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Wolfpack said:Furthermore, you're contradicting your own logic. You're trying to say there is no big impact to a Super Bowl, but you're also saying tht Dallas was "devastated" by the bad weather. Well which is it? If there no great economic boom to a Super Bowl, why would bad weather be so "devastating"?
Reading some of your stuff you're either incredibly naive or totally self absorbed or still in college... Restaurants, retail outlets, bars, clubs, hotels, municipalities went ahead and ordered exponentially more food, clothing, booze, entertainment, help, renovations and facelifts in anticipation of a massive influx of fans looking to spend like drunken fools for the better part of a week. Nobody reimburses them or the tax payers when mother nature throws a monkey wrench in the plans.
I saw a report where one restaurant owner expected to make $85K this week, and now he will be lucky to make $8500, which is probably less than what he makes on a normal week in Dallas in February. Everything businesses and even governments do in anticipation of hosting a boom event still has to be paid for in the event of a bust.
Somewhere between your simplistic vision of what football should be for fans and Bob Kraft's expansive vision of what it should accomplish for participants and investors lies the truth...












