Far less than meets the eye

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Ecumenism is the Universal Solvent of Tradition .

The thoughtful, Mr. Tunsil, irked that NFL fans consider his game entertainment





Mr. Tunsil, matriculating at the university of Mississippi (note the flag behind him)




Dope huffing hero irked that NFL fans consider what he does entertainment.

Well, Mr. Tunsil, what you do is entertainment- although the Dog Ass Jets thoroughly whipped your sorry ass on Sunday - or do you really think Mr. and Mrs. White Middle American is happy paying way too much money to watch you and your crummy teammates show disrespect for this country and its flag?



2017 NFL Pricing Preview: Your Guide to Costs & Trends for the Upcoming Season

Jul 10, 2017 4:32 PM by Julia

2017 NFL PRICING PREVIEWWith just weeks until the kickoff of NFL preseason games, Vivid Seats analyzes ticket sales data that reveals what fans are paying to cheer on their favorite teams. From the average cost per ticket of a Super Bowl Champion to the team with the cheapest seats, find out where your team falls into the mix. 
Vivid Seats 2017 NFL Pricing Preview:
NFL ticket prices for the 2017 season average $172, an increase of six percent year-over-year. The season opener between the New England Patriots and Kansas City Chiefs is currently the most expensive 2017 matchup with a $692 average ticket price – 302 percent higher than the overall season average.  Average ticket prices by team include:
NFL Pricing Preview
Highlights: 
1. Fans hoping to catch a New England Patriots or Atlanta Falcons game will pay a premium this year, with average ticket prices of $380 (31 percent higher than 2016) and $259 (135 percent higher than 2016), respectively.
2. Proving that winning pays, two-thirds (66 percent) of the teams that made it to the 2016 playoffs saw an increase in average ticket prices year-over-year.
3. Winning records equal higher prices. Of the 10 teams with the most expensive ticket prices, eight had winning records in the 2016 regular season. 





Keep it up, Mr. Tunsil, and fans will increasingly tune-out men like you.  The NFL is a game and it is entertainment. Period.

It is not war, it is not an ennobling exercise, it is not anything other than what it obviously is - entertainment.


What white man in his right mind will spend hundreds of dollars just for the opportunity to see you and you ilk show disrespect for what he and his family consider a pretty good country.


But, what will you do, Mr. Tunsil, if fans quit you and your crummy game; who will hire you and what task will they hire you for?

As for the entertainment industry, it will think your protest has both great value and meaning because extreme leftism is where the entertainment business is ideologically and so the politicisation of football is for them good news...