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1426
...not having his dog leashed or fenced in  ???:

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SC postal worker runs over dog and keeps driving in video, owners say. See for yourself
https://news.yahoo.com/video-shows-sc-postal-worker-103000522.html

Yogi is 8 ½ years old. He’s an Aussie German Shepherd mix who loves to sit near the house and watch the few cars and trucks that go by on the Gouge family’s long dirt driveway on 22 acres outside Walterboro.

Most days he gets some extra pets and maybe a treat or two as packages are delivered.

Then came Monday.

Yogi was sitting in his usual spot when the mail carrier came by.

Next thing Paula Gouge knew he came inside and laid down on the bathroom floor.

Moments later a neighbor called and said Yogi had been hit by the mail carrier’s truck. She did not stop. The neighbor saw it all as she sat on her porch.

Gouge looked at her Ring camera and she saw it all, too. Warning, the video may be upsetting to some viewers.

She checked on Yogi and saw he was bleeding.

They rushed him to the emergency vet and learned his hip was dislocated and femur broken. He had a spinal injury.

“He is 90 pounds of all-good boy,” she said on the gofundme page set up to pay what is likely going to be a $10,000 bill for surgery and other expenses.

Her husband Rodney said, “He’s my joker. He makes you laugh.”

“Yogi has never chased a car,” Paula Gouge said in an interview Thursday with The State.

She’s not sure why he did Monday. The carrier had delivered packages, went to a neighbor’s and was on her way back out of the Gouge’s property. They own both sides of the driveway and the neighbor has an easement to use it.

Rodney Gouge reported the incident to the United States Postal Service.

“We haven’t heard squat,” he said.

A spokeswoman for the Southern Area Corporate Communications Office of the Postal Service told The State on Thursday that, “The Postal Service strives to always provide the best possible service to our valued customers. It is disappointing when, on rare occasions, we fall short of that goal.”

She said Walterboro Post Office management has addressed the situation with the letter carrier, who was not named

1427
..."negative" behaviors:

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Non-binary ex-Biden official Sam Brinton was on secret taxpayer-funded trip at time of luggage theft


1428
..prime rib place. They've been using the same method for about 75 years now...600 meals a night, that's a lot of prime ribs indeed.. O0:

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How San Francisco's Most Iconic Prime Rib Restaurant Serves Hundreds of People per Night—Plateworthy

Watch How One of S.F.’s Most Legendary Restaurants Cooks Its Signature Slabs of Prime Rib


https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nh56_blOvLg




1429
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Edgar B. Aberilla, 72, traveled from the Philippines with his wife to visit their daughter, Abby Tullius, who lives in Burlington is missing

Edgar B. Aberilla, 72, traveled from the Philippines with his wife to visit their daughter, Abby Tullius, who lives in Burlington. Aberilla has dementia and often is disoriented. Aberilla left Tullius' home at about 4 p.m. July 4 without telling anyone.

C'mon, this photo is ridiculous for something like this  :o:


1430
...at OnlyFans?  ???:

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Jeopardy! champ Anji Nyquist blindsided by X-rated requests from fans who have dubbed her the ‘hottest contestant ever’

Anji told The U.S. Sun all about her winning experience that led to being bombarded by requests to create an OnlyFans account.



Anji, a Minnesota-based social media coordinator, won Jeopardy! on last Wednesday's episode in a moment that even surprised her.

She lept from third place to the new champ by being the only one correct on Final Jeopardy.

The clue read: "Nicknamed 'the kingdom in the sky,' this landlocked nation is the only country in the world to lie entirely above 4,000 feet."

Anji was the only one who could drum up "Lesotho," earning her $8800 and a priceless reaction when declared a winner, seen above.

Anji exclusively told The U.S. Sun that feeling was: “Amazing, I was as shocked as I looked. I was not expecting to win.

"I had a good game [Anji got 20 correct responses], but I had just turned to [rival contestant] Aubrey [Gillerman] and said: ‘I’m not gonna win this one,’ and he said something so kind, like, ‘You never know!’

“And all of a sudden, Final Jeopardy happens, and I did win; it was crazy.”

Though Anji lost one game later, she won over the masses by revealing in her second interview with Ken Jennings, 49, that her cat is named NAZ REID (in all caps) after the underrated Timberwolves player.

“The whole Naz Reid thing blew up," Anji shared. "That’s been the most fun part of this."

We filmed this in May, and Naz Reid just signed a big contract, so there was a lot of Naz Reid news the week my episode aired.

"If you're a Naz Reid fan, you're a Naz Reid fan all year.”

'DMS FROM RANDOM MEN'
However, Anji's win wasn't the only part of her experience that came as a surprise.

She conducted an Instagram Q&A about her stint, and instead of asking about her viral cat or her money moves, quite a few people wanted her to create a page on the adult subscription website OnlyFans.

“I did an 'ask me anything,' and there were a lot of people who asked, ‘Would you do an OnlyFans? It would be really popular.’

“I mean, that's not my style, but it was flattering?

"You’re gonna get some nice people, and you’re gonna get some creeps. I have been getting DMs from random men.

“Most of it's just nice, ‘you’re so beautiful, you're the hottest contestant ever - which is so dumb."

The game show contestant continued: “Jeopardy! is about your brain and your performance in this scenario.

"It was flattering, though, because who likes seeing themselves on TV ever?”

“It was not what I was expecting, that's for sure.”

WINNING ADVICE
Anji first auditioned in July 2022 and has been watching the beloved game show since she was 13.

“The stage is so much smaller than I was expecting. The board and contestants aren't that far apart. And you're not that far from Ken, who is a hero of mine.

"Hearing him tell a tidbit about me on my second episode, I could have cried."

Anji also dished out advice to future contestants: “It’s so cold in that studio, and I'm already always cold.

