CousinVinnieBear

330 posts

CousinVinnieBear

CousinVinnieBear

@TopDogCalBear

가입일 Eylül 2024
136 팔로잉58 팔로워
What a Bonanza!
What a Bonanza!@Bearly_Insane·
The program has 02’ vibes when Tedford first started. Feels great with Tosh here and we as fans need to pack the stands. That’s on us - show up!
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CousinVinnieBear
CousinVinnieBear@TopDogCalBear·
@CalBearsGR8 @nickatnocap This is precisely why Cal is so well Positioned to survive assuming we a) win and b) solidify the brand image. When combined with the university prestige - sky is the limit to thrive.
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CalBearsGR8
CalBearsGR8@CalBearsGR8·
@nickatnocap The Big 12 doesn't have a single school with undergrad admission rates below 40%. At least the SEC has a few (Texas, Florida, Vanderbilt).
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Nick Lord
Nick Lord@nickatnocap·
The University of Oregon's president just sent a budget letter to their entire campus community. Letter attached below. The message: enrollment is the single biggest factor in their operating budget, and they don't have a clear picture yet. Competition for out-of-state and international students is fiercer than it's ever been. The enrollment cliff is happening in real time. High school graduates peaked at roughly 3.9 million in 2025. WICHE projects a 13% decline through 2041. The pipeline of tuition-paying students is shrinking, and it's not coming back. Now, layer on what's happening in athletics. Schools are spending up to $20.5 million per year in direct revenue sharing with athletes. NIL budgets keep climbing. The transfer portal is a year-round bidding war. Facilities and coaching salaries are at all-time highs. This spending makes sense, because winning drives enrollment, especially out-of-state enrollment, which is where the real tuition margin lives. A football program on national TV is the best recruiting tool a university has. But schools are spending more than ever on athletics at the exact moment the student pipeline is shrinking. And it's not just enrollment. I've heard rumblings from people at major corporate partners who are already planning to scale back university spending over the next decade because of projected campus population declines. The sponsors see the same data. Three forces converging: fewer students, rising athlete costs, shrinking corporate spend on campus. The schools that survive this will be the ones that build new revenue models - alumni business networks, brand partnerships built on real economic value, fan revenue systems - not the ones that keep spinning the same wheels with a shrinking budget. The enrollment cliff isn't separate from NIL, the portal, or the spending arms race. They're all the same story.
Nick Lord tweet media
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CousinVinnieBear
CousinVinnieBear@TopDogCalBear·
@BonaguraESPN @CalFan97 Totally fair, will take some time to see. Very important for cal to blend success in the field with a functioning off field product - rooting for their success
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Kyle Bonagura
Kyle Bonagura@BonaguraESPN·
There is nothing cutting-edge about what is described in this release. Just a bunch of buzzwords. This is cost-cutting. A bunch of layoffs only for many of the same jobs to be immediately posted, presumably at lower wages: #results" target="_blank" rel="nofollow noopener">intercollegiate.co/?q%5Bschool_co…
Cal Athletics@CalAthletics

Announcing Strawberry Creek Studios: uniting Cal Athletics' marketing, creative and communications units into a cutting-edge collaboration built to deliver on two primary objectives - revenue generation and authentic storytelling. Learn more: calbea.rs/4tl9iZ4

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CousinVinnieBear
CousinVinnieBear@TopDogCalBear·
@Ben_Baby From a historical perspective that’s fair. In theory, taking big swings like this are what’s needed as colleges need to be their own media companies. A few will figure it out!
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Ben Baby
Ben Baby@Ben_Baby·
@TopDogCalBear In-house content rarely generates interest outside of a select group of diehards because typically, it avoids the aspects that actually make content good.
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CousinVinnieBear
CousinVinnieBear@TopDogCalBear·
@mattczizek Presser jargon aside - it’s a positive step towards building the Cal brand in a way that is fit for the modern sports entertainment landscape. Gotta start somewhere.
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Matt Czizek
Matt Czizek@mattczizek·
I need everyone to understand that this BS word salad of “innovation” and “storytelling” and “revenue” will ultimately result in: 1. Nothing new 2. Higher outsourced cost 3. A bunch of people patting themselves on the back as they leave this mess onto someone else.
Rob Hwang@rob11hwang

News from @CalAthletics: Cal announces the creation of Strawberry Creek Studios.

