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Little fake n shake lol
C'mon UBS!
Gallardo spider...Sounds right for me lol!
MOMO, what car is that in the bottom of your siggy?
I think it will be higher than .0013 if we get news
w0000000t w0000000000000000000000000000t
Thanks for the discount code yolo, see ya'll monday, im outta posts!
Someone paint a .001!!!!!!!!!
HoooWahh!
Lol, I sent him an email asking if he wanted to sponsor an up and coming light heavyweight. He's 4-0 so far, 6'3" 204, with 3 KO's
I'm going to a MMA tourney sunday, I will DEFINITELY be wearing my TFN shirt (that I made on Cafepress out of frustration) and promoting via Fight mobile
XM, Sirius, and Univision are multi-faceted non-specialty channels. Univision caters to the various ethnicities in this country. XM, and Sirius offer music, sports, and celebrity shows, without commercial interuption, and uncensored. MMA will be huge, but 20% of 51-99% of a specialty channel will never be a $10B stake
Obviously you need to do some DD on reality. P/E and the like will not equate a company with 10B o/s to a $10B company if they don't have product. Im just trying to keep everyone in check here. Give me an example of a specialty channel turning in enough revenue to make it a $10B company, and I will credit you. I work with mega corporations every day due to my summer job, and believe me, though this is a great investment, and the only way to invest in MMA anywhere, it isn't going to be a $10B company.
If by minority you mean sane... let's not be retarded here. I think BKMP and The Fight Network will be huge, but it will NEVER be a Microsoft, GE, or even a Viacom. Saying crap like that makes real investors look at this like it is a scam. I only have 7.5m shares, and I expect at least a nickel, hopefully more. But to think that with 10B o/s, this would go to dollars, is a fools dream. It isn't feasible. Mind you, this isn't a "bash" or a dissenting opinion, it is trying to keep discussion grounded in reality. And the reality is good. But to think this would be comparable to Viacom or Microsoft or GE is delusional
Okay, that's rediculous, and makes us all look bad. We own 20% of a company that owns between 51-99% of a specialty channel. It will be huge, but it will NEVER be a $10B company, nor a microsoft, nor a GE. Hell, Viacom isn't even that, and they own HUNDREDS of channels. Don't post stuff that makes us look like a pump and dump. This is real, and it will be real big. It isn't gayTV with no subscribers. It isn't friggin suitcases, it is a viable, versatile, and vicious digital channel in the fastest growing sport on earth, in addition to pro-wrestling and boxing.
Because Ameritrade is craptacular. Try Yahoo Finance for news
None of the aforementioned MM's hold shares. They make their money on the differences between the B&A. UBSS and ETRD are brokers, so someone is selling and buying there. It really doesn't matter though, because a sucker everyday (see pennyplays yesterday) will get discouraged and sell at a low level, only to miss out on a move. I have NEVER sold any BKMP, because I can't watch this every day, and I don't want to miss the inevitable run
We should sponsor Fedor Emelianenko...that would get some "hits" lol
Once again, UBSS running this shizow... U & Us my @$%
Well at least I was right about the Awards lol!
TFN GOLD: We beat Discovery, HGTV, MTV2, & PBS! Works for me biznitches! Can't wait for the PR monsoon season to take off
AWESOME Pride Knockout Reel!!!!!!!!:
Gee, wonder why the MM's kept it down HAHAHA!!! They make the money from the hands of the impatient!!!!!!!!!! BOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOM and I'm all outta posts, see ya kids on RB lol
Terdfurgussen
EVERYONE on Fight Mobile: Listen up;
Make sure you bookmark it as your favorite site. I signed up for Mobile web last week, and just ordered my new Vcast RAZR today. If you bookmark it, the carriers will monitor what is popular. Make it your only site, and log on every night when your minutes are free. Tell your friends, go to local MMA/NAGA events, and lets GET IT ON!
I'm going w/my friends to one of our buddy's NHB fight this weekend, and between us we have Verizon, Sprint, and Cingular. If we all are on our phones, with I'm guessing 2,000 local philly MMA enthusiasts, I imagine we can generate some buzz. Too bad the Fight Network shirts weren't available for Saturday... oh well, ill be sporting it FedEx overnight come Monday!!!
just ordered my RAZR and extended contract!
Got my 555,555 at .0015, and the other 7M at .003
Everyone raise your Asks!
Jebus?
