

Satire doesn’t have to be “funny”. I think you’re running into the rigidity of your expectations.
Satire doesn’t have to be “funny”. I think you’re running into the rigidity of your expectations.
So you didn’t get it. That’s fine. It’s a satire of southern megachurches, and how they are continuing the same con and the confederacy.
Given there was only one writer, and he knew nothing about computing other than how to turn one on, nope.
He doubled down exponentially because he can’t be wrong.
He had one casino that was actually doing ok. He was so happy with it that he opened another one down the street….
Yes, a widespread nickname…
Soccer is short for Association Football. If you really want to fixate on club names for some reason, you can take in Wrexham AFC, AFC Bournemouth, AFC Wimbledon, Barrow AFC, but I don’t see the relevance myself.
I don’t really get your point. You’re expecting a nickname to make it to the club’s formal name?
Found a PDF of a 2014 study by Stefan Szymanski at the University of Michigan. Compares Soccer/Football use in The Times, NY Times, British football bibliography, Guardian, Independent and Time Magazine.
As the close relative of a football journalist, I spent my early life surrounded by historical books, journals, fanzines and programmes from around 1900 to the 2000s. Strikingly, pre-1970s, soccer and football were wholly interchangeable in every social grouping, every purpose, every outlet. Dockers down the pub would talk about footy, football, or soccer as if it meant the same thing. It is only with the xenophobia of the 70s that it became an “American” word and a naughty thing to say in certain company.
Soccer was a widespread term for it among all classes up until the mid-late 1970s, with books, magazines, newspaper columns, and so on using the term interchangeably with football. There appears to have been a switch to actively hating on the term, and it coincides with the rise of the hooligan in the 60s and 70s, and general xenophobia as demonstrated by the rise of the far right. It is at this point that “soccer” becomes a filthy American term among a certain type of “fan”.
The US doesn’t use imperial measures. It uses US customary measures which often have the same names but are significantly different.
Like they said, Americans lol.
So what’s Portugal? Narnia?
It’s a campaign by the News Media Association, a trade body representing the publishers of many national and local papers and news sites.
Japan’s copyright laws are basically the same as everyone else.