
Motherwell wrote:Does HBO GO use some kind of DRM-esque protection?
badhat wrote:bike solve all problems

Feech La Manna wrote:Motherwell wrote:Does HBO GO use some kind of DRM-esque protection?
I dunno, but when you try to do airplay between an iPhone/iPad and an Apple TV you only get audio, not video, which suggests a high level of paranoia.
They need to get their shit together and get their console/streaming device apps out. It's ridiculous to not be able to use it on a TV unless you do a direct HDMI connection to your display.

Phil wrote:http://mubi.com/notebook/posts/and-then-the-camera-goes-up-the-jockeys-ass-a-close-look-at-luck
followed by his first feature, Thief, in 1981.
...
twenty years after Thief, he's one of Luck's leads


fury wrote:BRAH BRABH

badhat wrote:bike solve all problems

badhat wrote:bike solve all problems



super gas wrote:Horse claiming is pretty weird. I read a book about it a while back but it's still pretty abstract to me.
Btw, the horse he tried to claim, was it the same horse that they singled out in the first episode?


badhat wrote:bike solve all problems

super gas wrote:right, but are all races with claimed horses? will someone be able to claim the greek's horse when it runs?

Feech La Manna wrote:Was that Jewel from Deadwood in the wheelchair?

Feech La Manna wrote:no that was specifically a "claim race" that only happens once every so often
I still don't really understand why Escalante would be willing to risk what actually happened, but maybe there's more to it


fester wrote:If he's only doing it to pad his odds you'd think he'd tell the jockey not to kick so much ass in that race.
I don't totally get it either. So far the show seems to throw a lot of incomprehensible horse racing shit at you up front and then explain it all later, so I'm not too worried about getting lost.
Without claiming races there would be no racing at all. Owners would avoid the hazards of fair competition. Instead, they would enter their better animals in races against sixth- and twelfth-raters that occupy most stalls at most tracks… This would leave little or no purse money for the owners of cheap horses. The game would parish.
The claiming races changes all that. When he enters his animal in a race for $5,000 claiming horses, the owner literally puts it up for sale at that price. Any other owner can file a claim before the race and lead the beast away after the running. The original owner collects the horse’s share of the purse, if it earned any, but loses the horse at a fair price.
That is, he loses the horse at a fair price if it is a $5,000 horse. If it were a $10,000 horse, in a race for cheaper ones, the owner would get the purse and collect a large bet at odds perhaps 1 to 10, but the horse would be bought by any other barn at less than its true value.
-Ainslie’s Complete Guide to Thoroughbred Racing

kid8 wrote:I'm writing a screenplay for a project right now. It's called "Inspirational Mexicans: File Under Fiction."




gambra wrote:I also need to go grab a subtitle file.

kid8 wrote:I'm writing a screenplay for a project right now. It's called "Inspirational Mexicans: File Under Fiction."

kid8 wrote:I'm writing a screenplay for a project right now. It's called "Inspirational Mexicans: File Under Fiction."

badhat wrote:bike solve all problems
