This is the wildest World Cup story yet. If someone in Toronto sells a ticket above face value they get fined $25,000 yet the city of Toronto bought 3,500 World Cup tickets early and then sold them to taxpayers at a markup as a “revenue generation strategy.” What the hell man.
@JoshEberley Using MSG as a representation for previous years is crazy. New York has otherworldly money. Anywhere else would probably be about 1-3% of median income
How on earth are they giving 94/1 odds for this?👀
Spain, Germany, England, USA, Netherlands, France, Argentina, Brazil & Scotland all to concede 5+ goals across the tournament.
These are the type of bets that actually look so easy in a World Cup.
This looks like easy cash 💰
@AspiringWigger@adamtranter Yeah but they’re also wildly dangerous comparatively. The rate of deaths per km driven is like 25x more dangerous than a car. So they kinda do need more protection laws.
Granted people that drive motorbikes in the U.S. take more risks in general
@HOTYVHS@JimJones69_ That’s such a horrendous take. I’ll list tickets for every show I want to go to at a high price because if by a miracle they sell at $1000 I’d rather have my bills paid for a month than attend a concert. If you’re telling me you wouldn’t rather have 1k than go to a show?
@TicketsData My favorite is when artists think because they sell a venue like Red Rocks they should be touring venues bigger than that. Don’t realize it’s the venue that’s the draw
econ job market papers then:
"I ran a regression and added a bunch of covariates woohoo"
econ job market papers now:
"I tracked Bill Gates movements across 500 public and 200 paid datasets and can definitively show the impact of the Epstein files on microsofts tax payments"