![]() |
Just got back from Shanghai, Taipei, and Nanjing. Those supertalls really make me envious. 500 feet max for SD? :((
|
Quote:
Little Italy only keeps stepping up, Manchester Pac Gateway, Harbor Island, Seaport Village all transformative projects. Tons of hotel rooms are coming online, Liberty Station while maybe a bit boring to us who live here by now continues to improve and is a pretty unique place (OC/LA have nothing like it). Balboa Park will be getting the redo which willadd appea. I think Hillcrest and PB need a refresh and to step their game up but overall San Diego continues to get better. The Wine Scene is booming in Ramona we have the Indian Casinos with tons of hotels Tijuana keeps getting better so don't worry bobcat we are holding our own against Smell A and Orange Clownty. :cheers: |
Quote:
SDCC is growing YoY. It would be extremely foolish to even risk losing this event due to the city being unable to expand the CC. Comic-Con is only under contract with SD through 2018. The city better get it's act together, losing comic-con would be a blow to the city. SD could lose some of these other conventions if a competitor builds the next biggest/best thing. Cities either evolve and continue to grow or they get left behind by their competition. SD is a convention/tourism town and should do everything possible to remain a top destination in the US. The climate helps, but that's not enough to keep people coming, there are just too many options. |
Quote:
Most of the people that attend comic con are younger. So they probably spend more like the average person would. Same type of crowd maybe that Disneyland gets on a given day. So yeah, doctors and the like as a group are going to spend more than the average group of tourists. The biggest figure you're missing in that chart that has already been mentioned is media coverage which is free advertising for the city. This type of coverage of comic con extends outside the US too. So how do you place a price on that type of free press? Super Bowls, World Series, olympics, oscars, bowl games or whatever all come with various degrees of advertising for the cities they are held in. Doctors at convention here is something you want but they are dwarfed by comic con when talking about advertising for the city. Hell the auto show here gets more national buzz. You can not ignore media coverage with events like comic con and stick to numbers (which by the way vary some from the above depending on your sources). If you do you are not making a fair comparison. I've seen the numbers cited by officials and there's a reason they all mention the national exposure along with the numbers of events like comic con, all star game, Super Bowl, holiday bowl, etc. It's all part of the package of a event. |
Quote:
It's funny and I can only speak of people I know from outside of California so I'm not suggesting it's universal but it's because San Diego, Orange County and Los Angeles are so close (driving distance) that that synergy is what makes So-Cal so damn popular with people from other states. We have a lot to offer within driving distance from one another. Yes we compete on various levels with the other 2 but I've always viewed So-Cal as this really great area to be in. We can have a lot of fun here with never catching a plane. Just sayin' |
Quote:
|
Quote:
That Pendleton gap always made SD feel world's away from me even though it was so close. Hopefully one day we'll reform our land use regulations to make Japanese style regional train service a viable mode of transit between the two. |
Quote:
|
Quote:
I also hope, hope, hope, one day, our short-sighted Clark County Commissioners will be replaced with far-sighted Millennials, who will put mass transit at the top of their lists, and a stadium at the bottom of the list. |
Quote:
|
That would be so hilarious. They'd retain their rabid fanbase in the Bay Area, their rabid fanbase in Los Angeles, and the salty ex-Chargers fans. The Chargers would become irrelevant.
|
|
Quote:
COMICON is just about the biggest thing SD has in its tool kit. The entertainment world kinda pays all its attention to our lil hamlet for the duration of the convention. We need to ensure it stays in SD and the organizers of the convention need to work on making sure it stays relavent. |
Just listened to Mike Aguirre on the Radio he says the city has a great shot at getting an injunction to block the Chargers move and file an anti trust lawsuit. He is currently working with the City Attorney and a guy who filed suit against the NFL during the last lock out and was essentially successful. He said the Bolts were consistently 21st to 23rd in revenue among the 32 teams.
That isn't bad hey someone has to be in the bottom third not all can be top ten right? Plus he had rent credits, ticket guarantee in past, and free rent at their team facility now. He has had virtually no costs and the team has gone in value from 70 million to 1.5 billion - 2.2bill. So where is the hardship here? There is none at all. We are going to fight this #SDSTRONG :cheers: You can't move our Dolts:haha::notacrook: |
Quote:
|
Most professional sports teams are franchises in this country. As long as they honor their lease agreements and have approval of their leagues, they can move just about anywhere they want. The Chargers covered both of those and a lawsuit like this would be laughed at by the courts.
|
Gotta wonder how long Westfield is going to let Horton Plaza bleed out. They had similar problems with Downtown Plaza in Sacramento, but eventually sold it (and was later demolished to make way for the Kings' new arena).
Horton Plaza — from remarkable vision to troubled reality By Peter Rowe Quote:
|
http://www.cbssports.com/nfl/news/nf...inkId=33624389
Pah, Dean Spanos might just be the worst owner in pro sports. |
Quote:
|
Quote:
|
All times are GMT. The time now is 12:27 PM. |
Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.8.7
Copyright ©2000 - 2023, vBulletin Solutions, Inc.