Edit: whoops, double post
RU, i never knew you had so many of my quotes there haha
UBSS runs this shizow lol. U and Us my A%%
I did, there isn't an "Americas" link on the lyngsat.com, the page is kinda confusing too
Analyze, I cant find it on the site, do you have the link
New Video on website, Rumble at the Race details
4get WMD's, we need preemtive N.Korean Strike, read this:
(Yoinked from the Washington Post)
If Necessary, Strike and Destroy
North Korea Cannot Be Allowed to Test This Missile
By Ashton B. Carter and William J. Perry
Thursday, June 22, 2006; Page A29
North Korean technicians are reportedly in the final stages of fueling a long-range ballistic missile that some experts estimate can deliver a deadly payload to the United States. The last time North Korea tested such a missile, in 1998, it sent a shock wave around the world, but especially to the United States and Japan, both of which North Korea regards as archenemies. They recognized immediately that a missile of this type makes no sense as a weapon unless it is intended for delivery of a nuclear warhead.
A year later North Korea agreed to a moratorium on further launches, which it upheld -- until now. But there is a critical difference between now and 1998. Today North Korea openly boasts of its nuclear deterrent, has obtained six to eight bombs' worth of plutonium since 2003 and is plunging ahead to make more in its Yongbyon reactor. The six-party talks aimed at containing North Korea's weapons of mass destruction have collapsed.
Should the United States allow a country openly hostile to it and armed with nuclear weapons to perfect an intercontinental ballistic missile capable of delivering nuclear weapons to U.S. soil? We believe not. The Bush administration has unwisely ballyhooed the doctrine of "preemption," which all previous presidents have sustained as an option rather than a dogma. It has applied the doctrine to Iraq, where the intelligence pointed to a threat from weapons of mass destruction that was much smaller than the risk North Korea poses. (The actual threat from Saddam Hussein was, we now know, even smaller than believed at the time of the invasion.) But intervening before mortal threats to U.S. security can develop is surely a prudent policy.
Therefore, if North Korea persists in its launch preparations, the United States should immediately make clear its intention to strike and destroy the North Korean Taepodong missile before it can be launched. This could be accomplished, for example, by a cruise missile launched from a submarine carrying a high-explosive warhead. The blast would be similar to the one that killed terrorist leader Abu Musab al-Zarqawi in Iraq. But the effect on the Taepodong would be devastating. The multi-story, thin-skinned missile filled with high-energy fuel is itself explosive -- the U.S. airstrike would puncture the missile and probably cause it to explode. The carefully engineered test bed for North Korea's nascent nuclear missile force would be destroyed, and its attempt to retrogress to Cold War threats thwarted. There would be no damage to North Korea outside the immediate vicinity of the missile gantry.
The U.S. military has announced that it has placed some of the new missile defense interceptors deployed in Alaska and California on alert. In theory, the antiballistic missile system might succeed in smashing into the Taepodong payload as it hurtled through space after the missile booster burned out. But waiting until North Korea's ICBM is launched to interdict it is risky. First, by the time the payload was intercepted, North Korean engineers would already have obtained much of the precious flight test data they are seeking, which they could use to make a whole arsenal of missiles, hiding and protecting them from more U.S. strikes in the maze of tunnels they have dug throughout their mountainous country. Second, the U.S. defensive interceptor could reach the target only if it was flying on a test trajectory that took it into the range of the U.S. defense. Third, the U.S. system is unproven against North Korean missiles and has had an uneven record in its flight tests. A failed attempt at interception could undermine whatever deterrent value our missile defense may have.
We should not conceal our determination to strike the Taepodong if North Korea refuses to drain the fuel out and take it back to the warehouse. When they learn of it, our South Korean allies will surely not support this ultimatum -- indeed they will vigorously oppose it. The United States should accordingly make clear to the North that the South will play no role in the attack, which can be carried out entirely with U.S. forces and without use of South Korean territory. South Korea has worked hard to counter North Korea's 50-year menacing of its own country, through both military defense and negotiations, and the United States has stood with the South throughout. South Koreans should understand that U.S. territory is now also being threatened, and we must respond. Japan is likely to welcome the action but will also not lend open support or assistance. China and Russia will be shocked that North Korea's recklessness and the failure of the six-party talks have brought things to such a pass, but they will not defend North Korea.
In addition to warning our allies and partners of our determination to take out the Taepodong before it can be launched, we should warn the North Koreans. There is nothing they could do with such warning to defend the bulky, vulnerable missile on its launch pad, but they could evacuate personnel who might otherwise be harmed. The United States should emphasize that the strike, if mounted, would not be an attack on the entire country, or even its military, but only on the missile that North Korea pledged not to launch -- one designed to carry nuclear weapons. We should sharply warn North Korea against further escalation.
North Korea could respond to U.S. resolve by taking the drastic step of threatening all-out war on the Korean Peninsula. But it is unlikely to act on that threat. Why attack South Korea, which has been working to improve North-South relations (sometimes at odds with the United States) and which was openly opposing the U.S. action? An invasion of South Korea would bring about the certain end of Kim Jong Il's regime within a few bloody weeks of war, as surely he knows. Though war is unlikely, it would be prudent for the United States to enhance deterrence by introducing U.S. air and naval forces into the region at the same time it made its threat to strike the Taepodong. If North Korea opted for such a suicidal course, these extra forces would make its defeat swifter and less costly in lives -- American, South Korean and North Korean.