“They warn you that it's cold but it's so cold. Bring something warm to wear even when you're not on stage.

"That’s definitely some advice I'd give- your shirt might be pretty but layer up."

To study up, Anji: “made some flashcards of planets, got a big kids book on the presidents, classic lit, opera, and I have a few old Jeopardy! board games, so I was going through the card decks of those with my boyfriend.”

'SPECIAL MEMORY'
Anji also opened up about why Jeopardy! means so much to her.

“Before my dad passed away, I lived with him and took care of him when he had dementia.

"We would watch together and it was when James Holzahuer was on his run," referring to the poker pro and Masters winner's monster 32-day streak in 2019.

“My dad would do the ‘all in’ motion with James, and he would cheer when he got them right so that's a special memory for me.

1431
Georgia, the Peach State, is out of peaches. Here’s why, and how locals are coping

The Peach State lost more than 90% of this year's crop after a February heat wave followed by two late-spring frosts. The triple-whammy destroyed peach varieties specifically bred to survive different weather scenarios and wildly inflated prices of the fruit.





1432
...lever and/or hit the emergency shut off button and that bike ain't going anywhere. But then again at that moment with the adrenaline rushing it's probably harder to think of those things  ???. I also think that if the Trooper open fire, it would've been justifiable since the idiot rider uses his bike as a weapon..:

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Watch: Motorcyclist pushes Mass. trooper into road running from traffic stop with his bike

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lkXC_b83g4U


1433
Server Arrested For Theft After Refusing To Pay A Table's $100 Restaurant Bill When They Dined & Dashed

A server was wrongfully punished after she refused to give up money from her own paycheck when a group of customers didn't pay.

Posting to the subreddit "r/Serverlife" — an online forum where restaurant workers can share incidents that have happened to them while working — the boyfriend of a server shared that his girlfriend was put in a legal situation because she fought back against her boss' request when a group of customers skipped out on the bill.

She was arrested after refusing to pay for a table's bill when they dined and dashed.
In the Reddit post, the man explained that his girlfriend had started working as a server for a couple of weeks at a restaurant located in Georgia. While working one night, she had served a table of customers who ended up dining and dashing.

The table had walked out and left their $100 bill. In response, the server's manager told her she needed to pay for the table. "She told them no and immediately quit and walked out."

When she walked out, she also took the $50 in tips she had made that night, which is usually supposed to be given to management at closing time. However, feeling frustrated with management, she simply walked out and was planning on talking to them about taking it out of her final paycheck.

Though, she never got the chance. A couple of days after quitting, she was pulled over by the police and arrested for theft. "Apparently the boss called the police and put out a warrant for her arrest," he revealed.

While she was able to leave jail, her former boss is now trying to take her to court over the tab and the $50 she left with.

He concluded his post by seeking out advice on what would be the best course of action concerning helping his girlfriend, pointing out that it doesn't seem legal that she's getting into so much trouble for something that was out of her control.

According to federal rules, restaurant staff are protected against having to pay for customers who dine and dash. Restaurants can't force their employees to make up for the financial loss of dine and dash if it means they would earn less than the minimum wage.

On top of dining and dashing being illegal in most, if not all, states, including Georgia, it's incredibly unethical to deprive a business of the revenue it rightfully earned for providing customers with food and services.

Most Reddit users agreed that his girlfriend had the right to contact a lawyer and fight the charge.
"It’s illegal to make staff pay for someone walking out on a tab. Definitely get a lawyer this is an easy case. Absolutely insane," one Reddit user wrote.

Another user added, "Contact a civil rights lawyer. If there was an arrest warrant it was signed by a judge."

"So either the manager lied about the facts to get an arrest warrant, opening himself up to criminal charges and a civil suit, or the judge who signed it is an idiot and opened the city/county up to a civil rights lawsuit."

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A third user chimed in, "I don't know. The police did the job [of] arresting her based on the info they got from I assume the restaurant. The police didn't do anything wrong. The police could however charge the person who made the false report."

Overall, dining and dashing is considered dishonest, unethical, and harmful to businesses, their employees, and the overall community. It is always better to enjoy a meal at a restaurant and fulfill your responsibility by paying for the services provided.

1434
...on the Herschel Walker trade IMO. Glad my Raiders got Bo Jackson, still the biggest 'what if' IMO:

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Week of Woe: The one that got away for all 32 NFL teams

Let's face it: Rooting for sports teams can often be woeful. Only one gets to lift the trophy at year's end, and the months-long grind to determine that champion is stomach-churning. It's frustrating. It's also fun as hell. With that in mind, welcome to Yahoo Sports' "Week of Woe" in the NFL, where we look at some sliding doors that could have turned championships toward different hands. First up: The ones that got away.

The biggest mistakes in the NFL aren't just a wasted draft pick on a bust or a huge free-agency contract that doesn't work out. It's the opportunity cost.

For every draft bust, there's a future star that team instead could have had. For every great trade in NFL history, there was a team that was on the bad end of it.

Here are the biggest "the one that got away" stories from each of the 32 NFL teams, including coaches they didn't hire, draft picks they didn't make or trades that were instantly regrettable:

Arizona Cardinals: Not signing Joe Namath
The greatest quarterback the Cardinals ever drafted was Joe Namath. He was the 12th pick in the 1965 NFL Draft. But the Cardinals couldn't keep up in a famous bidding war with the AFL's New York Jets, who picked him first in the AFL's draft that year. The Cardinals — who many believe were secretly working for the Giants, and would have traded him to New York's NFL team upon signing him — are still trying to win their first Super Bowl. Namath signed with the Jets and led them to a win in Super Bowl III. He became one of the most famous players ever. Imagine how NFL history would be different had the Cardinals outbid the Jets.

