Events
OK, Papa John's, you're out of the doghouse. Sort of. About six months ago, Papa John's CEO John Schnatter speculated about cutting worker hours to avoid some of the Affordable Care Act's requirements. As a direct result of this, I joined the millions of other Americans in a quiet boycott of the chain. It's unfortunate. They make the best pizza in their category (cheap and delivered). I mean, of course I'd rather have a thin, wide, gooey slice from some nameless deli on the Lower East Side of Manhattan...
I find it fascinating when someone whose entire brand rests on its association with a particular place makes this kind of threat: "I'm not sure how anyone is going to stop the signs in the outfield," Ricketts said upon the unveiling of drawings of his renovation plan, "but if it comes to the point that we don't have the ability to do what we need to do in our outfield then we're going to have to consider moving." Ah, yeah. "Consider" moving. Tribune columnist Steve Rosenbloom scoffs: Look, if you’re...
Crain's has details this morning about what Ricketts wants to build at Wrigley: Two weeks after the Cubs and city officials announced a "framework agreement" on a $500 million renovation of Wrigley Field and development of its surrounding property, the team has released images of its plans, which include a 6,000-square-foot jumbotron in left field and a horizontal 1,000-square-foot advertising sign in right field as the framework outlined last month. With the images now complete (you can see them below...
We went to last night's game against the Padres at Wrigley. It just never seemed to end: After trailing 8-0, the Cubs rallied some with home runs from Luis Valbuena, Starlin Castro, David DeJesus and Cody Ransom. But [Cubs starter Edwin] Jackson put them in too deep of a hole to escape, and most of the crowd had departed by the seventh inning of the 3 hour, 28 minute game. We stayed the whole game, though. The weather was gorgeous: 27°C with a few high wispy clouds, with a stiff breeze out of the south....
That's "The Year of the Cub" in Latin. At the moment, that year looks like this: The numbers—04, 67, 104—refer to the years since the Cubs' last division, league, and World Series championships. They had to put another digit on it after the 2008 season. My guess is the current 7 digits will last about 33 more years. At least they've won a few recently, and have gotten back up to .400. I'm going tonight; we'll see if they can make it to .423.
When the U.S. Supreme Court issues a 5-4 decision, it means, for practical purposes, they haven't actually decided anything to help lawyers figure out how similar cases will proceed in the future. Sandra Day O'Connor put the "5" in "5-4" so many times during her 23 years on the Court that for a time it seemed she was single-handily causing an explosion of litigation, re-litigation, and rogue appellate court decisions. None of her 5-4 votes had a worse outcome than her vote in 2000 on Bush v Gore. Now...
I don't remember reading about this in Article II, but it sure is funny:
Being a season-ticket holder includes a "Rookie Day" open house at the park. Ours was yesterday. The open house included access to all the stands, the first-base-side warning track, the visitors club house, and the press box: Visitors club house: And the right-field wall, up close and personal: More later or tomorrow.
Krugman summarizes why we still have massive unemployment even though all the Serious People say we should be in a recovery: Part of the answer surely lies in the widespread desire to see economics as a morality play, to make it a tale of excess and its consequences. We lived beyond our means, the story goes, and now we’re paying the inevitable price. Economists can explain ad nauseam that this is wrong, that the reason we have mass unemployment isn’t that we spent too much in the past but that we’re...
Two seemingly-unrelated stories this morning outline how Republican-led spending cuts have reached diminishing returns. First, from New Republic, it turns out that when you cut the FAA's budget by 6% suddenly, you get airline delays: As you probably have heard, the FAA has responded to the automatic cuts by furloughing air traffic controllers—that is, ordering them to take extra days off, without pay. With fewer controllers watching over the skies, fewer airplanes can travel at one time. The FAA says...
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