Back in college, I was in a business fraternity. I never joined a regular fraternity because I wasn’t a meathead loser who wanted to spend money to hang out with other meathead losers and act like hazing was super fun and cool. And before the “regular” frat guys chime in with how they’re not all like that and your frat was full of chill dudes - I get it. There are exceptions to every rule. By and large, at my university, frat guys lived up to every single stereotype.
Back to the business fraternity. It was co-ed, had a great blend of social and professional gatherings, and is probably the only reason I ever got my shit together. It’s also the reason I ended up working for a massive corporation putting me on the brink of a full-blown meltdown with a side of severe depression. You win some, you lose some.
Once a semester, our business fraternity would have these “evaluation” nights. I forget the actual term we used for them, but here’s the gist: the executive committee, which was about 20 members, would get together and discuss each of the other committee member’s flaws. It was framed as an event where we could receive honest feedback from our peers in a professional manner. An effort to help each member grow, but also learn how to deliver uncomfortable messages to others.
You can imagine how this went. Every member loved it the night of and left the meeting feeling energized. But it turns out that when you point out the flaws of your college-aged peers, and let them stew on it for a few days, there’s a chance those conversations come back around during your weekend festivities. Things that were “constructive criticism” on Wednesday night had now been twisted into horrible insults in the mind of a hammered college student on Saturday night. Needless to say, the constructive criticisms were normally revisited during peak drunk times and it led to some must-see verbal abuse. Watching two female members scream at each other over who “didn’t dress professionally more often” was A+ entertainment.
And what did we all do during our weekly meeting the following Wednesday? In true college-kid fashion, we acted as if nothing happened and none of us remembered the chaos.
Why we ever thought it was a good idea to have those evaluation nights is beyond me. I get the point, but at that age and in that setting, it was just a bunch of mindless bullshit that could only cause trouble. However, the real reason those weekend fights happened was that both parties knew there was a hint of truth to what was said during the evaluation night. Sometimes it was more than a hint of truth and a person was flat out being told something that sucked about them. It made you acknowledge parts of yourself you choose to ignore and/or vehemently disagree with.
So what have I done? I strapped into the blog chair and got to work on Gambling Twitter superlatives (huge shoutout to @BackdoorBeard for the idea, all credit to him) that have a hint of truth to them. Or, as can sometimes be the case, maybe more than just a hint of truth to the award. Just remember to behave like a college-kid and act as if none of this ever happened by next week.
Before I launch into all of my marks, I gotta B Rabbit this shit. If I’m going to rip on all of you, I better point out all of my terrible, awkward, annoying flaws before they get thrown back in my face. Without further ado, here are Ferris’ Superlatives:
Most likely to command zero respect
Flup recently wrote an awesome blog with one of the key points being to take on more risk. Reach out to people who could help you further an idea, help you make money, or just strike up a casual friendship. If they don’t respond or never follow-up, who cares? You’re in the same spot you were before you took a chance. And we hear variations of this same story, over and over. Someone reached out to someone way more well-known than themselves, they had a back and forth, and now they’re good buddies accomplishing all sorts of amazing things.
My experiences are exactly like that, except the complete opposite. I cannot tell you how many times I’ve reached out to someone with what I thought was an interesting topic, an opportunity for us both to financially benefit, or just a general question, and not get any type of response. Not a “hey, busy now I’ll follow up later” or a “that’s super interesting, let me look into it.” Straight up zero responses more times than I can count. And if I do get a response, it’s normally a half-assed one, 2 weeks later, and acting as if I just sent my message two minutes ago.
At some point I have to come to terms with the fact that I don’t command the respect I wish I did. My mom was way off - I am not a very important person. I really do find it baffling when I point-blank tell someone I’m willing to pay them considerable money to help with something and they don’t so much as give me a ‘thumbs down’ emoji or some other backhanded insult/excuse. I don’t know if it’s a numbers game and the stories we hear are from people who did this hundreds of times before it worked, or if I really do suck that much. I’m guessing it’s the latter.
Most likely to reach out to a slimy tout asking about getting down on a sport I bet because he sells packages of the same sport and not get a response.
This is what we in the blog biz call ‘building on a previous topic.’ Not only am I so desperate to get more money down for my partners and I on the sport we bet that I reached out to a random Twitter user, I also got cold-shouldered by a fuckin tout. A long, depressing look in the mirror is in my future.
Most likely to be driven out of sports betting in a few years.