Atlanta Falcons: Trading Brett Favre
The Falcons made one of the best draft picks in NFL history and didn't know it. In the second round of the 1991 draft, Atlanta took Southern Miss quarterback Brett Favre, who would set numerous NFL records and go to the Hall of Fame. But for the Falcons, Favre attempted four passes and didn't complete any of them. (Actually two were completed ... to the other team for interceptions.) Fed up with Favre's partying ways, the Falcons traded Favre to the Packers for a 1992 first-round draft pick, which probably seemed smart at the time.

Baltimore Ravens: Cutting Trent Dilfer
You wouldn't think that Trent Dilfer would be the biggest one who got away from the Ravens, but Ray Lewis says it cost the Ravens more Super Bowl titles. Dilfer helped the Ravens win a championship in the 2000 season and then they cut him, opting to sign Elvis Grbac. Grbac didn't work out and the Ravens didn't win another title for 12 years.

In 2018, Lewis said cutting Dilfer was one of the biggest mistakes in team history.

"It took us a 12-year stint to get back to another Super Bowl. We went through, what, 17 quarterbacks?" Lewis told radio host Colin Cowherd, via the Baltimore Sun.

“I’m counting on one hand an opportunity of at least five to six Super Bowls that are supposed to be in my closet. But we made that decision.”

The Ravens got rid of Trent Dilfer right after he helped them win a Super Bowl, then spent nearly a decade in QB purgatory. (Photo by Focus on Sport/Getty Images)
The Ravens got rid of Trent Dilfer right after he helped them win a Super Bowl, then spent nearly a decade in QB purgatory. (Photo by Focus on Sport/Getty Images)
Buffalo Bills: Trading up for Sammy Watkins
The 2014 NFL Draft was awesome. It wasn't so great for the Bills. They traded up to the fourth pick, sending the ninth pick as well as first- and fourth-round selections in 2015, to the Browns. The Bills took Sammy Watkins, who was a bust. Khalil Mack, Jake Matthews and Mike Evans were picked in the next three selections. If the Bills had stayed at No. 9, they basically couldn't have done worse than Watkins.

Here are the Pro Bowl players picked between Nos. 9 and 17 that year: Anthony Barr, Eric Ebron, Taylor Lewan, Odell Beckham Jr., Aaron Donald, Kyle Fuller, Ryan Shazier, Zack Martin and C.J. Mosley. It's amazing to think that the Bills paid up to move to No. 4 and somehow missed 12 future Pro Bowlers with the pick, including some future Hall of Famers.

Carolina Panthers: Tim Biakabutuka over Eddie George
In the 1996 NFL Draft, the second draft in Panthers history, they took a running back at No. 8. Instead of going with Eddie George, who just won a Heisman Trophy at Ohio State, they took another Big Ten back. Michigan's Tim Biakabutuka was the pick and it didn't turn out well. Biakabutuka never had more than 718 yards in a season for the Panthers. George went 14th to the Titans and had an outstanding career, gaining 1,000 yards seven times in eight seasons with the team.

Chicago Bears: Forcing George Blanda into retirement
The Bears wanted to use George Blanda, a multi-talented player and promising quarterback, as just a kicker starting in 1959, his 11th season. So Blanda retired. Then, when the AFL started in 1960, he joined Houston and restarted what would become a storied career. Blanda played until 1975, playing quarterback and kicking. He was a three-time champion in the AFL and was elected to the Hall of Fame. The Bears haven't had a first-team All-Pro quarterback since 1950.

Cincinnati Bengals: Not promoting Bill Walsh
When Paul Brown stepped down after the 1975 season, it seemed like the obvious move was promoting offensive coordinator Bill Walsh, who had already established himself as a young star in the business. But Brown went with offensive line coach Bill "Tiger" Johnson. Johnson went 18-15, was fired after an 0-5 start to his third season and never was a head coach again. Walsh built a dynasty with the 49ers that included two Super Bowl wins over a Bengals team that inexplicably passed him over.

This could have been you, Bengals. (Photo by Focus on Sport/Getty Images)
This could have been you, Bengals. (Photo by Focus on Sport/Getty Images)
Cleveland Browns: Cutting Len Dawson
Technically, the Browns didn't fire Bill Belichick until the NFL had approved the team's move to Baltimore. So that doesn't count. However, the team did cut Len Dawson before he went on to seven Pro Bowls and a Super Bowl IV MVP with the Chiefs. The Browns traded for Dawson, who was stuck behind Milt Plum for two seasons. He was released after the 1961 campaign having thrown just 28 passes for the team. The Browns haven't had a Hall of Fame quarterback in the Super Bowl era.

Dallas Cowboys: Trading the Shaun Alexander pick for Joey Galloway
The Cowboys wanted to get a new offensive star, so they traded two first-round draft picks to the Seahawks for Joey Galloway. Little did they know that the offensive star in that deal was Shaun Alexander, whom the Seahawks took with one of the Cowboys' picks and would go on to be NFL MVP. Galloway played only four seasons with the Cowboys, never topping 1,000 yards in a season.

Denver Broncos: Failing to get Russell Wilson the first time
The Broncos could have avoided what looks like a bad trade for Russell Wilson by simply drafting him many years ago. The Broncos had just signed Peyton Manning but were looking at quarterbacks early in the 2012 NFL Draft. In the second round, they passed on Wilson, off an outstanding season with Wisconsin, to take Brock Osweiler. Wilson was considered too short by many, including apparently then-general manager John Elway, who took the 6-foot-7 Osweiler. Wilson went to nine Pro Bowls in 10 seasons with the Seahawks, who took him in the third round, and helped beat the Broncos 43-8 in Super Bowl XLVIII. While Osweiler played a key role on a 2015 Broncos team that won a title, he never panned out as an NFL quarterback. The Broncos were still looking for a long-term Manning replacement last year when they traded for Wilson, who had a terrible first season in Denver and has plenty of questions going forward.

