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OT: Any subscribers to Wondrium -- the Teaching Company's "Great Courses" streaming service ?

Trying it out on a trial basis. Offers access to hundreds of college-level lecture courses in dozens of subjects, including ones from National Geographic, Smithsonian, Culinary Institute of America, the History Channel, Mayo Clinic, and others in addition to the Teaching Company's catalog. Currently listening to a great course on the history of the Persian Empire. Really well-done if ancient/classical/Greek/Roman history interests you:

What do we know about the Persian Empire? For most of the past 2,500 years, we've heard about it from the ancient Greek perspective: a decadent civilization run by despots, the villains who lost the Battle of Marathon and supplied the fodder for bad guys in literature and film. But is this image really accurate?​
Recent scholarship examining the Persian Empire from the Persian perspective has discovered a major force that has had a lasting influence on the world in terms of administration, economics, religion, architecture, and more. In fact, the Persian Empire was arguably the world's first global power—a diverse, multicultural empire with flourishing businesses and people on the move. It was an empire of information, made possible by a highly advanced infrastructure that included roads, canals, bridges, and a courier system. And the kings of Persia's Achaemenid dynasty —Cyrus, Darius, Xerxes, and others—presided over an empire that created a tremendous legacy for subsequent history.​
The Persian Empire is your opportunity to see one of the greatest empires in the ancient world from a fresh new perspective: its own. Over the span of 24 fascinating lectures, Professor John W. I. Lee of the University of California, Santa Barbara—a distinguished teacher and an expert on the long-buried secrets of the ancient world—takes the role of a history detective and examines Persian sources to reveal what we now know about this grand civilization. Tapping into the latest scholarship on the Persian Empire, this course is sure to fill in some critical gaps in your understanding and appreciation of the sweep of ancient history and its undeniable effect on later civilizations. Including our own.​

Gary Patterson was subtly pushed to not return to Texas? (Plus old school coaches can’t get hired?)

Interesting info on why Patterson didn’t come back to UT for another year from Mac Engle of the FWST today- also some assertions regarding the overall employability of old school coaches….

“Since leaving TCU, Patterson’s path has been bumpy. In 2022, he joined Steve Sarkisian’s staff as a defensive analyst at the University of Texas. According to people familiar with that situation, and specifically that ‘22 season, Patterson’s re-entry to life as an assistant was uneven. He had been TCU’s head coach from 2000 through most of 2021. That’s a long time to get used to life running your own shop. As a defensive analyst, you can only do so much by design. After the ‘22 season ended, and the coaching hiring cycle concluded without any offers, he was invited to return to UT for the ‘23 season with a few stipulations. Basically, he was politely asked to just stay in your lane. Patterson, instead, essentially took the year off. He visited some coaching friends, including Jerry Kill in his one season as head coach at New Mexico State. Patterson frequented TCU home football games, including hosting a tail gate or two. He attended TCU’s home men’s basketball game on Saturday against Texas. He is a young 63, and he’d like to be “back in it.” Despite his record and historic run at TCU, neither moved the needle enough for another school to give him a shot. At least some of that had to do with his reputation; the fear was his personality was not going to fit outside of TCU. What a lot of coaches of his generation are discovering is that there is a quiet prejudice against them in this new model of NCAA football. Athletic directors, college presidents and the search firms that vet potential candidates aren’t too sure coaches over the age of 55, or so, are ideally suited for major college football. Even before he left TCU, Patterson was not a big fan of the transfer portal. The looming reality of NIL money, and pay-for-play “student athletes” was not something he was excited about. He was never shy about expressing his thoughts on the subjects; he even had a nickname, “Portal Parents.” It was not a flattering term. That is the world of college football now; much of the considerable power that coaches had over players has been extracted, and transferred. If one wants to coach in major college football, these are the rules. Do it, or don’t.”

Read more at: https://www.star-telegram.com/sports/spt-columns-blogs/mac-engel/article285230707.html#storylink=cpy

2022-23 SEC revenue distribution


$741m for an average of $51.3m per school.

For 24-25, I’m guessing total revenue will exceed $1.2B with the new tier 1 ABC deal, increased SECN distribution & revenue sharing, and pro-rata increases for UT & OU. The DTC for ESPN along with the Disney/Fox/TNT app should produce additional cheese.

Now, Disney needs to pay for a 9th conference game!
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