vinistic 🛡 (@vinistic) 's Twitter Profile
vinistic 🛡

@vinistic

Formerly @casinocityvin. Now Early Investing VP. Also iGaming consultant. Tweets ≠ investment advice. Retweets ≠ endorsements. Imported from Detroit. #GoGreen

ID: 44951167

calendar_today05-06-2009 17:55:23

26,26K Tweet

1,1K Takipçi

4,4K Takip Edilen

MLFootball (@_mlfootball) 's Twitter Profile Photo

CLASS ACT: Miami star RB Mark Fletcher came out of the locker room to find Fernando Mendoza after the game and congratulate him. Fletcher reportedly stood there for a while waiting to give the proper congratulations. Really great sportsmanship 👏❤️

derek guy (@dieworkwear) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Excited to announce I'm starting a new column at Bloomberg about the business of fashion. The first piece is about how to re-shore US apparel manufacturing. Instead of using mass deportations and tariffs, the government should move the industry upstream. 🧵

Richard Deitsch (@richarddeitsch) 's Twitter Profile Photo

There is nothing about The Washington Post that surprises me. I think Bezos and Will Lewis telegraphed it. But it is such a terrible thing in an age where information slop grows daily. That you would not try to find away to monetize sports, one of the few things that brings us

Brian Sullivan (@sullycnbc) 's Twitter Profile Photo

The family dinner that was $100 5 years ago is now $150. Auto insurance that was $200 is now $350 Home insurance that was $300 is now $450 How does the Fed fix those? It can't. Wages will keep going up, but still not fast enough to mitigate price hikes. That's the

SteveBrubaker (@stevebrubaker) 's Twitter Profile Photo

I listened to the the Illinois Racing Board meeting. The most important information that came from that meeting is that salaries are being paid from Hawthorne's "frozen" accounts, but horsemen with over $1m in bounced checks and other moneys due them for months are not.

Marc Edelman (@marcedelman) 's Twitter Profile Photo

My full take on the Darian Mensah situation now that it is resolved in ten honest bullet points. 1. We are entering a new system. Getting rid of kinks will take time. 2. If we had collective bargaining, these things wouldn't happen this way. 3. The lack of collective

vinistic 🛡 (@vinistic) 's Twitter Profile Photo

The Post has been the gold standard in sports for decades. The sports and style sections have been its only differentiators for years. Everything else, including great reporting in other areas, can be found elsewhere. No reason for a Washingtonian to subscribe anymore.

Richard Deitsch (@richarddeitsch) 's Twitter Profile Photo

As someone who watched Time-Inc management get rich, layoff tons of incredibly talented editorial people, before the eventual end: The executives who destroy the product always get away clean and always get away rich. You see this repeating itself now in real-time.

Richard Deitsch (@richarddeitsch) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Every person in sports at The Washington Post would be wise to look elsewhere right now. That's just reality. Now here's the other reality: You still have to do your job at the highest level, your editors have to do their jobs at the highest level, and you as a writer/copy

Jon Ralston (@ralstonreports) 's Twitter Profile Photo

I don’t care if you love the Post or hate it, love Bezos or hate him. The carnage today is horrible for the people who lost their jobs , a devastating blow to a legendary organization and for journalism writ large. Anyone taking a scintilla of pleasure in it is just sick.

Jim VandeHei (@jimvandehei) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Still baffled: why would a disinterested, disengaged, distracted The Washington Post owner hire a seemingly disinterested, disengaged, distracted CEO, suffer perpetual criticism and $ loss?  Lots of rich people would buy it, and even more execs would gladly run it.  Show me a single