The Essential Games of the Chicago Cubs DVD Contest

In Site by Obstructed View Staff77 Comments

This past season we used the slogan "This is a year" for the Cubs. Since the season is ending the new one unofficially beginning when this one does end, so it's time for a new slogan. We're going to let you guys come up with it.

The winners will receive The Essential Games of the Chicago Cubs on DVD compliments of A+E Networks Home Entertainment/MLB Productions. Product description below:

Product Description & Features

  • by A&E Video
    • 4 Pack Set
    • The Chicago Cubs have a rich history in Major League Baseball and is one of the two oldest active teams in "Major North American Sports"
    • Chock full of historic moments, players, and milestones in the club's history, ESSENTIAL GAMES OF THE CHICAGO CUBS is a must have collectible for not only Cubbies fans, but baseball fans everywhere

MLB.com Exclusive Release Date: 07/17/12

The four fan-favorite games include:

  • July 12, 1969 , Wrigley Field, Cubs beat Phillies 7-4, classic Cubs lineup
  • 6/23/1984 – Ryne Sandberg
  • 5/6/1998 – Kerry Wood 20 Ks
  • 9/20/2008 – Division Clincher

We've generally ran the contests right here on the blog, but this time we'll be doing it on our Facebook page.

To enter the contest, leave a slogan on our contest page at Facebook (mobile users can visit this page). You must enter by Sunday. And you can enter more than once, but only one entry per person advances to the final 5.

The four of us who started this blog will select the final 5 slogans and then we'll have you guys vote for them, also on Facebook. The winner will receieve the DVD set linked above along with an Obstructed View t-shirt. The other 4 we select will receive the DVD set.

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  1. Author
    Mucker

    I’m trying to access the link via my phone but when it gets into facebook, it says page not found. Any ideas? It’s an android phone.

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  2. Author
    Mucker

    I went to the OV page on facebook but I don’t see the contest. I see the thread that tells you about the contest but when I click on it, it just brings me back here. Do I just comment on the page or is there an actual link to click on facebook?

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  3. Author
    mb21

    We’d prefer you leave your entry on Facebook in order to enter. It’s just easier for us that way. If for some reason you can’t (give AC some time to look into it), send an email to ov [at] obstructedview [dot] net with subject Slogan Contest.

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  4. Author
    josh

    All right, well, I submitted 2, like a boss:

    “Facilitating events that approximate baseball [or something, I already forgot]”
    “Relive the agony”

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  5. Author
    SVB

    @ mb21:
    I imagine many readers of OV are setting up their own meth labs while wearing dirty clothes made of animal skins and plotting to kill their cousins (or whatever GoT is about–I couldn’t really tell on the one episode I watched last spring).

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  6. Author
    mikeakaleroy

    @ SVB:
    If setting up meth labs is cool, consider me Miles Davis.

    Two entries deep too:

    Something about piss warm Old Style and “Our Ace is a 28 year old with a mullet!”

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  7. Author
    SVB

    I thought I’d repost this comment I made to GBTS and Josh regarding Strasburg’s innings limit, since it was at the end of two threads ago and no one reads two-thread-old comments…

    I thought the numbers were pretty interesting. Maybe you will too. Or just ignore them like you did the first time! (dying laughing)

    @ josh:
    @ GBTS:

    Here’s an interesting stat that was in SI (july 30 issue on Dylan Bundy):

    From 1981-2000 there were 102 high school pitchers selected in the first round of the draft…

    Those who threw more than 150 innings in their first full year were much more likely to reach the majors (78%) than those who didn’t (51%) and more than twce as likely to reach 20 career wins (57%) than those who didn’t (27%).

    20 career wins is a pretty low bar, but anyway. These include guys who threw more than 150 were guys like Maddux, Al Leiter, Tom Glavine, etc.

    SI quotes folks suggesting that the breakdowns of Wood and Prior made everyone limit innings. Since 2002 the only HS 1st rounder with more than 150 innings in year 1 was…..drum roll…..Chris Volstad. ((dying laughing))

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  8. Author
    Mucker

    I sent two so far:

    2013 Chicago Cubs: Who gives a shit?
    Wait til next century!!

    I’ve probably got another two or three in me.

