It’s Friday.
You should be happy.
Tell me why.
It’s Friday.
You should be happy.
Tell me why.
NFL super fan, Hans Steiniger, has been attending professional football games in different NFL cities for the past three years in an attempt to see a game in each home stadium, a feat he calls, “The Quest for 31”. Now in his fourth season of NFL travel, Steiniger sits a mere five stadiums away from completing his journey. The remaining “Final Five” are the cities of Denver, New York, New Orleans, Washington, and Baltimore.
What began as personal challenge for the longtime Bills fan from Buffalo, N.Y., quickly became a city-by-city immersive study in the home team experience across the nation. Like an NFL chameleon who adapts to his surroundings, this fan tailgates with locals on gameday, eats traditional local foods, and wears a home team jersey for each game he attends.
Some of you local folks may wonder if he will visit the new Cowboys Stadium. Yup, he’ll attend the Carolina game at the end of September.
I have to admit I’m a bit envious of this man, it would be a total blast to watch a game at every NFL stadium. But I couldn’t go as far as he did wearing a cheesehead and doing whatever he could to root for each home team. But then again, he was mature enough to put things behind him so he could have a true home field experience.
And the guy loves his NFL football, he even proposed to his wife during an NFL game and had an NFL themed wedding. Heck, he even dedicated a website to sports themed weddings: www.sportsthemedweddings.com
That must be love, getting married where the Detroit Lions play.
But I will also admit, this wedding invitation was pretty creative.
Hans is actually a reader of BoN, and you may recall me posting about his quest a while back. Other than our love for the NFL, we are both half-Asian. When he eventually completes his quest for 31, he may just be worthy of my Half-Asian Hall of Fame.
A website dedicated to the “interesting” shoppers of Wal-Mart.
And if you submit your own photo, you have the chance to win a Wal-Mart gift certificate from $25-$100.
Tweet From Above and Tweet From Below (TFA/TFB) let you post anonymous messages on Twitter without creating an account or posting those messages in your own Twitter feed. And why would you want to do that?
Well, we thought of a gazillion reasons, but the most basic is this: You’re a Twitter user, and sometimes you want to respond to something in the Twitterverse without your comments being broadcast to your followers or attached to your name. Standard @replies are okay, but maybe you want to let an obnoxious Twitterer know it without starting a feud. Or maybe you’re a (dis)satisfied customer of one of the umpteen businesses on Twitter and you want to give them feedback without starting a “relationship.” Or maybe you just need to get something off your chest.