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CousinVinnieBear
CousinVinnieBear@TopDogCalBear·
Great commentary by Nick here. Cal has an opportunity to change the trajectory of athletics (particularly football and hoops) by embracing the currently reality and future of college athletics. Time is now to get it right on and off the field
Nick Lord@nickatnocap

Cal just laid off about two dozen staffers across marketing, communications, and creative services. They are replacing the entire external operation with something called "Strawberry Creek Studios," built around two objectives: revenue generation and authentic storytelling. This is not a Cal problem...this is the first wave. Cal is facing a $24.3 million shortfall. They owe $12 million a year in stadium debt. Their media rights money shrank when they moved to the ACC. And now they need to fund $20.5 million in annual athlete revenue sharing (Likely more) on top of all of it. The old org chart was not built for this. All of the functions operating as cost centers with no direct connection to revenue. That structure worked when TV deals and ticket sales covered the budget. It does not work when your athletes are paid and your expenses just jumped by eight figures overnight. Cal is not the last school that will go through this, they are one of the first. We are going to see athletic departments across the country restructure how they operate. Not because they want to, but because the math demands it. These are billion-dollar enterprises in some cases and they have been running on university department budgets with university department thinking. That era is over. The schools that get ahead of this will not wait until the shortfall forces their hand, they will look at every function inside their athletic department and ask one question: does this generate revenue, and if not, can it? Content is not a support function anymore, it is a revenue channel. Partnerships are not a sales team selling signage packages, they are commercial infrastructure. Alumni engagement is not a thank-you-for-donating email, it is a procurement network. The programs that restructure around revenue as the operating system, not an afterthought, will be the ones that come out on top. This is not a crisis, it is a market correction. College athletics is becoming a real business and the org charts need to catch up.

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Democratic Wins Media
Democratic Wins Media@DemocraticWins·
BREAKING: Bruce Springsteen just announced that his band will be doing a tour in effort to fight back against Donald Trump's authoritarian overreach. The Boss is back!
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Timothy Snyder
Timothy Snyder@TimothyDSnyder·
He took the greatest military force in world history, lost a war to a middle power in a week, begged the world to save him, and demanded that the media lie about this and everything else. I try, but at a simple human level I do not see how anyone can mistake this man’s almost supernatural weakness for strength. His weakness is something negative, gravitational, so deep that it can draw in a whole country. But only if we fail to see it. Only if we let it.
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Adam Cochran (adamscochran.eth)
Adam Cochran (adamscochran.eth)@adamscochran·
What the HELL?! Who is giving Trump advice right now? Kharg Island doesn’t have any military targets - it is all oil shipping infrastructure and storage. You can see it ALL from aerial images. Iran considered this their red line as 90% of oil from Iran passes through here. There is no world in which this doesn’t further escalate Iran and cause more pain in the oil markets. This will also cut off China and India from Iranian oil entirely…
Adam Cochran (adamscochran.eth) tweet mediaAdam Cochran (adamscochran.eth) tweet mediaAdam Cochran (adamscochran.eth) tweet media
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Chuck Todd
Chuck Todd@chucktodd·
Anyone else fear that the Commander in Chief isn’t getting the full picture of the war’s impact out of fear by those around him of telling him something he doesn’t want to hear?
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David J. Bier
David J. Bier@David_J_Bier·
Our "Secretary of War" says the US will give "no quarter" to its enemies, meaning it will execute prisoners of war. This is exactly why I raised the issue of ignoring unethical orders. The legality of such an order is irrelevant to its morality.
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Rep. Jason Crow
Rep. Jason Crow@RepJasonCrow·
An order to give no quarter is a war crime. I’ve fought in combat. I’ve trained service members on the law of war. Our military has an obligation to follow the law. The Secretary of Defense having such a complete disregard for the law is reckless and dangerous.
Acyn@Acyn

Hegseth: No quarter, no mercy for our enemies. Yet some in the press just can't stop. More fake news from CNN reports that the Trump administration underestimated the Iran war's impact on the strait of hormuz. The sooner David Ellison takes over that network, the better.

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