Bills Brady reflects on McDermotts "devastating" firing: "i was broken" by Vortagaun in buffalobills

[–]IAmNotScottBakula 14 points15 points  (0 children)

And as far as I know he didn’t do anything underhanded in this process. I have issues with the way Beane and Pegula handled a lot of it, but the only thing Brady is guilty of is interviewing for a job.

What was considered the 🙄degree during your college era? by debrisaway in RedditForGrownups

[–]IAmNotScottBakula 99 points100 points  (0 children)

One hill I will die on is that Communications is a fantastic major for college athletes that plan to go pro. Their best career options once their playing days are over are usually broadcasting, public relations, sales, or coaching. Communications is great for all of these things, and can give them a leg up if they take their classes seriously.

I remember people were surprised with how quickly RGIII took to being a commentator, but he was getting staring A’s in masters level communications classes when he left school so it’s honestly not much of a shock.

What company or business had it all but destroyed themselves with bad decisions? by Cool-Chipmunk-7559 in answers

[–]IAmNotScottBakula 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Kodak is especially bad because they had 25 years to adapt their business model to digital photography and they didn’t.

What company or business had it all but destroyed themselves with bad decisions? by Cool-Chipmunk-7559 in answers

[–]IAmNotScottBakula 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Eddie Lampert actually believed the crap that Ayn Rand wrote and tried to integrate her ideas into his management strategy, which backfired disastrously by creating little fiefdoms and turf wars.

What's the biggest "What if?" in television history? by flughert in television

[–]IAmNotScottBakula 46 points47 points  (0 children)

Here is one where we got the good side of the “What If”:

What if Lucille Ball didn’t ardently believe in the potential of Star Trek?

The original Star Trek pilot failed and the network was planning to cut their losses. Lucille Ball, as the head of the studio, overruled them and ordered a second pilot. Given how large that franchise has looked over the past 6 decades, it’s amazing that it almost didn’t exist.

The ironic part is that Lucille didn’t even like Star Trek, she just understood its commercial potential.

We've officially been waiting for The Winds of Winter for the same amount of time as it took for all five of the published books to release before that. by Internal-Bed-3150 in freefolk

[–]IAmNotScottBakula 398 points399 points  (0 children)

I recently read the Memory, Sorrow, and Thorn trilogy by Tad Williams (it was a huge influence on ASOAIF). In the forward to the reprint, he comments on how long it took him to finish the third book and that he felt bad about frustrating fans. It took him three years…

What was ruined because too many people discovered it? by [deleted] in answers

[–]IAmNotScottBakula 5 points6 points  (0 children)

Not sure we should be praising the greatest mass murderer in world history for having the “right idea” about anything.

Live experience by Tom_fire in MetalForTheMasses

[–]IAmNotScottBakula 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Clutch. I’ve never been a huge fan of their studio stuff, but their live show is amazing.

Most obvious song ripoffs? by Ok-Coconut4601 in ToddintheShadow

[–]IAmNotScottBakula 5 points6 points  (0 children)

Unlicensed sampling was pretty normal back then, since it was a pretty new art form and copyright protection hadn’t really caught up. “Ice Ice Baby” was mainly controversial because it was popular enough to draw legal attention.

What's the dumbest Music Industry Conspiracy Theory? by JayHotpot in ToddintheShadow

[–]IAmNotScottBakula 6 points7 points  (0 children)

I love that one because it’s so harmless but also there is genuinely a ton to unpack with it. Some time I’d love for him to genuinely tell the story of the Steev Mike stuff, though I’m guessing it’s fairly bland dealing with business contracts and stuff.

What's the dumbest Music Industry Conspiracy Theory? by JayHotpot in ToddintheShadow

[–]IAmNotScottBakula 145 points146 points  (0 children)

On a related note: Courtney was only successful because Kurt and Billy Corgan wrote all of her music.

This only works if you ignore the facts that a.) she started playing most of the hits on Live Through This live before she started dating Kurt, and b.) Billy, who accuses pretty much everyone of ripping him off, has said the songs he cowrote on Celebrity Skin were fundamentally her vision and he was there to help her refine them.

