Jump to content


Recommended Posts

Posted
On 2/13/2019 at 2:35 PM, ManDee said:

 

Do you not see the irony? And I think you mean pass time.

pastime
/ˈpɑːstʌɪm/
noun
  1. an activity that someone does regularly for enjoyment rather than work; a hobby.
    "his favourite pastimes were shooting and golf"
    synonyms: hobby, leisure activity/pursuit, sportgamerecreationamusementavocationdiversiondivertissementdistractionrelaxationpleasureentertainmentfuninterestsidelineenthusiasmpassionfadcrazemaniaobsession;

Posted
On 2/13/2019 at 1:57 PM, Macca said:

I totally understand the popularity but UFC is barbaric mindless violence.  Anyone who gets off on that stuff needs help.  Quintessential gratuitious violence.

As for ESports - get a life I say.

Lol. A lot of eSports players would be making more money than most AFL players... I'd say they've got their lives sorted...

Posted
2 hours ago, low flying Robbo said:

Lol. A lot of eSports players would be making more money than most AFL players... I'd say they've got their lives sorted...

Spectators not players.  

I was obviously never talking about the participants  - as for the participants,  whatever floats your boat and if you can make a good quid out of a pastime,  good luck to you.

As for the watching of video game players at large stadiums by adults - ???

  • Like 1
Posted
2 hours ago, low flying Robbo said:

Lol. A lot of eSports players would be making more money than most AFL players... I'd say they've got their lives sorted...

I don't think we should judge people by how much money they make. Is a banker of more value to society than a nurse? As for spending much of your life closeted away having a virtual life behind a screen or worse watching those doing so I say get a life. 

  • Like 1
Posted
2 hours ago, low flying Robbo said:

Lol. A lot of eSports players would be making more money than most AFL players... I'd say they've got their lives sorted...

Yeh but they all have poor personal hygiene and smell like fatty fried food. 

  • Haha 1

Posted

Approximately 99.8% of the world has little or no interest in Aussie rules footy ... yet in our eyes we mostly view the AFL  as being ultra successful.

The big bash audience is a different audience to the audience that watches test cricket

AFLX is more likely to get a new audience if it gets a foothold.

 

Posted (edited)
1 hour ago, Macca said:

Spectators not players.  

I was obviously never talking about the participants  - as for the participants,  whatever floats your boat and if you can make a good quid out of a pastime,  good luck to you.

As for the watching of video game players at large stadiums by adults - ???

I was one of those adults a few Sundays ago Macca. Margaret Court Arena held the ‘Fortnite Summer Smash’ during the Aus Open and there must’ve been at least 5,000 people that attended. Son and nephew were really keen to go, I wasn’t at all,  but they convinced me when they told me Jack Viney (he was eliminated early by the way) would be appearing in the ‘Pro Am’ event later in the day. 

100 gamers battled it out for nearly 7 hours for a share in 400k with the winner walking away with 100k. I tried to look as relevant as the next parent. Most parents including myself had no clue as to what we were watching. Ticketek charged $5 for children and $54 for an adult. Insanity, but each to their own I guess. 

Luckily the bars were open. 

Edited by Dee Zephyr
  • Like 1

Posted
6 minutes ago, Dee Zephyr said:

I was one of those adults a few Sundays ago Macca. Margaret Court Arena held the ‘Fortnite Summer Smash’ during the Aus Open and there must’ve been at least 5,000 people that attended. Son and nephew were really keen to go, I wasn’t at all,  but they convinced me when they told me Jack Viney (he was eliminated early by the way) would be appearing in the ‘Pro Am’ event later in the day. 

100 gamers battled it out for nearly 7 hours for a share in 400k with the winner walking away with 100k. I tried to look as relevant as the next parent. Most parents including myself had no clue as to what we were watching. Ticketek charged $5 for children and $54 for an adult. Insanity, but each to their own I guess. 

Luckily the bars were open. 

I bet it stunk in there. 

  • Haha 2
Posted
45 minutes ago, Dee Zephyr said:

I was one of those adults a few Sundays ago Macca. Margaret Court Arena held the ‘Fortnite Summer Smash’ during the Aus Open and there must’ve been at least 5,000 people that attended. Son and nephew were really keen to go, I wasn’t at all,  but they convinced me when they told me Jack Viney (he was eliminated early by the way) would be appearing in the ‘Pro Am’ event later in the day. 

100 gamers battled it out for nearly 7 hours for a share in 400k with the winner walking away with 100k. I tried to look as relevant as the next parent. Most parents including myself had no clue as to what we were watching. Ticketek charged $5 for children and $54 for an adult. Insanity, but each to their own I guess. 