I am not good enough to keep up, plain and simple. The market we dominate is drying up. I don’t have enough time to dive into other sports, and even if I did, I’m not smart enough to compete with you, the person reading this. What I’ve come to realize recently is that I’m smart enough to grasp the intricacies of advanced betting when they’re explained on a pod, but the disconnect lies in coming up with those ideas completely on my own. I fully comprehend what the guests or hosts are saying, but there’s just no possible way I would have been able to develop that edge on my own. That gap between understanding the edge and actually creating the edge is probably the most difficult part of sports betting to explain to a normie, or even a somewhat advanced bettor.
Prediction Markets are pretty established and probably going to keep growing, and I’m 99.99% sure people are getting super fucking rich off the things, yet I’m sitting here with a thumb up my ass trying to find ways to get a little extra money down on AAA baseball.
I refuse to believe I have zero value, but it’s trending that way. I have a million legal accounts I can still get a hold of as I’ve never truly tapped into my network of family and friends. Many, many legal accounts are at my disposal, but “passing them off” or having someone utilize you for the accounts never really caught on quite like PPH. Probably because everyone realizes just how easy it is to obtain the legal accounts themselves. So even with that as an option, I’m not sure I’ll be able to hang around for the long-term. There will always be the low-hanging fruit to pick off, like using the BetStamp Pro props screen, and money is money, but even that stuff will dry up soon enough.
As my betting abilities deteriorate, like an aging, mediocre-at-best-at-my-peak baseball player, I still want to find a way to cling to the sports betting space. I think that being a part-timer and having a full-time career that I love helps keep it a reality. I’m glad I got in when I did, before all the riff-raff and slop of the Spaces era. I believe the timing of my entry helped me learn the right way to do things. Sadly, I’m not sure my knowledge and previous experience will let me continue to earn like I used to. As a wise man once said, “The world went and got itself in a big damn hurry,” so I’ll enjoy it while I can.
Alright, I’ve shit on myself enough, time to get to the rest of you jabronis. Before I dive in, I need to give a caveat: I will not be mentioning any of that Spaces era slop below. In my mind, they are not, and never will be, part of Gambling Twitter. They don’t do things the right way. They can’t keep a thought in their head for more than 4 seconds, which makes sparring with them boring. Zero creativity in any of them. And don’t get me started on their inability to take a joke. We don’t need to acknowledge that part of the world unless we treat it as if we’re visiting the zoo. We can stop by and point at the weird little animals, maybe get a couple of laughs at their expense, but then we’re on our way.
2026 Superlatives
Most likely to have these jokes go over his head: China
I love China. The person, the food, the country. Actually, I'm not sure about the country. I’ve never been, but I would like to see that Wall.
China is an awesome dude who has mostly a no-nonsense approach when it comes to betting. Then you start going through the Twitter feed and it's a crisis of character. He wants to be a troll, but doesn't quite know how to troll properly, but thinks he's crushing it, and it all comes off as this weird, jumbled mess. He's keeping up with shticks that go on for so long it's hard to confuse them for trolling. Then he gets into these back and forth interactions with people until they try to insult him, at which point he retweets them in what I think he believes is a "gotcha!" moment. Every time I see him retweet someone insulting him:
Mostly, it just ends up coming off like a big time boomer who doesn't quite get how social media works. Like when Spanky would read questions from porn bots in his old Q&A's - you just gotta let them figure it out on their own.
Most likely to physically jerk each other off at the next Bet Bash: Flup, Isaac Rose-Berman, Mr. Peanut Bettor
(Circle formation, dominant arm extended, elbow a little bent to get full range of motion)
IRB: LOLZ no Flup, you’re a losing bettor!!!
Flup: LMFAO no, Mr. PB is a losing bettor!!
Mr. PB: ROFL no, you’re both losing bettors!!
(3 way cum)
Get it guys!? They’re all winning bettors but they joke at each other’s expense about being a losing bettor! It’s just guy stuff. Bustin’ each other’s balls ALL the time.
Most likely to work for (own part of?) a company that actually exists, but no one knows exists: AndyNotSafeForWork
The fuck is BetSperts? I think it’s been around for a while now (maybe even pre-covid) and I couldn’t tell you 1 thing they do. Is it a betting media platform like The Action Network? Do they sell pick packages? Every once in a while Andy tweets a link mentioning them and it throws me off every time. Like hey, yeah, that’s still a thing. Good for Andy!
