drgarage1
Not a real doctor. Lives in garage.
It's a really bad movie.Pfffff. It's arguably the funniest line of the movie. Pull your head out of your ass.
It's a really bad movie.Pfffff. It's arguably the funniest line of the movie. Pull your head out of your ass.
Wrong. There are 20+ better lines in that movie.Pfffff. It's arguably the funniest line of the movie. Pull your head out of your ass.
I'll show myself out, thanks
The line you posted is the absolute worst line of the entire movie.Wait is that line supposed to be better?
The line you posted is the absolute worst line of the entire movie.
... I've got branded cricketballs in boxes filled with hay..
Im having a hard time wrapping my head around this. How small of an iron would you need to brand cricket balls? And to be able to brand the balls without doing significant damage to their skinny little legs? Absolutely amazing.
product is released and finds an audience
product sells quickly and has people clamoring for more
product gains in popularity
company realizes that product has potential as a money maker
company makes a lot more and doesn't want to risk getting stuck with product on the shelves
company markets the **** out of said product to bring in new eyeballs
new consumers vastly out-number the early adopters
early adopters get mad that what was once "theirs" is now "popular"
early adopters move on
new consumers swell in numbers rendering the exodus of early adopters moot
product reaches its tipping point
popularity declines
company attempts to calibrate supply and demand to make a profit as no business is in business to lose money
product either disappears or early adopters get nostalgic and return
bottom line: people suck
me included
Chicago receives more Bourbon County than they ever have. It's spread more thin across accounts and more people want it. Then there is the whole Beer Geek per Capita argument I have been making since 2011...lol wut? #newmoney!?!!
How about the fact that it's been jacked up in price considerably and down in availability at about be same rate...
When we were all (for good reason, myself included) assuming after hearing GI would have access to much more resources, that the opposite would be true...
Chicago receives more Bourbon County than they ever have. It's spread more thin across accounts and more people want it. Then there is the whole Beer Geek per Capita argument I have been making since 2011...
The problem with availability is GI's obsession with being in every single market with every product in their portfolio. While crashing GI's Christmas party a couple of years back, I cringed when the DoO celebrated bringing their whole line to all 50 states during his big ra-ra speech knowing they cannot fulfill demand in their home state. Perhaps it's terribly selfish to think this way but I hate the idea of perpetual expansion when your home market is yet to be sated.
But you can grow without thinning the product in established markets.it sucks but this is the way of things
if you ain't growing, you're dying
But you can grow without thinning the product in established markets.
Whatever you don't want, buy for me?see also; Glarus, New
clearly the solution for Chicagolanders (extending out to Tennessee in the east and Minot in the West) is to move somewhere with better stock
like Green Bay
i'll kiddiepooltihar some BCBS for youse on Thanksgiving
I am looking forward to reading the threads about Black Friday in Chicago much more than I am looking forward to actually getting Bourbon County this year.
This is going to be the greatest day in beer history. I'm hoping I'll be sitting by a warm fire in a Vermont farmhouse drinking growlers of HF beer and watching the spectacle unfold on my computer.
But dude, her dad only drinks BMC.while you wonder if your girlfriend is getting banged by some old flame in the backseat of a Buick outside the town's most popular bar.
If you had half a brain in your head, you'd throw the ******* computer in the fire and just enjoy your surroundings and your beer.This is going to be the greatest day in beer history. I'm hoping I'll be sitting by a warm fire in a Vermont farmhouse drinking growlers of HF beer and watching the spectacle unfold on my computer.