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  9. Author
    josh

    So, how accurate is the depiction of making meth, near as any of you chem nerds can tell? Are they representing the process fairly accurately, to increase realism, or just making up some bullshit so they can’t get blamed? Like is it really possible to make meth from whatever they are making it from?

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  10. Author
    SVB

    Yes, as are a lot of the other innings limits placed on young pitchers. But now back to work, so if this spurs more discussion, I’ll get back to it this evening, probably when the Cubs are down by about 3 to Houston.

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  11. Author
    Rice Cube

    @ SVB:
    Why 20 wins? That does seem low. Plus it seems misleading. Like, how many of the pitchers in that study who reached the 20-win cutoff (but barely) won no more because they sucked versus getting injured and were out of the game?

    I really do think the Nats could’ve handled Strasburg differently with extra rest, skipped starts, etc., but I assume they know what they’re doing since they’re a multimillion dollar business with smart people in charge and I’m just posting on a sick day.

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  12. Author
    mikeakaleroy

    @ josh:
    I Google’d “How to make meth”, and most of the results are blocked by my company’s web filter. Also, they’re currently boxing up the shit from my desk, and escorting me out…

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  13. Author
    josh

    @ mikeakaleroy:
    Apparently the method Hal Walt uses is similar to what bikers use to make, and would yield an very unsatisfactory process, unless he does some other purification step (which is implied in the Box Cutter episode), in which case it would create a very potent meth that would be clear, not blue. The blue thing is just cinematics.

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  14. Author
    Mercurial Outfielder

    @ Rice Cube:
    I only get like that around bees or wasps, because I get sick as hell when i get stung. Otherwise, brush them off and let them be on their way.

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  15. Author
    josh

    @ Rice Cube:
    Looked like a (adult) female Chinese mantis. To me, it looked like it was thought he was a tree. You can see her reaching out, as though reaching for a closer branch. Then she can’t quite reach, so she does what mantids do, which is close the gap by flying briefly.

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  16. Author
    josh

    @ Mercurial Outfielder:
    Most wasps and bees have zero interest in stinging you. Hornets can be aggressive, but your average mud dauber or paper wasp or honey bee is perfectly content to leave you alone if you avoid its nest. Now these bad girls are worth watching out for:

    Velvet ant - angle

    Nickname: Cow Killer. Referring to the intensity of its sting. That’s a wingless wasp called a Velvet ant.

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  17. Aisle424

    My GF’s cousin is working towards his doctorate in psychology. As part of the dissertation process, he developed a survey that explores the links (if any) between perceived scarcity of resources and risk preference. He needs about 50 more responses to have enough data for the results to be meaningful. There is a better description of his purpose on the survey site for those interested.

    It only takes about 15 minutes or so and he is giving away five $50 American express giftcards via a raffle of participants wishing to provide an email address so you might get something tangible for your troubles. The e-mail address is not connected to the data collected, so your answers remain anonymous.

    https://qtrial.qualtrics.com/SE/?SID=SV_cHjS2ydTVjU6koA

    Thanks!

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  18. Aisle424

    @ josh:
    Yeah. the problem with wasps is that they’ve been really good at having nests where I don’t see them until it’s too late, like under a patio deck, or behind in a duct or something. Bees nests have always been easier for me to spot. Then there are hornets (or possibly yellow jackets) that burrow their nest in the ground, and god help you if you step on it.

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  19. Aisle424

    I also have a fear that any bee I see is actually a killer bee after watching that stupid 70s movie with Michael Caine. Especially when I’m down south.

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  20. Author
    Mercurial Outfielder

    Raley ————–> Iowa

    Bowden ———–> Cubs

    Deck chairs ——> Rearranged

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  21. Author
    josh

    @ Aisle424:
    There are ways to mitigate the risks, but I’ve seen people kill mud daubers who were minding their own business, simply because they were there. I’ve heard of people hosing down harmless cicada killers with hornet killer. I’d probably not tolerate a nest above my door, for example, but more often than not, you can leave them alone and never be bothered. Plus, they keep cicada, katydid, and/or spider populations from getting out of hand.

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  22. Author
    Mercurial Outfielder

    @ josh:
    See, I’m torn. We planted daisies and geraniums around the garden to attract bees. Then crab spiders moved into the flowers and started wrecking shop on the bees (I have a great pic of this, BTW). Now I have wasps and no crap spiders, but the wasps also prey on the bees. So harvesting for supper is always an adventure.

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