Luckily the bars were open. 

Ha ha!

As parents we have to do these things ... I have done similar things.  Numerous times.

But as free thinking adults ... each to their own I suppose.  As an example ... most people I know have very little interest in AFL. I really only watch or go to the Demon games. 

Different circles.

  • Like 1

Posted
1 hour ago, Macca said:

Approximately 99.8% of the world has little or no interest in Aussie rules footy ... yet in our eyes we mostly view the AFL  as being ultra successful.

The big bash audience is a different audience to the audience that watches test cricket

AFLX is more likely to get a new audience if it gets a foothold.

 

true, but be wary of such innovations.  I play a game where a simpler version was introduced some years back. Far less interesting both physically and tactically  but much easier to pick up quickly.     The original game is now almost dead with fewer and fewer players.

Posted
7 minutes ago, sue said:

true, but be wary of such innovations.  I play a game where a simpler version was introduced some years back. Far less interesting both physically and tactically  but much easier to pick up quickly.     The original game is now almost dead with fewer and fewer players.

Progress happens ... and there is often nothing that can be done to stop progress.

I played 50 seasons of sport including 30 cricket seasons - full on. 

A 3 hour version of cricket was inevitable.  I am amazed that it wasn't thought of earlier.  Thus,  test cricket becomes less relevant. 

That is progress.  Not my doing either ... these things happen despite all the protestations.  That's life.

Posted (edited)
22 minutes ago, Macca said:

Progress happens ... and there is often nothing that can be done to stop progress.

I played 50 seasons of sport including 30 cricket seasons - full on. 

A 3 hour version of cricket was inevitable.  I am amazed that it wasn't thought of earlier.  Thus,  test cricket becomes less relevant. 

That is progress.  Not my doing either ... these things happen despite all the protestations.  That's life.

maybe if you define progress as simply progressing rather than progressing with improvement.  Just because cricket had obvious problems (was a snore fest to me) doesn't mean all progress is good, especially that driven by the $.  At least in the game I play the "progress' wasn't driven by the $, but by amateur empire builders.

If AFLX started to dominate the world (fat chance fortunately) and normal Aussie rules footy vanished in 10 years, I'm sure we'd all be happy with that as an example of "progress".   

Edited by sue
Posted
2 minutes ago, sue said:

maybe if you define progress as simply progressing rather than progressing with improvement.  Just because cricket had obvious problems (was a snore fest to me) doesn't mean all progress is good, especially that driven by the $.  At least in the game I play the "progress' wasn't driven by the $, but by amateur empire builders.

If AFLX started to dominate the world (fat chance fortunately) and normal Aussie rules footy vanished in 10 years, I'm sure we'd all be happy with that as an example of "progress".   

What are you concerned about then if you reckon that AFLX has a 'fat chance' of succeeding?

Probably best that you just ignore ... it's not a threat in your eyes so why bother with the angst?

And I never said that all progress is 'good' ... I simply said that progress is going to happen and there is often nothing that can be done to stop progress. 

As an example, most test cricket fans (it is my favourite sport)  should know that the sport is a 19th century sport and is under threat from itself.  But the love & attachment is often too strong for such evaluations.

I prefer to keep things real.

 

Posted
On 2/13/2019 at 12:58 PM, buck_nekkid said:

So we have an utterly meaningless AFLX to follow an utterly meaningless big bash.

there is no soul in either of these, and seven will try to make them ‘meaningful’.

Much of life is meaningless.  It ceases to become  meaningless when we die.

In the meantime, whilst we remain on this mortal coil, we exercise choice. 

We accept some things, reject others.

Increasingly, I find sport in all its forms, meaningless, particularly those sports or derivations of a game that are invented and marketable purely to milk more revenue.  The culture and history of a sport becomes meaningless because the new thing is just something invented by marketing executives and administrators who see $ signs in front of their eyes. They are dominated by thinking purely of markets, growth and money (in the pockets of all those involved in the game, namely, administrators, players, media and advertisers).

Sport is now seen as entertainment. Sport (and footy) in its purest form no longer exists. In footy, we see rule changes every season to make the game more marketable.    

Do we really need it or want it ?  No, but we are going to get it anyway. Do we need the latest TV or iphone?  Do we need Big Bash or AFLX? 

Probably not, but we will get it anyway and folks have to exercise choice to buy or not to buy. 

Some manifestations of a sport or game are good. Women's footy for example. Worth watching, worth supporting  and important for gender balance. 

All consumers can do is to exercise their power through choice.

Avoid the sport (product) completely or choose what product or form of the sport that you like and wish to follow. 

