NBA (Nothing But Agitators) ratings plunge

The Logo of The NBA was created to remind its fans of the great Hall of Fame guard, Jerry West, of The Los Angeles Lakers, a man born in Cabin Creek, West Virginia (not a city)



The NBA is taking tanking to never-before-seen depths. If LeBron and the Lakers in the Finals can’t save this collapse — nothing will. This is the best-case scenario. Imagine these numbers when the Nuggets finally win the West and the media has to push that over the NFL.

Compared to 2018, the last Finals with LeBron, Game 1 is down 58%. That kind of slide is what gets TV shows canceled and showrunners chased out of the business.

https://www.outkick.com/nba-finals-ratings-tank/

The LeBron Legacy is a toe tag affixed to the NBA.


Now, watch some racist radical claim the ratings disaster is directly attributable to the NBA's Logo because the Logo is an silhouette of Jerry West, who was born in Cabin Creek, West Virginia; Zeke-From-Cabin-Creek was his nickname.


Of course, that's it.


The image is of a white male supremacist, born in the inbred hollers of West Virginia, which means he prolly was a racist KKK-sympathiser who was also a Hillbilly, and who was bootlegging White Lightning in his General Lee automobile because he loved being an outlaw.




If the NBA's Logo is not a prime example of White Supremacy then try to explain why the Jerry West silhouette is WHITE rather than the usual black.



Richard “Dick” Simmons, an actor best known for playing the Royal Canadian Mounted Policeman who tracked down bad guys across the frozen North in the 1950s television series “Sergeant Preston of the Yukon” has become frozen.

Driving a dog sled with Yukon King, the “swiftest and strongest lead dog, breaking the trail in relentless pursuit of lawbreakers in the wild days of the Yukon,” Simmons played Sergeant Preston for three seasons on CBS, from 1955 to 1958. The show continued to air in syndication around the world for decades.

“On King! On you huskies,” Preston would cry as he set off on a mission.

At the end of an episode, he’d turn to his faithful furry companion and say, 





Well, King, this case is closed.”