Skip to main content

Friday is the day we get to appreciate Papa John's greed. Thank you.

I would be extremely hesitant about purchasing food at Papa John's on Papa John's Appreciation Day this coming Friday. The day is celebrating CEO John Schnatter's contemplations of cutting employees' work hours so he doesn't have to provide t
hem with healthcare. No, there is not going to be any risk at all with this...

Employee #1: "What's with all the people here today?"

Employee #2: "They're celebrating the fact our hours will be cut so we don't get healthcare."

Employee #3: "Seriously? Screw that!"

Employee #2: "What are you two doing?"

Employee #1: "We're going to take all the pizzas to the bathroom and add our own special ingredients."

"Better ingredients. Better pizza. Papa John's."





http://blog.al.com/wire/2012/11/papa_vs_obamacare_group_calls.html

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

Boycotting jukeboxes because of TouchTunes

I love music and enjoy hitting the bar(s) over the weekend, so naturally, when the mood strikes me, I've never been coy about playing some songs on the jukebox. This past Thursday, a friend of mine turned 50, so several friends of her's, including myself, all met up to celebrate the occasion. At around 9:30, a friend of mine and I both chipped in $5 to play some songs on the jukebox. Four hours and 231 skips later, we gave up on hearing the songs we had selected, and went home knowing we had just wasted $5. This wasn't the first time such a thing had happened to me (and many others), and due to that, I'll be boycotting jukeboxes. Why? The scam known as TouchTunes. You see, here's how the plot typically breaks down. A person (or group of people) downloads the TouchTunes app on his/her phone, consumes one too many adult beverages, and due to this, has less care for spending extra money to hear the songs of their choosing right NOW. That's the thing with TouchTun...

Face guarding is legal in college football and the NFL

I just wanted to remind fans and announcers especially, that face guarding is legal in both college football and the NFL. It all comes down to contact. So long as a defender doesn't make contact with an intended receiver, he doesn't have to turn around to play the ball. I can't tell you how many times every week I hear announcers talk about face guarding being a penalty. It's not. I even heard one announcer yesterday state, "If the defender doesn't turn around and play the ball, the ref will call pass interference every time." That's simply not true. Courtesy of referee Bill LeMonnier, he says this with regard to the rule at the college level (answered on 8/12/13): "NCAA rules on pass interference require the face guarding to have contact to be a foul. No contact, no foul by NCAA rules." In the NFL rule book, this is written:  "Actions that constitute defensive pass interference include but are not limited to: (a) Contact by a ...