This is a hard measure for President Bush to take. It undoubtedly carries risk. But the risk of continuing inaction in the face of North Korea's race to threaten this country would be greater. Creative diplomacy might have avoided the need to choose between these two unattractive alternatives. Indeed, in earlier years the two of us were directly involved in negotiations with North Korea, coupled with military planning, to prevent just such an outcome. We believe diplomacy might have precluded the current situation. But diplomacy has failed, and we cannot sit by and let this deadly threat mature. A successful Taepodong launch, unopposed by the United States, its intended victim, would only embolden North Korea even further. The result would be more nuclear warheads atop more and more missiles.
Ashton B. Carter was assistant secretary of defense under President Bill Clinton and William J. Perry was secretary of defense. The writers, who conducted the North Korea policy review while in government, are now professors at Harvard and Stanford, respectively.
Exactly!! Thats our first REAL mention EVER, i.e., not in a stock PR, or a Media blip, or a wrestling/mma mag. Thats on the National page's sports section. Not to mention, the event is attended by 150,000+ over 3 days, TFN has a 2 year partnership with them, and it is carried throughout NORTH AMERICA on CBS!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
The Grand Prix, check it out on CBS!!!!!!!!!
12:30 EST July 9th. http://cbs.sportsline.com/autoracing/schedules/OPEN_B
Penny, I would rather see PR's from actual news sources, where the information was not paid for, then from a PR firm like marketwire, or a crap site that pays for their own picks like bellweatherreport. This is going to give us excellent exposure.
FULL STORY ON CANADA.COM:
Bret (Hitman) Hart, Fight Network coming to Molson Grand Prix of Toronto
Chris Johnston
Canadian Press
Wednesday, June 21, 2006
TORONTO (CP) - Bret (Hitman) Hart looked out at the large crowd waiting to get his autograph in the heart of the city's business district on Tuesday afternoon and couldn't help but marvel at his own popularity.
It's been six years since he last stepped in a wrestling ring but his appeal hardly seems to have waned.
From the guys at the front of the line who had waited hours to meet Hart to those walking by in suits on their lunch break, all seemed to be in awe of the man widely considered to be Canada's greatest professional wrestler.
"I'm kind of like Mickey Mouse," Hart said before signing autographs for an hour. "I can't escape (the attention) and I certainly don't mind it. I marvel at the fact that people still remember me the way they do.
"I always scratch my head and wonder why that is."
That kind of appeal helps explain Tuesday's announcement of an agreement between The Fight Network and the Molson Grand Prix of Toronto, which will see a series of appearances by wrestlers like Hart as well as some actual fights during the July 7-9 race festivities.
Two rings will be set up near the 2.8-kilometre street track over the race weekend and will host mixed-martial arts demonstrations along with Muay Thai kickboxing and even bikini babe wrestling.
Hart and other celebrities from the fighting world - who have yet to be officially announced - will also be on hand to sign autographs and mingle with fans.
Mike Garrow, co-founder of The Fight Network, says he thinks there are a lot of parallels between the sports.
"There's a lot of cross-over between the racing fans and the fight fans," said Garrow, who came up with the idea for his network with a friend over wings and beer. "Whether you're bombing down the track or throwing bombs in the ring, the guys that compete in those sports have a very unique skill set.
"At the end of the day, it's all about the competition."
More than 150,000 fans traditionally attend the race each year and the grand prix association is always looking for more ways to keep those patrons happy, says its president and CEO.
Charlie Johnstone thinks partnerships like the two-year deal it signed with The Fight Network bring more buzz to the race.
"There's going to be more stars, more celebrities to see, more things to do," said Johnstone. "It's all about bringing new initiatives.
"We're in the entertainment business."
It's a business Hart knows a lot about.
Since retiring from the ring in 2000 after suffering a serious concussion, he's kept busy with several projects - including compiling a three-disc DVD of his career footage and appearing as the Genie of the Lamp in the children's musical Aladdin, which will gets its second run in Toronto this fall.
Hart says he never expected to maintain his popularity in retirement or to have enjoyed his time away from the ring so much. It's why he enjoys events like Rumble at the Race, which keep him busy and help him connect with fans.
"You always ask yourself, 'What do you do now?"' he said of his feelings after leaving the sport. "I've been really lucky in that I find myself falling into things all the time."
© The Canadian Press 2006
Gotta love Hitman Hart, Molson, Toronto Grand Prix, and TFN all in the same sentence!