Remembering Tecmo Bowl

If you ask me, the game that launched video games into the stratosphere was Tecmo Bowl. Other sports games were pretty good, but this was the precursor to Madden. This was the one that turned playing video games into an obsession for some people.

So, if you ever played, you will find this clip hilarious. Remember how Bo Jackson was the absolute MAN in this game?

Congrats

I don’t throw any personal stuff on here, but I think it’s newsworthy in my circle that Liz Boyer completed her PhD in Sports Psychology from teh University of North Texas.  It’s been quite a long road filled with sacrficies – the kind of uphill battle most entrepreneurs and start-ups face every day as well.  These stresses were shared and assisted by her husban Rich who has been great through the whole process.

Anyway, let me be the first person in the blogosphere to congratulate DOCTOR Elizabeth Boyer.   Nice work. 

Recapping The Time on Air America

(also posted at http://myelectionchoices.wordpress.com/) 

Hi all – we just got done with two segments on "The Air Americans" on Air America Radio.

We had the chance to speak with host David Bender, and saw traffic to the site spike during the period we were on.  Unfortunately, the particular show we were on was not broadcast in Seattle – and we didn’t realize that until gametime.  Also, to further confuse matters, we were moved from 7:00pm to 6:30pm to 6:00pm.  So, if you received one of our emails and were hoping to hear the live broadcast on the radio at 7:00pm, apologies.  But, we do have it recorded and will be posting it as podcasts as soon as we get the legal clearance.

So, we’d like to thank David Bender and the whole team over there for the opportunity.  Hopefully we’ll get a few more shots on the radio.

When Mascots Attack….

So, marketing question – Are mascots an important part of the baseball experience today, or are they simply peripheral to the process? After all, if owners’ claims that stadiums are integral to fans’ interest, it stands to reason that all parts of the stadium experience are necessary. One could even argue that the mascot is the only figure that can be guaranteed to wear the team’s uniform for 25-50 years.
I ask this because the Mariner Moose near killed the Red Sox center fielder, and so some people wondered if the Moose should be fined, banned or at least given driving lessons. The clips are funny since no one was hurt.

WSA and Zango – Seems like an odd combination

I am trying to catch up on my John Cook reading, and ran across something confusing.

Now, I don’t know that much about the WSA, but it stands to reason that any formal Association that supports Washington Software Companies would have some pretty high bars when rounding out its executive board.  And I don’t know Keith Smith personally, but I can read things on the Internet about his company, Zango (formerly 180 Solutions)

Some excerpts from simple google searches:

In my testing, 180 software specifically and systematically causes merchants’ tracking systems to conclude that users reached merchants’ sites thanks to 180’s efforts, even when users actually reached merchants on their own or through other affiliates. As a result, merchants pay commissions to 180 even when no commission is properly payable. In addition, 180 causes merchants to pay commissions to 180 even when commission is properly payable to other affiliates. – http://www.benedelman.org/spyware/180-affiliates/

The Center for Democracy & Technology (CDT) Monday accused 180solutions, one of the world’s largest developers of Internet advertising software, of "deliberately and repeatedly" engaging in illegal and deceptive spyware practices.http://www.internetnews.com/xSP/article.php/3579576

Just when 180solutions’ CEO Keith Smith is whining about anti-spyware companies, or to use his words “scanning applications”, Spyware Warrior has captured another 180solutions installation with no notice and no consent through a security exploit. From a crack site, too. Nice. Way. To. Go. – http://netrn.net/spywareblog/archives/2005/11/29/anti-spyware-zealot-rants-about-180solutions/

Again, I don’t know Smith or the company personally.   But when your Board of Directors includes Google, RealNetworks, Amazon, Microsoft, etc…you would think an invitation to join that board would at the very least require not being sued by the FTC, or not incurring the wrath of every Spyware watchdog advocate on the planet.  It seems like this is kind of like Jeff Skilling being invited to join a committee of oversight in the energy industry.  

So just to be clear, I’m not making a value judgement here, but I think it’s an interesting selection to what is supposed to be a respected board. 

A Moment of Silence for Bill Walsh

At a time when the sports leagues are under seige from drugs, gambling and violence, the loss of one of the really "Good and Decent Guys" in the game seems to hurt a lot more.

