This was Rocket’s decision. They didn’t want to be a Track 2 event (they’ve basically been treated like one for years), and they didn’t see the value of moving to Track 1, given the huge title-sponsorship price tag. The PGA Tour says it remains interested in the Detroit market.
@soccerpaedia And the original post was about aesthetics. And yet again I see another post about stadium size which completely misses the point. Why is it always about size? ‘Big is best’. It isn’t. The OP was commenting on looks, not size.
Chris Illitch is on the verge of losing Skubal AND Larkin in the same year. Let that sink in.
The media in Detroit is totally spineless and instead of making this the storyline and finally saying enough is enough they will continue to ignore it because he gives them free little caesars after games and a ride on the team plane. It’s pathetic
The thing millennials will never understand is that there is not a set of accomplishments in this world that will make routine LinkedIn posting not cringe
I had a professor go on an end of class rant about how being a product/project manager is one of the worst possible uses of your time on Earth and he kinda knocked it out of the park
I can tweet but not respond to tweets because i havent updated the app since 2022, so from now on i have to call people out directly. @2Leo2Clemons one of your tweets recently was funny.
Forcing customers to hit no tip after buying a $2 donut or $3 drip coffee introduces socio-emotional labor to the transaction. Multiply that across multiple purchases during the day and a lot of people feel annoyed in a way they wouldn’t if buying stuff in, say, Sweden or Japan.
You’d actually have to be challenged to put detroit in the same conversation as cleveland as a city. Detroit is in Baltimore territory, whereas one might compare cleveland to Wichita, Kansas or Branson, Mizzouri