Most likely to care way too much about what people think even though they’ve proven themselves to be one of the most impressive and influential people in sports betting: Pizzola
As the kids say, let me get the glazing out of the way first. Rob is my favorite person in sports betting. His style, his demeanor, and his thought process mirrors what I would hope for myself had I accomplished what he did/is doing in sports betting. Him and JFBS asking me to do an episode of Circles Off years back (fun fact: Doc Bettor got both parties hooked up, how about that name? He was always so nice, heard things didn’t go great) is one of the biggest highlights of my sad, soon to be finished betting career. Him and Mike Craig are the two people I will glaze for eternity, regardless of what they do in the upcoming years, because of my experiences with them.
With that said, I find it mind boggling that the Pizza man continues to care so much about Twitter algorithms, viewership numbers, and playing by rules other than his own. Actually, let me rephrase: I completely understand why he cares so much about those things. He is still in the process of building a sports betting media company and has to worry about feeding the kids (we’ll get to them later). I guess what I’ll twist this into is this: I don’t understand how the best NHL bettor of all time (I’m stating this as fact, no fucking clue if it’s even remotely true) has put himself in a position to care about making threads on Twitter because they do better numbers than a regular post.

And I know these measurements don’t force him to tweet things he doesn’t believe in, but when we see what’s said in that tweet, it does make the content feel slightly performative. The really valuable message (how stupid bet splits are) gets watered down because it feels like there should be a link at the end of that thread directing you to a 7-day free trial of a sports betting product. I don’t know, it seems like someone who has had Rob’s amount of success should never be concerned with half of the things he worries about when it comes to public perception.
Most likely to have the most overrated episode of Circles Off: Diggs
Go back and listen. Go ahead, this blog isn’t going anywhere (
sorry Brandon and Blake you fuckin losers). People put this pod on their Mount Rushmore and I’m so confused. Don’t get me wrong, it’s good to hear someone who is considered a massively successful sports bettor speak on any platform. But he didn’t say anything groundbreaking. Didn’t give away some awesome edge. He had a run of the mill podcast episode, sprinkled in a coughing fit, and got exposed as a mostly fake Taylor Swift diehard. Yeah I’m going there.
Listen, true Taylor Swift fans are deranged. I would know, I live with one. Her and her friends speak about the concerts they've attended as if the performance transcended space and time. An out-of-body-expereience which can't be properly put into words. They speak about their life almost in terms of Before Taylor (BT) and After Taylor (AT). It's like the world’s worst, most useless cult. But when given the chance to speak about your fandom, it came off more as you felt embarrassed than proud. Some half-ass story about going to her concert by yourself (wut?) and asking a girl if she was 18 (actually kind of a funny joke if you listen back) doesn't cut it. I'm sorry, but the lore of your fandom is gone.
And Diggs, before you start responding to my posts with one word “idiot” responses, please consider that Circles Off production accidentally doxxed you in the YouTube video. I reached out and told them to take it down before anyone noticed. I’ll let you be the judge as to how much of a hero I am.
Most likely to have their Twitter account suspended because they went off the deep end regarding a political issue: Kirk Evans
You know what gets a bad rap? The ‘For You’ tab on Twitter. People bitch and moan about how it’s a cesspool filled with the most vile shit imaginable. And you know what? They’re mostly right! You know what the simple solution is? Don’t slide over to the ‘For You’ tab! “Uhhhhh sometimes I don’t realize I’m on it when I open the app.” Well, you’re a dumb motherfucker, aren’t you?
The For You tab is where you go to spice things up. Find some crazies out there that are even more batshit crazy than the normal crazies you follow. It’s where I stumble on most of Kirk’s political takes. Not once in the history of the world has someone changed their mind on a political issue because of what another user said. Kirk is going to buck that trend and change the minds of both Red and Blue voters with his views on political matters.
Is it weird that a Canadian citizen frequently attempts to insert himself into American politics? Yes! Is it weird he has such a passion for our policies but has zero vote in how our country is run? Also yes! Do I need to see Kirk and Spreadapedia in a room firing political takes at one another? Absolutely!
The only downside of going down the Kirk political take hole is the algorithm (Rob!) automatically thinks you want more of that. I mean, I followed a few of his longer threads just to see how nuts it would get a couple of times and now Twitter thinks I need more of that. One click shouldn’t define a person’s entire social media experience!
Most likely to tweet about a women’s sporting event because they have to prove to everyone they like women’s sports more than men’s sports: Alex Bartlett, barely edges Kirk
It will be a random night in February and you come across a tweet like “Matilda Hornsberry just doesn’t contribute enough to this offense, they’ve gotta cut down her minutes.” This information cannot mean anything to more than like 4 people on the planet at that exact moment. Matilda’s own parents are probably out to a nice dinner and will catch a replay of the game later cause it’s WCBB.
