Experiences. Hospitality.
Central Standard Distillery.
Sports. Education.
Co-host, College Sports Weekly on 105.7/1250 The Fan,
Wisconsin Sports Radio Network
There's a whisper in the fields of the Heartland saying this was the best college SI cover of all time.
Sidenote - Racine Park's John Clay is an often overlooked and underrated member of the RBU pantheon in Madison.
On April 3rd, Milwaukee was 5-22 and one of the worst teams in the country.
Some of their losses:
Run-ruled 21-7 by LSU
Run-ruled 20-3 by Duke
Run-ruled 14-4 by Minnesota
Run-ruled 12-2 by SEMO
Run-ruled 17-1 by Purdue
Run-ruled 14-1 by NKU
Run-ruled 13-2 by Wright State
Run-ruled 16-2 by Notre Dame
Run-ruled 14-4 by UNLV
They finished the regular season 22-31, but won the Horizon League tournament and earned an autobid to the NCAA tournament.
Milwaukee beat #4 Auburn 13-8, beat UCF 13-6, and is now in a regional final, one win away from going to supers.
College Baseball.
Calling all Bourbon Drinkers or anyone who wants to support people living with MS. Join Fred Jackson II and others on May 19 for "Sip & Support for MS" at Vier North in Milwaukee - a simple way to show love to people living with multiple sclerosis!
To coin a phrase that has become very popular in college athletics these days, "There will be lawyers." NCAA 5-in-5 rule is set to pass, but players like Otega Oweh won’t be grandfathered in https://t.co/ClYueZ8WOV
The statistics show it:
Invest in a Marriage not in a wedding.
The wedding industry is a $60 billion machine built on convincing you that spending more means loving more.
The research says something different.
Emory University researchers surveyed over 3,000 couples and found that the more you spend on your wedding the more likely you are to end up divorced.
The data is consistent enough that it's hard to ignore.
Women who spent over $20,000 on their wedding were 3.5 times more likely to divorce than those who kept the budget between $5,000 and $10,000.
Couples who spent less than $1,000 on their wedding had the LOWEST divorce rates of all.
Now here's the nuance that matters.
The researchers don't believe an expensive wedding causes divorce.
They believe the financial behaviors and pressures that lead couples to overspend on a wedding create the conditions for marital strain down the road.
Financial stress is consistently the number one cause of divorce.
Starting a marriage with $30,000 in wedding debt on a combined $80,000 income is a fundamentally different situation than spending $30,000 when you earn $300,000.
There's also a finding in this study that almost never gets mentioned in the viral versions of this stat.
Couples with large guest lists but modest budgets had some of the strongest marriages of anyone in the study.
The researchers believe community support from friends and family matters far more to a marriage than what you spent on centerpieces.
The wedding industry spent decades convincing people that the size of the ring and the budget of the reception are expressions of love.
The data disagrees 💍 ♥️
Source: The Argent Group
Hey @theSCDOR, I desperately need to talk to a LIVE person regarding a tax payment. Please do not refer me to Dorwin. Is there a number I can call? Your main line is always too busy to accept new calls.
So occasionally we’ll get asked , “what do you do during commercials?” Today, @Butch_AFL cleans our @wisportsradio studio. To our studio-mates, you’re welcome.