Detroit Lions: Having Barry Sanders and Calvin Johnson retire
We'll cheat a little here. Barry Sanders and Calvin Johnson weren't ones the Lions didn't acquire when they could have; both had Hall of Fame careers for Detroit. But both superstars retired in their prime, in part because of persistent losing with the team. Those two abrupt retirements became emblematic of the Lions' futility for the entire Super Bowl era.

Green Bay Packers: The whole 1989 draft
The 1988 Packers were well on their way to getting the No. 1 overall draft pick in 1989. Then, inexplicably, a 2-12 team won its final two games. They got the second pick, and that shift changed NFL history. The Dallas Cowboys got the first pick and took Troy Aikman. The Packers were in great shape, in retrospect, with the second pick. Barry Sanders, Derrick Thomas and Deion Sanders, three of the greatest players ever, were on the board. The Packers took Tony Mandarich, perhaps the greatest bust in NFL Draft history. It ended up OK for the Packers, who ended up with Brett Favre three years later, but they had a shot at four Hall of Famers in the 1989 draft and somehow ended up with Mandarich, who was unremarkable in 31 starts for the Packers.

Houston Texans: Taking David Carr over Julius Peppers
David Carr was a good prospect and it made sense that the expansion Texans wanted to make a quarterback their first-ever pick in the 2002 NFL Draft. In retrospect, putting Carr behind a horrible offensive line was bad for Houston and ruinous for Carr's career. The player who went second overall, Julius Peppers, is fourth all time with 159.5 career sacks and is considered a great bet to go into the Pro Football Hall of Fame in 2024, his first year of eligibility.

Indianapolis Colts: Trading John Elway
John Elway put the Colts in a tough spot. He threatened to go play baseball if the Colts drafted him first overall in 1983. The Colts drafted him and then-general manager Ernie Accorsi was adamant the team should not trade the once-in-a-generation talent. But Colts team owner Robert Irsay made a deal with the Broncos himself, and the Colts were stuck without an answer at quarterback until 1998, when they drafted Peyton Manning. Elway retired after that season following his second Super Bowl win.

John Elway said he wouldn't play for the Colts, so they traded him to the Denver Broncos. (Getty Images)
John Elway said he wouldn't play for the Colts, so they traded him to the Denver Broncos. (Getty Images)
Jacksonville Jaguars: Sticking with Blake Bortles, ignoring Patrick Mahomes or Deshaun Watson
In 2017, the Jaguars could have moved on from Blake Bortles to draft a quarterback. They had the fourth overall pick, and Bortles had taken a big step back during the 2016 season. Instead of admitting a mistake on Bortles and taking Patrick Mahomes or Deshaun Watson, they drafted running back Leonard Fournette and exercised the fifth-year option on Bortles for the 2018 season. Bortles was gone after the 2018 season and Fournette lasted just three frustrating seasons with Jacksonville. Mahomes is on pace to be one of the greatest quarterbacks ever and Watson has been an elite quarterback, though sexual misconduct allegations have overshadowed that.

Kansas City Chiefs: Letting Rich Gannon walk
The Chiefs wanted to make it work with Elvis Grbac at quarterback, and that kept Rich Gannon on the bench. Gannon played well at times when Grbac was hurt, but after the 1998 season he left as a free agent. To be fair, not even the Chiefs could have known that Gannon would sign with the Raiders and go to four straight Pro Bowls, winning an MVP and leading the Raiders to an AFC title. And the Chiefs got to see Gannon's revival happen twice a year in person in the AFC West.

Las Vegas Raiders: The missed John Elway trade
It's too bad the Al Davis-Pete Rozelle feud didn't happen in the social media era. It would have been even more entertaining.

The feud was the epicenter of a big controversy involving the 1983 draft and one of the greatest quarterbacks ever. The Raiders thought they had a deal with the Chicago Bears to acquire the sixth overall pick of the draft, which they would have packaged to move up to No. 1 overall and draft John Elway. The deal was never finalized. Davis, the Raiders' owner, accused Rozelle, the NFL commissioner, of getting involved and having the Bears nix the deal due to the NFL's distaste for the Raiders, which included Davis' lawsuit against the league over relocation. The NFL denied that but Davis always believed he was robbed of Elway. Even worse for the Raiders, who haven't won a Super Bowl since that 1983 season, Elway eventually went to the division rival Broncos and had a great 16-year career.

Los Angeles Chargers: Cutting Wes Welker
Welker made the 2004 Chargers after being an undrafted free agent. He returned kicks in Week 1. Then he was cut after one game when the Chargers claimed safety Clinton Hart off waivers. Hart ended up starting 39 games for the Chargers. Meanwhile, Welker redefined the slot receiver position with 903 catches and 9,924 yards, leading the NFL in receptions three times with the Patriots. He made the Pro Bowl five times and his one game with the Chargers was mostly forgotten, except among Chargers fans.

Los Angeles Rams: Trading Jerome Bettis to draft Lawrence Phillips
Yes, the Rams basically chose Lawrence Phillips over Jerome Bettis. The Rams took Phillips, a troubled star at Nebraska, sixth overall in the 1996 NFL Draft. To clear room for him, they traded Bettis to the Steelers for second- and fourth-round draft picks. Bettis, who had won NFL Offensive Rookie of the Year three years before he was traded, went on to the Pro Football Hall of Fame. Phillips was one of the biggest busts in Rams history. His off-field issues never left him, and in 2016 he was found dead in his prison cell. His death was ruled a suicide.

Miami Dolphins: Failing Drew Brees on his physical
The most famous butterfly effect tale in pro and college football history is what would have happened if the Dolphins had cleared Drew Brees on his physical. Brees was a free agent coming off a shoulder injury. Miami's doctor wouldn't pass him, so the team didn't sign him. Then-Dolphins coach Nick Saban says that was the moment he knew that was it for him in the NFL.