Listen, we all get it. You guys are women’s sports enthusiasts. You’re different because you don’t tweet about NFL or NBA games like the other 99.99% of the world. But can we all agree on something? It’s weird. It just is. These hipster fans can spin it however they’d like, but it’s flat out weird to enjoy and/or watch women’s sports more than men’s sports as a male.
Most likely to use the RT button too often when it used to stand for something: Shipper
Be honest, you’ve gotten loose with the RT’s Shipper. It has to follow a cadence. It has to come naturally, reserved for tweets you come across in the wild. You cannot get into arguments with people, and when you don’t agree with what they’ve said, you hit the RT. It feels cheap and you know it. People gotta earn the RT.
Most likely to be discussing a topic that needs a break for just a few damn months out of the year: Knish and Powers

It’s March 19. March Madness is in full swing. What do the people need? A little Week 0/1 betting preview! Hell yeah, college football is back! 6 months before the season kicks off baby!
Most likely to fill the breaking news gap with the departure of Russini: Joey Tunes
Most likely to create content that pokes fun at other’s betting advice, or pointing out scammers, when their own programming has no problem platforming people who have no business discussing sports betting because it could lead to more viewers: The Hammer Network
From the people who love to bring you this:
But have no problem giving their viewers this:
It’s hard to be the moral arbiter when you say one thing and do another. All in the name of views!
Most likely to not write anymore even though I think they should write a lot more: Pads and Canzhi
Both have written short blogs in the past regarding their betting careers and things that they’re focused on. I found their writing to be captivating and would like to see it more often.
Most likely to rub up too closely on a female at bet bash causing her to make a scene while he retorts "it was all a big misunderstanding:” GRP
When it was not a big misunderstanding at all. In fact, it was probably a very small misunderstanding. But don’t worry about GRP, Benson will pretend to scold him, but in reality, protect him at all costs. Surely this won’t backfire with all of GRP’s views of the world and women.
Most likely to still have their job because they got in early: TakesByJ
About a month ago, over my Spring Break, I made the wise decision to get a vasectomy. Did it during March Madness like the doctors advise you to. So I’m at home in the middle of the day and figured I would tune into Circle Back live. I don’t typically listen to the show, but I’m sitting there icing my balls. What do I have better to do?
The topic of conversation is the ridiculous sports betting piece from the pantry guy posted in The Atlantic. Each host is making solid points, keeping the conversation going. It gets over to TakesByJ:
“Um, I didn’t actually read the story.”
I might be misinterpreting this look, but Rob’s facial expression was somewhere in the vicinity of “why the fuck are you sitting here?” J then made some joke about how it would have taken him hours to read the article and that’s when I decided it would be more beneficial to log off and focus on my balls.
Most likely to have gotten a cool sounding job but not quite sure what they do: Isaac Rose-Berman

Most likely to be besties but never actually meet in person over the course of their lives: Abnormally Distributed and Cheeseburger
Just two guys that love chopping it up and replying to each other. Live look at Strait Vibin seeing Cheese got to be part of the joke:
Most likely to never receive the validation they are so desperately looking for from the sharp sports betting community: RAS
Dear Warden! You were right. Salvation lay within" - Andy Dufresne
Most likely to be upset a blog is being written about sports betting: Broner
Literally the living embodiment of the meme. It is so weird to be intricately involved in a space you would kill off if given the chance.
Most likely to have treated a betting partner like shit and no one is really talking about the story but it should actually be talked about because it’s the kind of sharp gambling gossip people would find entertaining: Rufus
Let’s get it out there, fellas. No deleted tweets this time.
Most likely to not be able to handle a Twitter beef: Mr. Peanut Bettor
Most likely to not be able to live up to his reputation, but also probably will live up to it because he’s super intelligent (but an actuarial nerd): SportsProjections
Sometimes I wish I put my takes out there more often. I had SP as someone who was about to dominate betting after listening to him for like 30 minutes. Then Shipper comes along with his fancy ranking tiers and steals my non-existent thunder.

That last tier makes me giggle, every single time. Also, Shipper giving the nickname “Missionary Matt Landes” is Chris Berman-esque.
It’s crystal clear SportsProjections knows his shit. He also understands how to navigate topics he isn’t knowledgeable enough to speak about with his usual authority, which is such a key skill to possess. He’s not super active on the Twitter, but he would be my pick for 2026 breakout if he stretched out those thumbs a little more often. Let’s get the man to Bet Bash so the shroud of mysteriousness can be completely crushed and we all find out he’s just a regular loser like the rest of us.