The sports I don't like, I don't attend, watch or read about.  Or I take less interest in. Just like you will read one book but not another based on your personal likes and biases.  

 

  • Like 2
Posted

Summed it all up very well H ... we all have choices so it is simply a mattet of exercising those choices.

I spoke up yesterday against UFC because I believe it should be banned. Let it go underground but have huge penalties if caught doing so

It is not ok for a defenceless unconscious female to have punches rained into her head thus causing untold brain damage. 

It is disgusting and more people should speak up about the disgusting practice. 

Now a mainstream sport?  What have we become?  By comparison,  AFLX is utterly harmless.

  • Like 1
  • Love 1
Posted
On 2/14/2019 at 9:29 AM, La Dee-vina Comedia said:

Demonland. It's to AFLX like Keith Dunstan was to the (former) VFL with his (then) AFL, otherwise known as the Anti-Football League.

A Place in the Sun - yep, indifference to AFXL would be strongly supported by Keith Dunstan. Except, he would have hoped that such contempt would be contagious and thus, affect the H&A season as a natural progression - and that would not be appropriate. Gotta admire his long-term commitment and the amusing way he promulgated such thoughts. 


Posted
On 2/14/2019 at 12:33 PM, DV8 said:

Keith Dunstan, gees, there's a throw back in time.

He lived across the road from Central Park (Scott Rd, I think???) in Malvern and would often come over to us little kids.... sniff the air and say footy was a disgusting game ... as we kick-to-kicked in the rain to imitate Bill Barrott, or Ron Barassi, or Fred Swift, or Jack Clark, or Ted the Whitten.  In summer, he'd clap from the boundary line as we played cricket (as productively as Bill Lawry grave-yarding the Poms) and we took that as eventual approval from Mr Dunstan. 

  • Like 1

Posted

The AFL are interested in making money ... that is what corporations do.  And it has been that way for 2 decades now

Wanting them to help out at grass-roots level or other worthy causes is fast becoming a pipe-dream.

Posted
19 minutes ago, Macca said:

Summed it all up very well H ... we all have choices so it is simply a mattet of exercising those choices.

I spoke up yesterday against UFC because I believe it should be banned. Let it go underground but have huge penalties if caught doing so

It is not ok for a defenceless unconscious female to have punches rained into her head thus causing untold brain damage. 

It is disgusting and more people should speak up about the disgusting practice. 

Now a mainstream sport?  What have we become?  By comparison,  AFLX is utterly harmless.

UFC is beyond description. 

Lots of people want to ban boxing but it is child's play compared to UFC.

It staggers me that it has not been banned. 

  • Like 1
  • Love 1
Posted
26 minutes ago, hemingway said:

UFC is beyond description. 

Lots of people want to ban boxing but it is child's play compared to UFC.

It staggers me that it has not been banned. 

Actually (while I don't like UFC all that much, I sometimes watch it), there is far less being hit in the head than a Boxing match has.

I think its just that there is more blood smeared around on bodies,  that makes it appear worse than it is.

 

Boxing Is much worse for the brain, imo.

  • Like 1
Posted
1 hour ago, Macca said:

What are you concerned about then if you reckon that AFLX has a 'fat chance' of succeeding?

Probably best that you just ignore ... it's not a threat in your eyes so why bother with the angst?

And I never said that all progress is 'good' ... I simply said that progress is going to happen and there is often nothing that can be done to stop progress. 

As an example, most test cricket fans (it is my favourite sport)  should know that the sport is a 19th century sport and is under threat from itself.  But the love & attachment is often too strong for such evaluations.

I prefer to keep things real.

 

If you read my original post you won't find any evidence of angst or any concern about AFLX.  I was just making a general point based on my experience of the game I play having "progressed" but gone downhill.  

Join the conversation

You can post now and register later. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.

Guest
Unfortunately, your content contains terms that we do not allow. Please edit your content to remove the highlighted words below.
Reply to this topic...

×   Pasted as rich text.   Paste as plain text instead

  Only 75 emoji are allowed.

×   Your link has been automatically embedded.   Display as a link instead

×   Your previous content has been restored.   Clear editor

×   You cannot paste images directly. Upload or insert images from URL.