However, the other way to look at the death of Bill Walsh today, is that sports fans, especially football fans, have a chance to recollect and reminisce about a football genius that was both intellectual and classy.  

It’s hard to imagine Bill Walsh ever leading a team who’s star players flirted with the law, or engaged in all out illegal behavior.  You think of "Walsh’s guys" – Montana, Rice, Craig, Lott, Clark, Young, etc….guys you couldn’t root against even when you were supporting another team.

Over the weekend, babeball inducted two of their own high-class players into their Hall of Fame – Cal Ripken and Tony Gwynn. When reading the Sunday features about these two gentlemen of the game, it was difficult not to make mental comparisons to the players today that would fill their shoes.  Besides someone like Ichiro and Craig Biggio, it’s hard to imagine who will be grabbing the torch.

But back to football – where the Walsh legacy will live on thanks to the long list of Bill’s apprentices who went on to long coaching careers in the NFL.  Perhaps more and more of these coaches will remember back to lessons Walsh taught, choosing players who love football and achievment, and see that long-term financial rewards come from being good people and players at the same time.   Maybe the fans will start to look to Lindsay, Paris and other Hollywood convicts for their crime fix, and revert back to admiration of the players who excel on the field and serve as good role models without trying to.

If there’s anything the loss of Bill Walsh this week can remind us, it’s that good guys win lots of games.  And fans spend a lot of money to watch teams win games.  Maybe losing one good guy this week will help teams and players look to character as an imprtant trait, and we’ll soon be able to look back at last week as the low point in professional sports, the point where things actually turned around. 

New Music From the Editors

I’m ashamed to admit that I’m a month behind the release of a new CD from one of my favorite bands, the Editors.  If you haven’t heard of them, definitely give them a listen.  The new CD, "An End Has a Start," continues their dramatic, heavy, yet oddly upbeat sound.  A pretty unique band, so I hope you’ll give them a listen on Rhapsody or your favorite streaming service.

I got hooked after seeing them in Manchester in Fall 2005, playing to a PACKED house.  Then they went and played 7 straight sold out nights in London.  Definitely worth a checking out if you like live music.

Site to Avoid

It makes me sick when companies are so successful at being sleezy, that they can afford to advertise in Google Mail, and have a high enough conversion rate that the venture is profitable.

I hesitate to give the url, of my latest nnoyance, because they are probably good enough marketers that they’ll receive a ping and then launch some kid of attack on me.  So, here it is, but you can’t cllick on it.  http://your fortune revealed [dot].com.  You have to actually copy and paste this in and remove the spaces. 

These guys are pretty high on the scumbag meter.  Unsuspecting people will enter their cell phone number and start getting texts, which they will start paying for if they aren’t careful and take action.

I click on a lot of links in Google Mail to see what works from a marketing perspective.  Frankly, Gmail is starting to take on a more Hotmail-like feel with the continual ads for shady thing like this.  It’s too bad that Gmail doesn’t have some sort of "customer filter" where we could choose to block ads from disreputable companies.  Or, if a company gets enough block requests, their CPC should rise.   Ad based email programs work if the ads are unobtrusive, or even better, relevant.  When they are scams, they just turn people to other email programs.

Rant over, I hope this campaign fails.  I for one, will click on the ad every time I see it, so they pay the $.25 over and over again but never get a conversion. 

Everyone who has ever complained about an NBA ref…..may be right

So, it turns out that a few million NBA fans may have been right all along.  All of the compaining about NBA officials making ridiculous foul calls to affect a game, might be actually true.

http://sports.espn.go.com/nba/news/story?id=2943095

So, how big a deal is this? I think the most important question is, "Is there only one ref involved?" It seems impossible that one guy could bemixed up in this, doesn’t it?  And it seems further unlikely that the mob launched this idea in 2006. There’s a real possibility that this goes back 10-20 years, with 1-10 refs per year.  I mean, why not?

And how does the NBA address Mark Cuban now?   If this guy did any important games that the Mavericks were involved with, Cuban has every right to be suspicious.

Bottom line – the technology is around now where millions of fans are a more reliable barometer of whether a player or ref is doing his job well.  The fans may need to have a bigger play inhow we police these things.