One thing I want noted - the actuary nerds are getting a little too confident. We need to take them down a peg before they form an awkward, wheezing, mathematically efficient army. Quick story…between my junior and senior year of college, I landed an internship down in Louisville with Humana. On the first day of our internship, we were taken through all the usual bullshit. We talked about their corporate policies, their mission, what the company hoped to accomplish, yada, yada yada. Our intern class was fairly big; about 30 of us regulars with an additional 8 actuarial interns in the same room. The actuarial interns were…different. So different, that when the two groups split apart the next day, the lady in charge of us regulars got in front of the room to state: “To be clear, you will not be working with the actuarial interns. Their program is COMPLETELY different from our program. You will probably not see them this summer.”
Most likely to take it way too seriously if his name is mentioned in this blog: Porter
Most likely to change their Twitter handle after years of questionable behavior and we’re all going to act like it’s completely normal: PlaymakerDave/FadeUsDave
So we’re doing this, huh? We’re all going along with it? Alrighty then.
Most likely to have their Risk Takers Pod pulled down in the next couple of months: CSPTrading
Holy shit, this guy suuuuuuccckks. How did he pull it together for a 2 hour pod?

I didn’t know much, if anything, about this guy before the pod. So I give him a follow afterwards and the tweets above are par for the course. He’s a complete psychopath, and not in a fun way. I wonder if they’ll sneakily pull the episode down or announce that they’re pulling it down?
Most likely to take it way too seriously if his name isn’t mentioned in this blog: Porter
Most likely to hate my guts and I hate his guts: Storm
I urge everyone to have a forever beef in their life.
Most likely to have been on my Twitter feed way too often before he became a big dick over at NoVig: Flup
I guess we gotta thank Henry and the crew over at NoVig for taking him in. There was a time where Flup was recording his own pod, (I think) hosting Circles Off, appearing on Circle Back, and replying to every sports betting tweet. Oh, and I think he was in a Spaces every night of the week, but I can’t state that as fact as I was never a cringeworthy loser thinking those were the future of gambling twitter.
Thank you, Henry. And the whole NoVig crew (this praise will be short-lived). Flup now seems busy enough to only be able to write an occasional blog.
Most likely to have unfollowed me around the time OSU beat the brakes off UM and I unfollowed back way harder than he unfollowed me: Knish
Hey Joey - be a real man. When your team loses in embarrassing fashion, then guards the middle of the field harder than they guarded anything else that day, just don’t log into twitter for like 3 weeks.
Most likely to have changed your opinion on them: Jacob and Gjeooff
This might be the take readers disagree with most, but I feel like these two have earned some praise. I don’t know if his opinions are ever actually great, but I respect any man willing to enter the arena, and that’s what Geoff is willing to do. He doesn’t back down on Twitter, even when he’s in the thick of it. On the few clips Circle Back will put out, it seems like he doesn’t give two shits about who he’s making fun of or scared to go at one of the bigger dicks in the space. I would guess he still talks too much, but it’s better than being a vanilla, nod your head in agreement type guy.
Same goes for Jacob. In the few clips I’ve seen, he’s come into his own and is willing to put out content he works hard on. I do need more confidence from the guy. Confidence Jacob, confidence! I’ll be honest - Jacob will always get a pass from me because I get the impression he can’t stand Zy the Clown at the same levels I do. And not in the “haha funny little goof” way it’s the “this guy actually fucking sucks” way.
Most likely to have killed someone while driving their car, but still went to a World Series viewing party and also still drives said car:
Most likely to start putting out the same division by division NFL previews they’ve done for the last 12 years: Deep Dive Podcast
Guys, the season starts in like 6 months and I don’t know how the AFC South is shaking out. I’ve got CFB Week 0/1 lines being analyzed in March. What’s your excuse?
Most likely to being a grumpy old man who calls the cops on teenagers that look a little too suspicious: Captain Jack
I tried to give the guy a chance. I really did. He’s just an angry, old, wet fart. I DM’d him and told him he’s an asshole after this interaction:

Sadly, I continued my streak of not getting responses. Weird.
And here’s the thing (which I also told him along with the whole ‘asshole’ phrasing): people (a person) love to talk about how he’s such a nice guy behind the scenes. How he takes the time to answer every DM and walks novice bettors through stuff, time and time again. And yet, when all you see of a person is them making bullshit assumptions and playing the same 4 hits, over and over, you start to really question whether this ‘behind the scenes nice guy persona’ ever actually existed. Or if it’s just his buddy from Unabated pushing that message.
