2015-2016 NBA Regular Season - MDA to HOU - All-NBA - Harden snubbed - Anthony Davis is broke

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Panda express

Taco bell

Five guys

Holy trinity
taco bell is cool  

five guys eww

panda is decent but hella overpriced and they stingy with the portions 

quiznos

jersey mikes are the ish. my quiznos that i used to frequent just closed down and i dont know of any more around my area

that honey mustard chicken sandwich was the ish.

. im a huge sandwich fan. 
 
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If you have a MOD Pizza near you try it out.

Create your own pizza with as many toppings as you want for $7.87 :hat
 
Artichoke Basille's Pizza
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 Open Season on Jeremy Lin? In Video, Fan Highlights Hard Fouls

By ANDREW KEHAPRIL 14, 2016

Hsiu-Chen Kuei waited until her husband and three sons had gone to bed one night recently before surreptitiously beginning work on an ambitious personal project.

As they slept, Kuei, 48, a stay-at-home mother from San Jose, Calif., hunkered down at her computer and began poring over highlight videos featuring Charlotte Hornets guard Jeremy Lin, her favorite N.B.A. player. She fumbled around on Final Cut Pro, a video-editing program, splicing together the specific clips she had sought. She did this for six straight nights, three hours each night.

On April 5, Kuei uploaded her finished product, a six-and-a-half-minute video, to YouTube. She called it “Jeremy Lin: Too Flagrant Not to Call.” Piecing together clips of Lin over the years getting whacked in the face, clotheslined, bleeding, tumbling to the floor — all without ever drawing a flagrant foul — Kuei tried to convey that Lin, an American-born son of immigrants from Taiwan, was the victim of excessive physicality from opponents and insufficient protection from the league and its referees.

To Kuei’s surprise, the video soon attracted close to a million views, capturing the attention of basketball fans around the world and the eye of the league — even if no one quite knew who was behind it. With its bruising simplicity, it revived questions about the fairness and consistency of officiating in the N.B.A. and sparked conversations about the possible effects of latent racial biases. With its far-flung reach, it reiterated the power of social media in the contemporary sports landscape.

. . .

Critics of the video have suggested similar ones could be made about other players. Kuei, who was born in Taiwan, does not disagree with that notion and does not feel that it contradicts her view that Lin gets shortchanged. She said fans of other players should make their own videos.

“Through this, I just want to make sure the rules apply to every player and players get protected by the rules,” Kuei said.

Though Kuei’s video does not attempt to speculate on the root cause of Lin’s perceived treatment, much of the ensuing discussion has gravitated toward Lin’s race.

http://www.nytimes.com/2016/04/15/sp...=top-news&_r=0
 
 
 Open Season on Jeremy Lin? In Video, Fan Highlights Hard Fouls

By ANDREW KEHAPRIL 14, 2016

Hsiu-Chen Kuei waited until her husband and three sons had gone to bed one night recently before surreptitiously beginning work on an ambitious personal project.

As they slept, Kuei, 48, a stay-at-home mother from San Jose, Calif., hunkered down at her computer and began poring over highlight videos featuring Charlotte Hornets guard Jeremy Lin, her favorite N.B.A. player. She fumbled around on Final Cut Pro, a video-editing program, splicing together the specific clips she had sought. She did this for six straight nights, three hours each night.

On April 5, Kuei uploaded her finished product, a six-and-a-half-minute video, to YouTube. She called it “Jeremy Lin: Too Flagrant Not to Call.” Piecing together clips of Lin over the years getting whacked in the face, clotheslined, bleeding, tumbling to the floor — all without ever drawing a flagrant foul — Kuei tried to convey that Lin, an American-born son of immigrants from Taiwan, was the victim of excessive physicality from opponents and insufficient protection from the league and its referees.

To Kuei’s surprise, the video soon attracted close to a million views, capturing the attention of basketball fans around the world and the eye of the league — even if no one quite knew who was behind it. With its bruising simplicity, it revived questions about the fairness and consistency of officiating in the N.B.A. and sparked conversations about the possible effects of latent racial biases. With its far-flung reach, it reiterated the power of social media in the contemporary sports landscape.

. . .

Critics of the video have suggested similar ones could be made about other players. Kuei, who was born in Taiwan, does not disagree with that notion and does not feel that it contradicts her view that Lin gets shortchanged. She said fans of other players should make their own videos.

“Through this, I just want to make sure the rules apply to every player and players get protected by the rules,” Kuei said.

Though Kuei’s video does not attempt to speculate on the root cause of Lin’s perceived treatment, much of the ensuing discussion has gravitated toward Lin’s race.

http://www.nytimes.com/2016/04/15/sp...=top-news&_r=0
these fans are soft these days 
mean.gif


inb4 knicks fan makes melo video 
 
I check snapchat and see a snap of clipper darrell in his clipper suit at LA live leading the kobe chant yesterday 
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1st tweet.
Darren Rovell
@darrenrovell


Warriors broadcast on ESPN was watched by 184,000 viewers more than Lakers broadcast last night on ESPN2


2nd tweet

Darren Rovell
@darrenrovell


At its peak, Nielsen says 5.38 million were watching Lakers game on ESPN2. Warriors game on ESPN peaked at only 4.16 million watching.


Interested to see how the regional stations did.
 
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