"So, I decided right then when that happened that we don’t have a quarterback in the NFL, we’re not going to win. I’m getting out of here. I’m not staying here," Saban said in 2021, via 24/7 Sports.

Brees went on to be a record-setting quarterback and Super Bowl champion with the Saints. Saban went to Alabama and became arguably the greatest college coach ever, overseeing a Crimson Tide dynasty. The Dolphins haven't won a playoff game since missing out on Brees.

Minnesota Vikings: Everything that was traded for Herschel Walker
When you're on the wrong side of what is generally considered the greatest trade in NFL history, you'll have some regrets. The Vikings didn't have some of the foundational pieces for a dynasty like the 1990s Cowboys had, like Jimmy Johnson and Troy Aikman, but they gave Dallas the ammunition to build a champion when they traded for Herschel Walker. They sent eight draft picks and multiple players to the Cowboys. The Vikings have still never won a Super Bowl.

Trading Herschel Walker was a huge step in the Cowboys' 1990s dynasty, and didn't turn out so well for the Vikings. (AP Photo/Jim Mone, File)
Trading Herschel Walker was a huge step in the Cowboys' 1990s dynasty, and didn't turn out so well for the Vikings. (AP Photo/Jim Mone, File)
New England Patriots: Passing on Archie Manning for Jim Plunkett, then trading Plunkett
The Patriots had a big choice at the top of the 1971 NFL Draft. They took Stanford's Heisman Trophy-winning QB Jim Plunkett over Ole Miss legend Archie Manning. Plunkett was solid for his first four seasons, but a shoulder injury in Year 5 opened the door for rookie Steve Grogan. The Patriots decided to trade Plunkett to the 49ers, and he would eventually win two Super Bowls with the Raiders. Manning never became an NFL superstar but that's mostly blamed on a terrible situation in New Orleans, and his fortunes might have been better in New England.

New Orleans Saints: Trading away the 1999 draft class (and some of 2000 too)
Imagine if a team traded an entire draft class — and high picks in next year's draft — to select a running back fifth overall in the social media/"running backs are devalued" age. It happened in 1999 when Saints head coach Mike Ditka traded the entire 1999 NFL Draft class and first- and third-round picks in 2000 to Washington so his team could draft Ricky Williams. It was eight picks in total, including two first-rounders. The first-rounder in 2000 was second overall. Washington screwed up a lot of the picks, but you can only wonder how the Saints would have looked different through the next few years with all those picks instead of Williams, who never played at a Pro Bowl level in three Saints seasons.

New York Giants: Letting Vince Lombardi go
Vince Lombardi wanted to coach the Giants. He was the offensive coordinator there in the 1950s. But he was more interested in being a head coach, and the Giants had Jim Lee Howell. When the Packers hired Lombardi away, Giants co-owner Wellington Mara thought he had an agreement that he could hire Lombardi back when Howell stepped down. Howell wanted to step down after the 1959 season, Lombardi's first season in Green Bay (right after Giants defensive coordinator Tom Landry went to coach the expansion Cowboys), but Lombardi didn't want to come back to New York. Howell stayed on one more year, Mara tried Lombardi again but was denied ("It became a sore subject, both ways," Mara told The New York Times), and Lombardi went on to a legendary run with the Packers. The Giants didn't win their first Super Bowl — and the Lombardi Trophy — until the 1986 season.

New York Jets: Passing on Jerry Rice
The Jets weren't the only team to miss on Jerry Rice. Thirteen teams passed on him in the 1985 NFL Draft. The Bills and Oilers passed twice. But the Jets are remembered for it most because they took another receiver (though, so did the Cincinnati Bengals, taking Eddie Brown). The Jets took Al Toon out of Wisconsin 10th overall, and he was on his way to a good career before concussions ended it prematurely. But Toon still wasn't Rice, who was drafted 16th overall and would score 208 career touchdowns, 33 more than any other player in NFL history.

Philadelphia Eagles: Jalen Reagor over Justin Jefferson
Let's go with a recent whiff for the Eagles, who haven't made many big mistakes lately. With the 21st pick of the 2020 NFL Draft, they took TCU receiver Jalen Reagor. He had 64 catches with the Eagles, many bad drops and was dumped after two seasons. With the 22nd pick, the Vikings took Justin Jefferson. Jefferson has 4,825 yards through three seasons, an NFL record, and won NFL Offensive Player of the Year in 2022. The Eagles won the NFC last season, but imagine how much better they'd be with Jefferson instead of Reagor.

Pittsburgh Steelers: Passing on Dan Marino
Taking Dan Marino in the 1983 NFL Draft was almost too obvious for the Steelers. He was from Western Pennsylvania and starred at Pitt. The Steelers needed to replace Terry Bradshaw, who was near the end of a great career. Aware of drug rumors with Marino, the Steelers took Texas Tech defensive tackle Gabriel Rivera. Head coach Chuck Noll admitted in an interview nearly a decade later that the rumors, which were unsubstantiate d, influenced the Steelers' draft decision.

Rivera was paralyzed in a car accident midway through his rookie season. The Steelers struggled to replace Bradshaw for many years while Marino became an all-time great with the Miami Dolphins.

San Francisco 49ers: Alex Smith over Aaron Rodgers
The 49ers wanted a quarterback with the top pick of the 2005 NFL Draft, and Aaron Rodgers was a local product who was impressive at Cal. But the team went with Alex Smith, the safer pick. Then-49ers head coach Mike Nolan said the team had issues with Rodgers' throwing motion, and also saw Smith as a friendlier personality while Rodgers was "very cocky, very confident, arrogant," via NFL.com. Smith didn't have a bad NFL career, but Rodgers became one of the greatest quarterbacks ever.

