![]() |
Re: Death Pool 2014. 10th Anniversary Special!
Quote:
Second, I apologize for treating your question as rhetorical. I feel especially guilty because it drives me CRAZY when I ask similar questions ("Hey guys, which approach is more consistent with what we're trying to accomplish here, A or B?") and I get no responses, or responses only from the people who want to change what the organization is trying to accomplish. That said, to the extent it helps with this issue going forward next year, I have no objection to the use of celebrities whose famousness originated from crime. The purpose served by the no-death-row rule isn't to redefine "celebrity"; it's to avoid the hazard to the game of allowing picks whose death is a scheduled event, period. There is no "reward" to bad people for making them famous enough for a death pool, as I see it. My policy preference is to expand the definition of celebrity as broadly as possible so the DP lists don't become permutations of the same 25 people. I'm guilty of adopting the best people from last year's lists, and anyone who takes a gamble by adding in new blood is making this more fun, not less (IMHO). It would be a shame if everybody's list were the nine oldest people on aretheydeadyet.com plus one person who was diagnosed with pancreatic cancer last year. The truly memorable hits here were Mindy McCready and Amy Winehouse — indisputably celebrities, yes, but we admire the spirit of gambling in spending a precious spot of 10 on something that risky. I guess what I'm saying is that I respect your desire to make the right decision about eligibility, but as a player I'm not terribly disturbed by other people's idea of who's a celebrity. If you decided to get out of the gate keeping business, I wouldn't feel like the game had gone to shit. |
Re: Death Pool 2014. 10th Anniversary Special!
Quote:
|
Re: Death Pool 2014. 10th Anniversary Special!
Quote:
I also agree with ncs's decisions, and not just because they mirror my votes. Atticus is right about the rationale for the "No Death Row" rule, but I think the reason that the Amy Winehouse and Mindy McCready hits were so memorable was, in large part, because they were actually celebrities, not the anchor of the morning news in Portland, but someone the board knew about BEFORE the game.* * I didn't know who Mindy McCready was until a couple years ago, and it was because of her problems with substance abuse and the law, but then again, my taste in female country singers runs more to Kacey Musgraves, who should have gotten a best album Grammy nomination instead of merely one for best country album.** ** None of the above statement should be taken as a dig against Neko Case, whose music I still adore. It's just that with her last album, I think she's completed her transition from alt-country to alt-rock. |
Re: Death Pool 2014. 10th Anniversary Special!
Quote:
|
Re: Death Pool 2014. 10th Anniversary Special!
Quote:
|
Re: Death Pool 2014. 10th Anniversary Special!
Quote:
|
Re: Death Pool 2014. 10th Anniversary Special!
Quote:
|
Re: Death Pool 2014. 10th Anniversary Special!
|
Re: Death Pool 2014. 10th Anniversary Special!
Quote:
|
Re: Death Pool 2014. 10th Anniversary Special!
Quote:
|
Re: Death Pool 2014. 10th Anniversary Special!
Quote:
|
Re: Death Pool 2014. 10th Anniversary Special!
Quote:
|
Re: Death Pool 2014. 10th Anniversary Special!
Quote:
|
Re: Death Pool 2014. 10th Anniversary Special!
Quote:
|
Re: Death Pool 2014. 10th Anniversary Special!
Quote:
|
All times are GMT -4. The time now is 05:47 AM. |
Powered by: vBulletin, Copyright ©2000 - 2008, Jelsoft Enterprises Limited.
Hosted By: URLJet.com