Saturday, September 29, 2012

Even if you do not follow football (the American version), you've probably heard discussions on the replacement referees intervened in arbitration, while the real arbiters solved its labor dispute with the NFL. If there had been no hint of competition, it is likely that most non-NFL fans would still be blissfully unaware that Green Bay and Seattle recently played a game, let alone one that was decided by a blown call that bad writers from List B began to improvise "amateur night brothel" analogies. In addition, the idea that referees real return actually achieved what was perhaps the first ever ovation referees should tell you something about how things went wrong substitutions.

few days before the NFL reached an agreement with the
aa real
referees, Mike Tanier (writer Outsiders football and, above all, it is worth reading in the New York Times Fifth Down blog) lambasted the idea of ??closing the referees replacement before further damage was caused. This system is based on the participation of the crowd, the complexity of public performance rights and a band whose catalog has already been mentioned (by b-Lister) to be almost as accessible as a badger "covered live grenades."

Go to the game. If you are a fan chargers Jaguars and Bengals, it is buy a ticket and drive to the stadium. There are sites that teach you how to do these things. Anyway, once there, wait for replacement agents to make a call or drop idiot in one of his marathon delays. When this happens, start singing



Nah nah nah na-na-na-nah na- na - na-nah, Hey Jude


copyright Beatles (held primarily by Paul McCartney and heirs of John Lennon rights) and publishing (owned by Paul, Sony / ATV Publishing, and perhaps one or two chimpanzees ex Michael Jackson) are between the rights of the world's best kept music. "Hey Jude" is the song most closely guarded in the Beatles catalog. Everyone knows, and it is easy for a large crowd to sing, as Paul himself showed when he took Olympic fans in a chorus of a song first recorded 15 years earlier than their parents have reached puberty.





If the crowd in an NFL game sings "Hey Jude", the television will be taken "Hey Jude "without the authorization of the copyright holders. The sound editors are good enough to hide the BS song, but just a bit of white noise. Try editing far one of the most recognizable melodies in the world of television. Dissemination will sound like it comes from Venus. But if the NFL is not heard the song, someone big and powerful will be presented at the headquarters of the league in a demanding environment.





Faced with the choice of a battle against Big Music Publishing and the fourth most wanted man on the planet ( between Ron Howard and ... wow ... TJ Lang) or fair dealing with officials, the NFL will be left with no choice. The blockade will end, thank you and the cute Beatle.

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