NFL history would have been much different if the San Francisco 49ers would have taken Aaron Rodgers (12) over Alex Smith in the 2005 NFL Draft. (AP Photo/Mike Roemer)
NFL history would have been much different if the San Francisco 49ers would have taken Aaron Rodgers (12) over Alex Smith in the 2005 NFL Draft. (AP Photo/Mike Roemer)
Seattle Seahawks: Trading the Tony Dorsett pick
The Seahawks could have drafted Tony Dorsett, the reigning Heisman Trophy winner, with the second overall draft pick in 1977. But Dorsett might have been hard to sign and the expansion Seahawks needed to stock up on picks, so they traded the selection to the Cowboys for the 14th pick and two second-rounders. The players from those picks — offensive linemen Steve August and Tom Lynch and linebacker Terry Beeson — were solid players but they weren't Dorsett, who became a Hall of Famer with Dallas.

Tampa Bay Buccaneers: Alienating Bo Jackson
Bo Jackson is one of the most electrifying athletes ever, and the Buccaneers blew the chance to have him. In 1986, the Bucs made Jackson the top pick of the draft. But Jackson was angry at team owner Hugh Culverhouse, who he blamed for ending his baseball eligibility at Auburn. The Buccaneers flew Jackson to Tampa for a physical, which he didn't know was against NCAA rules. Jackson refused to play for Tampa Bay and his NFL highlights live on forever as a member of the Raiders, who drafted Jackson in the seventh round a year later.

Tennessee Titans: Trading Steve Largent
We have to go back to the Houston Oilers days for the franchise's biggest regret. Houston drafted Steve Largent in the fourth round in 1976, but he didn't impress head coach Bum Phillips right away. Instead of cutting the rookie before the season, the team traded him to the Seahawks for a future eighth-round pick. When Largent retired he was the NFL's all-time leader in receptions, yards and touchdowns, all with the Seahawks.

Washington Commanders: Howard Milstein's ownership bid denied
The entire Daniel Snyder era could have been avoided. In 1999, New York real estate mogul Howard Milstein made an offer for the Washington franchise. NFL team owners were against it, in part because a lot of Milstein's bid was based on debt, so Milstein withdrew his offer. He'd later sue team president John Kent Cooke and general manager Charley Casserly, claiming they interfered with his bid to buy the team. One of Milstein's partners, Snyder, went forward with a different partnership group and landed the team. That led to one of the worst ownership tenures in sports history.

1435
...that was used to calm and quiet down fussy babies so we don't get caught and shot by the Viet Cong while trying to reach the refugee camps in Thailand. Sad that a few of those Hmong babies never woke up  :'(:

Quote
Mom put fentanyl in baby formula to calm her son, Florida cops say. He never woke up

Nassau County Sheriff Bill Leeper said the mother, “a child herself” at 17, told detectives she was tired and wanted to take a nap. So she put what she thought was a small amount of cocaine in her baby's bottle to help him get to sleep, she eventually told investigators. The nearly 10-month-old never woke up.

1436
...a guy that has worked in restaurants, food delivery, ...industry that rely on tips. The main reason is the confusion and the chaos a tip society can cause for all parties involved:

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'It's more than fatigue': 30% of Americans say tipping in the US is 'out of control' — even self-checkout machines now ask for tips. Do you agree?

It’s beyond just showing appreciation for your Starbucks barista and Uber Eats driver — tipping prompts have even spread to self-checkout machines, and frustrated Americans are ticked off.

About 2-in-3 adults have a negative view of tipping, according to a recent Bankrate survey.

While 41% believe businesses should pay employees better instead of relying so heavily on tips, 32% are annoyed about pre-entered tip screens and 30% feel that tipping culture has gotten out of control.

“It’s more than fatigue, it’s irritation,” Michael Lynn, a professor of consumer behavior and marketing at the Cornell University School of Hotel Administration, told CNBC.

“It’s not tip creep, it’s tip gallop.”

Consumers are starting to tip less
Despite the recent escalation in tipping prompts, it appears the frequency of tipping in the U.S. has been trending downward since 2019.

For example, dining at a sit-down restaurant is still the most common service for Americans to leave tips, but according to Bankrate data, 73% of U.S. adults who dine at sit-down restaurants always tipped in 2022 — compared to 75% in 2021 and 77% in 2019. Tipping has also slowed down in other businesses, like salons, cafes and food delivery services.

And the practice can vary based on demographic. Women are significantly more likely to tip than men, and Gen Z is the least likely to tip compared to older generations.

While 16% of U.S. adults say they’re willing to pay higher prices if American culture could do away with tipping, 15% reported being confused about who and how much to tip.

That said, nearly half of Americans still tip at least 20% at sit-down restaurants — which etiquette experts say is standard practice.

What’s triggering the fatigue?
As tipped workers generally receive a federal minimum wage of $2.13 per hour — a rate that was set back in 1996 — they rely mainly on tips to make ends meet. However, researchers now worry that companies are using tips as a way to pass the buck of ensuring employees receive fair wages to consumers. About 40% of respondents in the Bankrate survey agree employers should pay their workers better instead.

1437
..he's contributing UNLIKE PH's GEORGE SANTOS where he just abuses and leeches off the elderly folks that own the basement he lives in so he won't miss a moment of COD while they spoon feed him:

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A millennial entrepreneur who’s raised over $1.5 million for his 2 small businesses says he lives in his parents’ basement because nobody will give him a mortgage

Chace Barber is 35 years old and you could call him a job creator. The serial entrepreneur owns two small businesses, one of which has 11 full-time employees and has raised upward of $1.5 million from private equity to date, per CB Insights. And yet, the bank won’t give him a mortgage. It’s why he lives in his parents’ basement in Merritt, a city in British Columbia, Canada. “They look at me and my business partner, who also still can’t buy a house, and say, ‘oh, sorry, ‘you’re a little bit too risky,’” Barber told Fortune.