  • Recently Browsing   0 members

    • No registered users viewing this page.
  • Demonland Forums  

  • Match Previews, Reports & Articles  

    2024 Player Reviews: #36 Kysaiah Pickett

    The Demons’ aggressive small forward who kicks goals and defends the Demons’ ball in the forward arc. When he’s on song, he’s unstoppable but he did blot his copybook with a three week suspension in the final round. Date of Birth: 2 June 2001 Height: 171cm Games MFC 2024: 21 Career Total: 106 Goals MFC 2024: 36 Career Total: 161 Brownlow Medal Votes: 3 Melbourne Football Club: 4th Best & Fairest: 369 votes

    Demonland
    Demonland |
    Melbourne Demons 5

    TRAINING: Friday 15th November 2024

    Demonland Trackwatchers took advantage of the beautiful sunshine to head down to Gosch's Paddock and witness the return of Clayton Oliver to club for his first session in the lead up to the 2025 season. DEMONLAND'S PRESEASON TRAINING OBSERVATIONS Clarry in the house!! Training: JVR, McVee, Windsor, Tholstrup, Woey, Brown, Petty, Adams, Chandler, Turner, Bowey, Seston, Kentfield, Laurie, Sparrow, Viney, Rivers, Jefferson, Hore, Howes, Verrall, AMW, Clarry Tom Campbell is here

    Demonland
    Demonland |
    Training Reports

    2024 Player Reviews: #7 Jack Viney

    The tough on baller won his second Keith 'Bluey' Truscott Trophy in a narrow battle with skipper Max Gawn and Alex Neal-Bullen and battled on manfully in the face of a number of injury niggles. Date of Birth: 13 April 1994 Height: 178cm Games MFC 2024: 23 Career Total: 219 Goals MFC 2024: 10 Career Total: 66 Brownlow Medal Votes: 8

    Demonland
    Demonland |
    Melbourne Demons 3

    TRAINING: Wednesday 13th November 2024

    A couple of Demonland Trackwatchers braved the rain and headed down to Gosch's paddock to bring you their observations from the second day of Preseason training for the 1st to 4th Year players. DITCHA'S PRESEASON TRAINING OBSERVATIONS I attended some of the training today. Richo spoke to me and said not to believe what is in the media, as we will good this year. Jefferson and Kentfield looked big and strong.  Petty was doing all the training. Adams looked like he was in rehab.  KE

    Demonland
    Demonland |
    Training Reports

    2024 Player Reviews: #15 Ed Langdon

    The Demon running machine came back with a vengeance after a leaner than usual year in 2023.  Date of Birth: 1 February 1996 Height: 182cm Games MFC 2024: 22 Career Total: 179 Goals MFC 2024: 9 Career Total: 76 Brownlow Medal Votes: 5 Melbourne Football Club: 5th Best & Fairest: 352 votes

    Demonland
    Demonland |
    Melbourne Demons 8

    2024 Player Reviews: #24 Trent Rivers

    The premiership defender had his best year yet as he was given the opportunity to move into the midfield and made a good fist of it. Date of Birth: 30 July 2001 Games MFC 2024: 23 Career Total: 100 Goals MFC 2024: 2 Career Total:  9 Brownlow Medal Votes: 7 Melbourne Football Club: 6th Best & Fairest: 350 votes

    Demonland
    Demonland |
    Melbourne Demons 2

    TRAINING: Monday 11th November 2024

    Veteran Demonland Trackwatchers Kev Martin, Slartibartfast & Demon Wheels were on hand at Gosch's Paddock to kick off the official first training session for the 1st to 4th year players with a few elder statesmen in attendance as well. KEV MARTIN'S PRESEASON TRAINING OBSERVATIONS Beautiful morning. Joy all round, they look like they want to be there.  21 in the squad. Looks like the leadership group is TMac, Viney Chandler and Petty. They look like they have sli

    Demonland
    Demonland |
    Training Reports 2

    2024 Player Reviews: #1 Steven May

    The years are rolling by but May continued to be rock solid in a key defensive position despite some injury concerns. He showed great resilience in coming back from a nasty rib injury and is expected to continue in that role for another couple of seasons. Date of Birth: 10 January 1992 Height: 193cm Games MFC 2024: 19 Career Total: 235 Goals MFC 2024: 1 Career Total: 24 Melbourne Football Club: 9th Best & Fairest: 316 votes

    Demonland
    Demonland |
    Melbourne Demons 3

    2024 Player Reviews: #4 Judd McVee

    It was another strong season from McVee who spent most of his time mainly at half back but he also looked at home on a few occasions when he was moved into the midfield. There could be more of that in 2025. Date of Birth: 7 August 2003 Height: 185cm Games MFC 2024: 23 Career Total: 48 Goals MFC 2024: 1 Career Total: 1 Brownlow Medal Votes: 1 Melbourne Football Club: 7th Best & Fairest: 347 votes

    Demonland
    Demonland |
    Melbourne Demons 5
  • Tell a friend

    Love Demonland? Tell a friend!

×
×
  • Create New...