Most likely to be thinking about prediction markets or golf, and literally nothing else, while reading this blog: GP
“On this week’s Risk Takers podcast, we’re going to switch it up and talk about betting from a prediction market standpoint. We will also discuss golf, the Masters, and future golf events.”
Most likely to Tweet ONLY when it’s at Rufus: Logan
Seriously, he has to have notifications on for Rufus’ tweets, right? The man has disappeared (did Kamala kill Logan?) from the Twittersphere, but if you want to draw him out, get Rufus to say something.
I went into his Twitter feed to prove this point and all his tweets are completely gone, except for 1. Which actually couldn’t have worked out better:

Most likely to be the worst public speaker we’ve ever seen for a person who sold their company for 9 figures: Alex Monahan

So a buddy sent me a link to the video above. I’ve never taken in his content, but I immediately recognized him as the OddsJam guy. I gave it about 8 minutes before I physically couldn’t handle it anymore.
Seeing as how I have never been, and will never be, in a position to sell my company for 9 figures, I don’t know how the process works. But I’m assuming you hire people who can pitch the product to the buyer and get them jacked up to spend millions and millions of dollars. Because there is NO fucking way the guy from the video above gets in front of a room filled with potential investors/buyers and it results in a sale of OddsJam for 9 figures. If that guy is in front of those people to pitch his product, it sells for $40 bucks and half a ham sandwich.
Most likely to have checked out of the sports betting world: Spanky
It’s actually an interesting thing of note. Spanky has, without a doubt, become far less active in sports betting. Rather than fill air time with awful guests and boring stories, Spanky hung up his podcasting mic, which I think we can all respect. Leave the game before the game passes you by.
However, the man has to continue to sell a Bet Bash event that I’m sure costs a hell of a lot of money. I could be completely mistaken, but I’m not sure the event is strong enough to stand on its own without his consistent marketing and reminders. Actually, without as much marketing effort behind the event, there’s less of a chance of the new era trash showing up, so overall, net positive.
I miss the Spank man mixing things up. He was one of the first personalities I gravitated towards when I started taking this stuff seriously.
Idea before it gets stolen some day: there should be a roast of Spanky at a future Bet Bash event. I would be more excited to see all the strays audience members caught, but a Spanky roast would be the perfect vessel to unload on gambling twitter in person.
Most likely to be reading this and I’m hoping for their approval like a son looking to his unaffectionate father giving him a seldom seen smile: Hagrin
Maybe we can go out back and play catch later? Please?
Most likely to have highlighted all the NFL teams in which there was a coaching change, QB change, or offensive coordinator change: Jared Smith
Most likely to not win betting on the NFL: Jared Smith
Most likely to stop caring about whether they do things the right way in an effort to grow their brand: Henry and Jacob from NoVig
Over the years, we’ve seen companies come around and we think to ourselves “Oh hey, this is cool. They’re doing things differently than anyone else, maybe they’ll carve out a unique path in this industry.” Then those same companies hit us with:

Again, I don’t run a super successful company and probably never will. But is this really the only playbook available in the industry? I know we don’t have to reinvent the wheel, but this is it? Has the sports betting world truly run out of any other possible ideas?
I’m sure they’ll make the argument they’re getting exactly what they want from this move. Hell, this part of my blog is proving their point. But seriously guys, with all that funding you’ve recently raised, this was the most creative thing you could purchase?
NoVig's still awesome and they'll probably build something that lasts. But if this is the only bullet sports betting companies have in the chamber, maybe getting washed out won't be so bad.
Most likely to be the most incredibly boring podcast guest imaginable: BeagleBets
Seemingly, he has a relatively high approval rating from other gambling twitter members, so there’s no point in me going on here. But you’ve heard the pods. You know what I’m talking about. You can send me the usual DM’s copy and pasting part of the blog and telling me you agree.
Most likely to continue podcasting 35 years after being on a blackjack team even though there’s no demand for it: Jeff Ma
I blame this on the soft-ass pit bosses of the 90’s. If they would have gone just a little too far in a back room there’s a chance we would know what Rufus’ voice sounds like on a pod. Just kidding, we’re all very aware of what Rufus’ voice sounds like.
Most likely to catch some shrapnel after publishing this blog: Me
Until next time.
Ferris
@FerrisB_86