Can we make it the official CP moniker for the Chiefs' offense?
Edit: Initial votes are not good for "Legion of Zoom." Seems we've done this exercise in past years. At least for the defensive side. Would be nice to see CP come up with something that catches on outside of CP. So many creative minds here. Maybe if we get a short list of good names, someone smarter than me can create a new thread with a poll to vote on the short list. [Reply]
I hope it sticks then and Denver fans have to hear it on TV hundreds of times. Denver sports radio thought Showtime was a dumb nickname too. Did you think a rival fanbase would admit that any nickname associated with the Chiefs was good? [Reply]
Originally Posted by prhom:
I hope it sticks then and Denver fans have to hear it on TV hundreds of times. Denver sports radio thought Showtime was a dumb nickname too. Did you think a rival fanbase would admit that any nickname associated with the Chiefs was good?
The fact that everyone knows that it was stolen from the legion of boom is what makes it so bad. It's just so damn blatantly unoriginal. [Reply]
Along the way, I'm sure somebody has already conjured up the "Fast And Furious" sobriquet, but it kinda makes sense now that we have Clark and Don't Give A Sh*t on the defense to provide the Furious part.
“Did I grease up my jersey, and use sticky substances on my gloves? You’re damn right,” Schlereth said recently. “What you call cheating is a fine line. It’s an interesting line. What we did, in the locker room, is called being creative. Certain cheating is snickered at, or applauded.”
Originally Posted by :
Take Hydra, a cluster of galaxies about three billion light years away. Astronomers have measured the distance from the Earth to Hydra by looking at the light coming from the cluster. Through a prism, Hydra's hydrogen looks like four strips of red, blue-green, blue-violet and violet. But during the time it takes Hydra's light to reach us, the bands of color have shifted down toward the red end—the low-energy end—of the spectrum. On their journey across the universe, the wavelengths of light have stretched. The farther the light travels, the more stretched it gets. The farther the bands shift toward the red end, the farther the light has traveled. The size of the shift is called the redshift, and it helps scientists figure out the movement of stars in space.
So you’ve got faster than the speed of light, redshift, and Hydra! Downside of this is the inevitable memes of Captain America in patriots gear, so...oh well forget it.