the seemingly-indomitable New England Patriots and preventing Goliath-like QB Tom Brady from winning his whopping 6th Vince Lombardi trophy, we can think about how sports-fanfare media will be conducive for business and merchants under our commerce-centric 'TrumpUSA.'

After all, isn't that what culture-aesthetics is all about in the Wall Street era?

So move over New England Clam Chowder and make room for Philadelphia Cream Cheese!


View attachment 175047

====

Chinatown, Philadelphia (Pennsylvania, USA) was a booming ethnic business district, offering travellers/consumers a zesty taste of Chinese food and some of the ornaments, architectural aesthetics, and designs of China itself. Chinatown features a myriad of restaurants, some Hunan and some Szechuan and some Cantonese and some...well, you get the picture! Chinatown, Philadelphia was getting more business now that Eagles fans flocked to the city for the Super Bowl victory parade!

View attachment 175048

Nearby was the rival Little Italy, Philadelphia. Little Italy offered travellers a taste and glimpse of Italy, not China. Little Italy was arguably as popular as Chinatown and certainly as successful. Little Italy was where you went if you craved lasagna and not chow-mein. Little Italy offered an equally-brilliant presentation of culturally-authentic lights and decorations, and Eagles fans would flock there for Italian cuisine after enjoying the Super Bowl victory parade.

View attachment 175049

A young business student from Wharton (University of Pennsylvania) named Kay Barnes was doing research about the market impact of ethnic business districts in commercially trafficked cities such as Philadelphia (Pennsylvania) and San Francisco (California). Barnes wanted to do a comparison of shopping/dining behaviors in Little Italy and Chinatown to see how immigration trends correlated with consumer trends. Barnes was interested in how urban commerce was 'imprinted' onto television advertisements (e.g., aesthetics), so you'd imagine she was curious about Super Bowl 52 ads and if they would 'tune' consumer-trends in Philly now that there was great urban excitement following the Eagles incredible upset-victory!

View attachment 175050

Barnes completed her work and it was published and much-lauded. Barnes was so inspired by her detailed research that she decided to set up a small shop in Philadelphia called Eagles Stereo, which would feature all kinds of audio-video home-entertainment equipment but with special customizable Eagles colors and logos as print-on options for consumers/customers. Eagles fans could walk out with digital-discs and stereos with Eagles insignia printed on them, and in some cases, the discs/stereos were specially white-and-green colored(!). Barnes' Eagles Stereo became a huge hit on Black Friday.

View attachment 175051

The Eagles cheerleaders were present that day during the Super Bowl victory-parade in Philadelphia. The cheerleaders did not yet meet Kay Barnes, but one cheerleader, Meghan, learned that Barnes was inspired to open Eagles Stereo while studying the post-Super Bowl impact in Philadelphia on ethnic business districts. Meghan decided that sports-fanfare in the modern age was not merely superficial or human interest apathetic. Meghan realized that commerce was catalysing intriguing changes in pluralism, multiculturalism, and traffic-aesthetics and felt proud (truly proud!) to be an Eagles cheerleader in the time when they won their first-ever Vince Lombardi trophy.

View attachment 175052

Since American movie superstar Tom Hanks had made a movie called Philadelphia (which was actually set in that city!), he was intrigued by the consumer-chatter surrounding Eagles Stereo and decided to make a celebrity-cameo one day there (on New Year's Day!) signing autograph-copies of Flash (DC Comics) comic books for fans coming into the store and into Philadelphia on New Year's Day. Hanks explained that he felt that Flash represented commercial efficiency, and he wanted to 'cheer on' capitalism-related media-fanfare surrounding commerce-rich American cities such as Philadelphia, cities using sports-achievements to promote small-business values vital for the American Dream!

View attachment 175053

U.S. President Donald Trump said of the Eagles upset-victory in Super Bowl 52 [2018] that "A culturally-vibrant and socially symbolic American city has reminded us why Americans love to cheer for the underdog, which is why my administration hopes this exciting NFL championship will draw in much-desired business and tourism for the wonderful City of Brotherly Love --- Philadelphia!" Eagles fans appreciated Trump's comments before scurrying out into the city to enjoy the victory-parade and maybe even some pizza or wontons! Eagles Stereo continued to be a commercial and cultural success for Philly. GO EAGLES!!!

====


:dance:
That was a very very long post, but I stopped reading after “...greatest upset in Super Bowl history...” The spread was 4.5 points. Which means it is not in the top 5, and likely not even in the top 10.

All of his posts are long and loquaccious -- like novels. They're erudite because he's a Philadelphian.

Up to now I think I'm the only poster who's ever responded in his threads.

They aren't necessarily all that long, but most of the time they are based on some comic book fantasy world. :D

True. It's not hard to guess why nobody posts in his threads..........

He seems like a nice enough fellow. I am just not that into the comic book life. :dunno:
 

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