I'd love to think there are rich people out there willing to fund 50 small startups thinking that if one of them
becomes the next google, then they've recouped all that lost money and then some.
But from what I understand, rich people didn't get there being loose and carefree about their money,
like "I'll throw a million bucks at this even though it's a long shot."
And nothing in pool EVER blew up like internet startups.
There is no google or facebook equivalent in pool. One great success in pool might at best erase
half of one failure. It won't recoup the cost of 50 train wrecks.
If I were an investor I'd keep away or treat the money as a flat out donation with no chance of getting it back.
And if I were starting something I'd start extremely small and not try to jump straight from rough idea to
"new national cue sport playing on TV with custom built arena and 30+ pros". Seems to me they
skipped a lot of rungs on the ladder.
...and what has the APA done for Professional Pool as of lately?
And nothing in pool EVER blew up like internet startups.
There is no google or facebook equivalent in pool. One great success in pool might at best erase
half of one failure. It won't recoup the cost of 50 train wrecks.
If I were an investor I'd keep away or treat the money as a flat out donation with no chance of getting it back.
And if I were starting something I'd start extremely small and not try to jump straight from rough idea to
"new national cue sport playing on TV with custom built arena and 30+ pros". Seems to me they
skipped a lot of rungs on the ladder.
All I know for sure is there a bunch of players in Vegas who haven't been paid.Actually that is EXACTLY what Venture Capitalists and Angel Investors do. They fund dozens and dozens of startups that they feel has potential because the FACT is that one Google, one Facebook, one YouTube, etc....pays back such HUGE dividends that it's worth it to fund hundreds of startups.
They don't fund many train wrecks and often along with their money comes their management teams.
At this point almost nobody knows what the deal with Bonus Ball is. That's a fact. Not Justin, Mark, or Jay has the real inside scoop on BB's finances. Sure they have buddies on the teams, sure they are closer to the action, but I'd stake my life that they don't know all the innermost details of Larry Chiborak's networking outside the industry.
All we know at the moment is that in two weeks they will resume the season. So, let's see if that happens. At this point the facilities are built and the show will go on.
All I know for sure is there a bunch of players in Vegas who haven't been paid.
Whatever his plan is he couldn't meet payroll for a month.
Thats what I know.
Actually that is EXACTLY what Venture Capitalists and Angel Investors do. They fund dozens and dozens of startups that they feel has potential because the FACT is that one Google, one Facebook, one YouTube, etc....pays back such HUGE dividends that it's worth it to fund hundreds of startups.
They don't fund many train wrecks and often along with their money comes their management teams.
FATBOY did you get my e-mail? jim
he couldn't meet payroll for a month
And that is very telling.
All I know for sure is there a bunch of players in Vegas who haven't been paid.
Whatever his plan is he couldn't meet payroll for a month.
Thats what I know.
Yup! Speculation is what makes forum life more interesting.Yep that's what we all know. And from that we go on the rollercoaster of speculations.
I'm not saying they don't exist, what I'm saying is, they can't exist in the pool world...
because nothing in pool has the potential to explode on a facebook-like scale.
Zuckerberg turned his time + cheap servers into (conservatively) $40 billion.
In the pool world, nothing can return your investment money 1000-fold.
You're way ahead of the curve if you break even.
"Let's take a gamble on this huge underdog" is fine in a volatile field where there are numerous examples
of tiny startups exploding to multimillion dollar companies. The pool world doesn't have those stories.
It makes me kinda wish they'd dumped that money into a safer, more boring bet...
an 8b or 10b league. Bonus ball was always a very long shot.
Bonus Ball gets picked up by a cable channel who agrees to buy 40 weeks. it gets popular and people across America start playing.
If I had been drinking anything, I would've spit it up laughing right there. :thumbup2:
Well if you had asked me if people would ever watch other people play cards I would have laughed as well.
I mean let's face it there is a lot of stupider crap on TV than bonus ball. Stuff that probably costs a lot more to produce.