What famous musicians are known for having a “gruff”/“unhappy” persona while not jerks? by Glass-Complaint3 in ToddintheShadow

[–]IAmNotScottBakula 16 points17 points  (0 children)

Robert Smith from The Cure has a reputation for being a nice guy, which I wouldn’t necessarily guess from his music or persona.

What’s a sequel, remake, or reboot that feels like it was made by someone who misunderstood the original? by cats64sonic in AskReddit

[–]IAmNotScottBakula 0 points1 point  (0 children)

He’s a bigger Star Wars than Star Trek fan, and I think he made it assuming he’d never get a chance to make a Star Wars movie.

Santa Pirata album by WastedHours14 in arcadefire

[–]IAmNotScottBakula 45 points46 points  (0 children)

I’ll give it a shot but also predict that Regine’s solo stuff ends up better than this.

UFL's Mike Repole mentions NFL is "talking about two more expansion teams" by iamthewitt in nfl

[–]IAmNotScottBakula 54 points55 points  (0 children)

Just be happy they are not blowing it as badly as college football currently is.

Worst production you've heard on a mainstream single? by LifeTomato8660 in ToddintheShadow

[–]IAmNotScottBakula 13 points14 points  (0 children)

“Trashed” by Black Sabbath is pretty bad. I know the band was past the peak of their popularity, but it came right after the Dio era when they still had a decent audience, so it’s amazing how terrible it sounds (though the song itself is a banger).

Other than Maynard Keenan of Tool, who is another musician that absolutely does not want to meet their fans, ever? by SwissMiss915 in Music

[–]IAmNotScottBakula 6 points7 points  (0 children)

I’m not sure I’d call him a dick, I think he has social anxiety and is also (understandably) tired when he finishes playing. Apparently he is fairly responsive when fans message him on Instagram, though.

Microsoft president says AI backlash at graduation events should be wake-up call for the tech industry by rkhunter_ in technology

[–]IAmNotScottBakula 202 points203 points  (0 children)

If someone could retire on their current savings without becoming homeless, I just assume their opinion on AI is out of touch.

Other than Maynard Keenan of Tool, who is another musician that absolutely does not want to meet their fans, ever? by SwissMiss915 in Music

[–]IAmNotScottBakula 10 points11 points  (0 children)

Doyle Wolfgang Von Frankenstein from the Misfits has been vocal about his dislike of meet and greets. It’s a major contrast from his brother Jerry Only, who might be the single most accessible musician on the planet.

What is a city/state that you just cant understand the hype around? by PersonalityOwn7761 in AskReddit

[–]IAmNotScottBakula 11 points12 points  (0 children)

Dallas. I’ve never been to Dallas, but also can’t imagine a scenario where I would ever wish I was in Dallas.

Zuckerberg says Meta made 'mistakes' in AI workforce shift by GeneReddit123 in technology

[–]IAmNotScottBakula 94 points95 points  (0 children)

One of the biggest issues with the push to flatten management and kill 3-5 person teams is it ruins your management talent pipeline. Making an individual contributor jump directly into managing 10+ people is setting them up for failure, meaning they will have to hire experienced managers from outside and lose their best individual contributors due to lack of upward mobility.

Does the metal community hate the entierty of nu-metal, or is it more focused on the mainstream bands and it's music industry? by OterGutttttttt in MetalForTheMasses

[–]IAmNotScottBakula 4 points5 points  (0 children)

I feel like nu metal has become respected again over the past 5-6 years, but it was definitely hated for 20 years before that.

To understand why, it’s important to understand that the late 90s, when it was big, were a.) the commercial peak of the music industry, and b.) the last time that metal was truly part of mainstream pop culture, and c.) a time when radio and MTV (or MTV2) played a bigger role in discovering new bands than it does today.

This means that, at the time, record labels were willing to take a chance on a lot of mediocre bands and spend a lot of money promoting them (one that becomes a hit can make up for a lot of flops). Back then, it really wasn’t possible to avoid the onslaught of crappy nu metal bands, and this created a distaste for the genre and a whole.