1438
...in place of soy sauce for number 14. Besides number 14, numbers 7, 15, 19, 25 and 26 also apply to us. And with number 19, it can be any vegetable. I remembered my mom would boiled a whole cabbage with just a pork bone and we eat it with rice...

In regards to number 15, sometimes our whole family would go out to gather as much redeemable recyclable as possible.

In regards to number 25, my mom would cut the hot dogs in half so it can sit flatter on regular bread slices.

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People Are Sharing Telltale Signs That Someone Grew Up Poor, And They're Spot On

Experiencing poverty can have long-lasting effects, ranging from financial trauma to small, everyday habits that are hard to let go of. Recently, u/tiredofw8ing asked Reddit to share the dead giveaway signs that somebody grew up poor, and the replies were spot on. Here are some of the top comments:
1."I didn't realize I made 'poor people sandwiches' until I met my wife. The amount of meat she piles onto the bread — it's just nuts to me. I was doing two slices folded in half and she's using a 1/4 pound of turkey."
ham on bread
—u/zilorzilhaust

Lauripatterson / Getty Images
2."You're always afraid to use your nice things because you might ruin them, and then you never get to really enjoy what you do have."
—u/velociravenous

3."Disproportiona tely wasting a ton of time to save up a few dollars. It’s going to cost $2 less if I go to this grocery store, even though it will take 30 minutes longer to walk there? Sign me up."
—u/sariahannibal

4."Never showing teeth when smiling. I grew up dirt poor and never received dental care until I was well into my twenties. I'm now forty, only recently (after many dental procedures) have I begun to feel comfortable showing my teeth."
dentist going over x ray images with patient
—u/king_of_lunch223

Kathrin Ziegler / Getty Images
5."Only using part of a stick of chewing gum at one time. Mom would make us share. We each got 1/4 stick."
—u/fungrandma9

6."You look for off-brand everything."
—u/real_railz

7."Saving the extra things from eating out. Condiment packets, napkins, and unused plastic silverware all go into the drawer."
pile of takeout sauce packets

—u/technical_contact836

Mark Weiss / Getty Images
8."Having no control over my spending habits because now that I have money I want to buy everything I couldn’t as a kid. Also, apparently, hot dogs in mac and cheese being one of my staple meals."
—u/carlwheezerspants

9."Food hoarding. All the people I know who grew up poor have too much food expiring in their pantries, myself included."
—u/saltychica

10."You view paper plates and paper towels as a luxury. It is literally throwing money away. I still don’t buy them often even though I am upper middle class."
paper plates in a trash can
—u/topazwarrior

Sorsillo / Getty Images/iStockphoto
11."Never, ever, ever, ever turn down free food."
—u/urmomskryptonite

12."Still packing food (bread, deli meat, chips) for road trips. My husband and I can afford to eat out every meal, but when we do a road trip, I still pack a cooler with food for lunches instead of eating out. By the way, packing hack for homemade cookies: Make them small enough to fit in a cleaned-out Pringles can. They stay fresh and don’t break."
—u/goodlife1988

13."I thought everyone ate breakfast cereal with a fork, so they could pass the bowl of milk to the next person. I was wrong."
woman holding a bowl of cereal
—u/one_oh_1

Cavan Images / Getty Images/Cavan Images RF
14."Anyone else eat rice with soy sauce as a full meal by itself?"
—u/veotrade

15."Collecting pop/soda cans from random places, even pulling them out of the trash because they're worth 10 cents. My biggest score ever was cleaning out a rich dude's garage on an island near my house. He would have epic parties and just stick the cans in the garage. It was filled floor to ceiling and he gave them to me and my sister. Just over $600 worth in 1984 money, so we lived pretty good that summer."
—u/paypermon

16."This is an odd one… I realized the only people who will offer to help you with moving, or even moving furniture around your house, are people who grew up poor. Everyone else seems to think it’s normal to hire movers."
person carrying moving boxes out to a truck
—u/princezz_zelda

Nick White / Getty Images/Image Source
17."Always ordering the cheapest thing on the menu, even if you could now literally afford to buy the whole restaurant."
—u/thumbsup2323

18."I've noticed I try to hang on to every little thing in case I can reuse or repurpose it. Gift bags, empty containers, old makeup. My family went through some really hard times, and I guess my brain tries to prepare in case it happens again. I have to go through my things and force myself to throw the junk away sometimes so I don't become a hoarder."
—u/taters_are_great

19."I bulk my meals with carrots. Meat was too expensive when I was a kid. My mum’s stew was known by my older siblings as carrot stew. Making soup, curries, lasagne? Add carrots! I never saw it as strange until my husband asked why I was doing that."
person holding a bunch of carrots

—u/haybai81

Klaus Vedfelt / Getty Images
20."My grandfather grew up during the Depression. If something was moldy, you would just take out the moldy parts and eat the rest."
—u/naw2665

21."Poor people have trouble letting go of things that are broken. That old car might have parts which you can use to maintain your next used car. That broken bike might be something you can find parts for someday. Rich people toss it and buy a new one."
—u/jacksoninhouse

22."You know exactly how much is in your bank account. You don’t have about $100. You have $103.72. I didn’t realize this until an ex of mine pointed it out."
woman using an ATM
—u/yellowforest4

Vgajic / Getty Images
23."Washing plastic bags and aluminum foil to use again."
—u/abilitysalt

24."If someone knows the pain of boiling your water on a stove to take a shower for months on end."
—u/phixiq

25."Using regular bread for everything, like hamburger rolls, hot dogs, etc."
slices of white bread

