I'll give Walker the benefit of the doubt there. Looked like he jumped up and then the dude when for his feet so he just lifted his knees to go over him. I don't think he intended to jump over the guy
From their August financials call:
Here’s what the company reported compared with what Wall Street was expecting, based on a survey of analysts by Refinitiv:
Earnings per share: 85 cents adjusted vs. 77 cents expected
Revenue: $1.78 billion vs. $1.75 billion expected
Restaurant Brands announced second-quarter net income of $351 million, or 77 cents per share, up from $346 million, or 76 cents per share, a year earlier.
Excluding items, the company earned 85 cents per share.
Net sales rose 8.3% to $1.78 billion. Restaurant Brands’ same-store sales climbed 9.6% in the quarter, driven by strong growth at Tim Hortons and Burger King.
I would drop Johnson. The Texans are throwing a ton and they only have two receivers - Dell and Collins. The Bears might be all time bad and Johnson is gonna split time with Herbert unless there's an injury.
Lillard averaged 32 pts a game as a 32 year old. I doubt he falls off a cliff in the ext year or two. Chris Paul is like 58 years old and can still ball pretty good.
Again, income tax goes to the state not the city/county and the bulk of that sales tax goes to the state as well. The city does have a hotel tax but I think the last I saw something like 14% of all people attending games are from out of state and most of those are probably Cubs fans driving up for a game. So it's probably closer to 5 - 7% needing a hotel. I don't have an issue with the state kicking in as they get the 5% sales tax and the income tax. The state comes out ahead even contributing $20 million a year. I take issue with 265 acres property tax free and then being asked to contribute $100 - 200 million on top of that unless someone can show me actual numbers that prove the city/county at least break even.
This is everything - state and local. The state is 5% and the county is/was .05%.
https://madison.com/news/state-regional/government-politics/brewers-stadium-state-funding-milwaukee/article_d1cf1912-5bb0-11ee-9d2b-8bd883ecb017.html
The shared revenue comes from the state sales tax (typo below ..should be 5 percent sales tax):
The roughly $1 billion in aid to local governments — known as shared revenue — would be paid for by tapping 20% of the state’s 5-cent sales tax. Aid would then grow along with sales tax revenue. The measure increases current aid by about $250 million statewide.
https://pbswisconsin.org/news-item/evers-signs-bipartisan-shared-revenue-bill-designed-to-prevent-milwaukee-bankruptcy/#:~:text=The roughly %241 billion in,by about %24250 million statewide.
the city doesn't collect income tax. The state does The city also doesn't collect property taxes because the stadium district is exempt from them. The city gets branding, sales taxes from bars and hotels, and sales taxes from food, beverage, merch sold at the stadium.
10 -> 2022 - Weeks 1, 2, 4, 5, 8, 9, 14, 15, 16, 17
Felt like Watson missed more than 3 games but he was probably limited or left early in a few. Doubs missed weeks 10 - 13.
Do you need a subscription to Amazon Prime to watch the Packers-Lions?
Probably yes, though not if you live in the Green Bay or Milwaukee markets. If you live in Milwaukee, the game will also air on WITI (Fox 6). In northeast Wisconsin, it'll be on WGBA (NBC 26). Everyone else will need a subscription to Amazon Prime to stream the game (unless they're in Detroit, where it's also airing on a traditional linear channel).