—u/tiffm2022

Daniel Day / Getty Images
26."Lack of vacations, even if you have the time and money to afford them."
—u/sabre_one

27."You save your money instead of investing your money because you’re terrified of losing it."
—u/noquit9132

28."Breakfast for dinner. Seemed cool as a kid but as an adult, I realized that all we had was a box of instant pancake mix. Now breakfast for dinner with my kids is a truly fun and non-emotionally damaging treat."
person eating a savory waffle topped with a fried egg and sliced avocado
—u/comfortablesort3304

Anjelika Gretskaia / Getty Images
29."I made six figures last year but still think cheap disposable razors should last at least a few months, and sometimes out of habit I drink a bunch of water before eating to feel more full."
—u/wonderifatall

30."Parents going without eating so we could. I do that now with my kids even though we don’t need to! If I am out of town working, my wife always tries to give me food or money to bring to work and I say, 'No. I don’t need anything. Leave it for the boys so they can eat it or save it so you can get y’all anything y’all need!'"
—u/thenotor1ous

1439
Death Valley visitors drawn to the hottest spot on Earth during ongoing US heat wave

The heat in Death Valley is on and it becomes a tourist attraction













1440
Indian tourists flock to Southeast Asia as China's reopening falters

Indian tourists are streaming into Southeast Asia, cementing the world's most populous country's position as a key growth market for a travel and tourism sector that is feeling the pinch of China's slower-than-expected re-opening.

From airlines like IndiGo (INGL.NS) and Thai Airways (THAI.BK) to hospitality chains offering thousands of rooms, companies are tapping into India's burgeoning middle-class and growing spending power, executives and analysts said.

Southeast Asia is obviously very well positioned for a lot of the growth that is inevitably going to come from India," aviation analyst Brendan Sobie told an industry conference last month.

The travel and tourism industry is critical for several Southeast Asian economies and contributed about 12% of the region's gross domestic product before the COVID-19 pandemic. It also employs more than 40 million of the region's people, according to the Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development.

Southeast Asia is obviously very well positioned for a lot of the growth that is inevitably going to come from India," aviation analyst Brendan Sobie told an industry conference last month.

The travel and tourism industry is critical for several Southeast Asian economies and contributed about 12% of the region's gross domestic product before the COVID-19 pandemic. It also employs more than 40 million of the region's people, according to the Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development.

A long-term increase in Indian tourists would lead to a recalibration of airline capacity, hospitality offerings and tourism operators - early signs of which are underway, according to industry members

India could emerge as the next China "in terms of outbound tourism growth" over the next decade, though connectivity would be constrained by fewer airports there, the Asian Development Bank (ADB) said in a May report.

"India could become the story in the decade after the pandemic for tourism," it said.

'STRONG UPTICK'
In Thailand, where tourism is an economic mainstay, the number of Indian tourists - though fewer than Chinese in absolute terms - is only about 14% lower than it was in 2019.

In 2019, Chinese visitors spent about $197 a day in Thailand and Indians spent about $180, with both visiting for about a week, according to Thai government data.

Tanes Petsuwan, deputy governor of the Tourism Authority of Thailand said 1.6 million Indians were expected to visit the kingdom this year.

In May, more Indians than Chinese visited Singapore while that same month nearly 63,000 Indians visited Indonesia compared with just over 64,000 Chinese.

"Indian routes are very strong," said Chai Eamsiri, chief executive officer of Thai Airways, which is flying 14 flights a week to China - down from about 40 before the pandemic - and 70 a week to India.

Some of a possible doubling of Thai's narrow-body aircraft fleet over the next decade would be deployed to India, Chai said.

Indian budget carrier IndiGo, which has ordered 500 Airbus (AIR.PA) narrowbody jets to meet regional demand, said it had seen a "strong uptick" in routes between India and Southeast Asia that it connects with more than 100 flights a week.

"We are introducing flights to Jakarta in August, as well as additional frequencies to Singapore," said Vinay Malhotra, IndiGo's head of global sales.

Overall, seat capacity on scheduled flights between China and Southeast Asia was 57% below pre-COVID levels as of June but flights from India to the region had recovered to about 90%, Sobie said.

Indians are helping to sustain a post-pandemic rebound for hospitality chains, including Minor Hotels, which has 45 properties in Southeast Asia with more than 6,000 rooms.

"The Indian market is consistently one of our top source markets," said CEO Dillip Rajakarier, adding that the hotel chain - part of Bangkok-listed Minor International (MINT.BK) - had intensified marketing across India.

'TIME AND MONEY'
In June, Pratyush Tripathy and four friends hopped on a two-and-a-half hour flight from the Indian city of Kolkata to Bangkok for a five-day holiday, much of it in and around the beach resort of Pattaya.

The trip cost between 40,000 and 60,000 Indian rupees ($484-$726) each, about the same as a flight to Europe, said Tripathy.

"It will save you time and also money," said the 33-year-old software professional, explaining their decision to visit Southeast Asia, where Indians can usually get visas much more easily than they can for European countries and the United States.

Flight bookings from India to Bangkok jumped by 270% between January to June this year compared with the same period in 2019, according to Indian online travel portal Cleartrip.

Thailand's central bank expects 29 million visitors this year and 35.5 million in 2024. That's still fewer than a record of nearly 40 million in 2019, but the Bank of Thailand forecasts that the sector will help drive overall economic growth to 3.6% in 2023 and 3.8% next year, compared with 2.6% in 2022.

To cash in on the surge, Thailand's tourist industry must understand Indians' preferences, particularly around food and entertainment, said Somsong Sachaphimukh, vice president of the Tourism Council of Thailand.

"If we don't adjust quickly, neighbouring countries will draw in those visitors," Somsong said. "Thailand has a lot to offer, so this is a big opportunity."

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