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-   -   Football Aaron Rodgers is a weird mother****er lol (https://www.chiefsplanet.com/BB/showthread.php?t=334484)

dlphg9 10-21-2020 02:31 PM

Aaron Rodgers is a weird mother****er lol
 
https://www.google.com/amp/s/www.esp...3fplatform=amp

Spoiler!

Simply Red 10-21-2020 02:40 PM

k

GayFrogs 10-21-2020 02:41 PM

Rodgers said "my down years are career years for most other qb's" on national tv in the week leading up to his 38-10 embarrassment.

Jewish Rabbi 10-21-2020 02:48 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by dlphg9 (Post 15264162)
https://www.google.com/amp/s/www.esp...3fplatform=amp

IT IS 2010. Aaron Rodgers is going into his third season as the starting quarterback for the Green Bay Packers. He is a Pro Bowler, a superstar on the rise. Graham Harrell is new to the Packers, signed to be the third-stringer. Harrell is a friendly, fast-talking Texan from Brownwood, and he develops a real rapport with Rodgers. The banter between the two starts right away and never stops.One day, Rodgers tells Harrell he thinks they are basically fraternity brothers. This becomes a running joke. The pair bro-talk constantly, and very quickly Harrell becomes amazed at the depth of Rodgers' investment in this (completely imaginary) universe. The Packers' other quarterback, Matt Flynn, is now in an "enemy fraternity," Rodgers tells Harrell, and whenever Harrell does well in a drill, Rodgers compliments him by saying, "It's about time you did something for the brothers." Likewise, if Flynn is better than Harrell on a particular day, Rodgers laughs and tell Harrell, "Bro, you're getting paddled when we get back to the house."

Rodgers even names their fraternity: Tau Kappa Epsilon, or TKE.

All of this is going along fine until one afternoon at Packers training camp, which is held on the campus of nearby St. Norbert College. During drills, one of the ball boys overhears the banter between Harrell and Rodgers. "Hey, what fraternity are you guys in?" the ball boy asks Harrell after practice ends. After weighing whether to come clean about how he and the Packers' franchise player have created an elaborate fictitious scenario involving two 20-something men being in a fraternity, Harrell simply says, "Oh, uh ... we're TKEs?" He hopes that will end the conversation.

It does not end the conversation.

"No way, I'm a TKE!" the ball boy erupts. Harrell is stunned. "Yeah, uh ... TKEs, man," he says weakly, looking around helplessly. Rodgers is giddy. The ball boy's smile is ripping his own face apart.

The ball boy invites Harrell and Rodgers to a mixer that the St. Norbert chapter of TKE is hosting that fall. The mixer is known as the "Carnation Crush," because it also involves the women of Delta Phi Epsilon, one of the college's sororities. Harrell is certain this is where they will draw the line and explain that they're not, you know, actually TKEs, but Rodgers is defiant. "There is no way in the world we're missing this," he tells Harrell.

They go to the mixer. It is like most college parties. Rodgers and Harrell sit with the fraternity's president, Stephen Schumacher, and some of the brothers. Schumacher asks everyone at the party to respect that Rodgers and Harrell just want to hang out and not to take cellphone photos or videos. Somehow, everyone listens. Inside, Rodgers asks lots of questions about the fraternity and is very interested in all the small details. Schumacher, who is a Packers fan, tries to keep his heart from exploding out of his chest. As they talk, Schumacher notices that Rodgers and Harrell are eyeing a table where flip cup is being played. He asks if they want to play. Rodgers and Harrell jump up.

Flip cup involves two teams of multiple players flipping plastic cups in order. Rodgers and Harrell are on a team with Schumacher and some other brothers. They play against a team of women from one of the school's social clubs. Schumacher and the brothers are very skilled. The women are even better. Rodgers isn't very good, but he finally gets his cup over. Harrell is a complete disaster. He is struggling to find the sweet spot between weakly knocking his cup down and overflipping it four times in the air. The TKE team loses. Rodgers is frustrated. He tells Harrell he needs to "be better," but then he brightens when a ceremony begins during which one of the sorority sisters will be crowned as a queen.

As part of the ritual, all of the brothers in attendance get down on a knee and sing a song while holding up one hand, as if offering the queen a flower. Harrell has no idea what is going on. He spins around and realizes he is suddenly surrounded by a bunch of teenage boys kneeling and shouting verses to a teenage girl who is up on a stage, and he assumes that now, surely now, is the moment when he and Rodgers -- two professional football players who are, again, grown men -- will finally make their exit.

Except then he looks to his right and sees Rodgers down on one knee with his hand up.

"This isn't even real life, bro," Harrell says to Rodgers, who gestures wildly for Harrell to get down beside him. Harrell sighs and kneels next to Rodgers. They raise their hands. They mouth words to a song they do not know. The queen is crowned.

Shouts and cheers ring out from all corners of the room. The queen beams. Rodgers giggles uncontrollably.

Harrell has never seen him happier.IF HARRELL'S STORY about Rodgers and their (pretend) fraternity seems weird, well, fair enough -- it definitely is. But the truth is that it is also squarely in character for Rodgers, whose athletic prowess has always been rooted in an equally intense desire to push and prod and challenge and question. To take things to such a degree as to be, at times, uncomfortable.

For Rodgers, nothing is irrelevant and everything is subject to review. He wants to know about people and places and things. He wants to understand motivations. While almost every high-level athlete is ambitious and determined to kick down doors, Rodgers is among the few who also want to know why the door was closed in the first place and, while they're at it, where the hinges came from.

Now, it should be said: Plenty of that unconventionality is channeled toward Rodgers' actual job. His ability to scramble out of plays, to see throwing lanes that aren't there, is fabled. He has passed for nearly 50,000 yards and 377 touchdowns (including 13 so far this season). There are scads of highlights showcasing his ingenuity -- the miracle Hail Mary against the Lions in 2015, the roll-left-throw-back 48-yarder to win the game against the Bears in 2013, among many others -- and the magic is absolutely an everyday thing.

Joe Callahan, who was a rookie quarterback in 2016, recalls an otherwise nondescript drill from early that year that has always stuck with him. It was a quick drop drill, Callahan says, and Rodgers backpedaled. He saw two defenders blanketing the tight end from both sides. Instead of chucking the ball away, Rodgers simply dropped his elbow and unleashed a wicked 15-yard pass that curved in the air like a golfer hitting an intentional slice around a tree. The ball bent at an angle, then dived sharply into the tight end's belly.

Callahan was slack-jawed by the play and even now shakes his head as he describes it. "Coach [Mike] McCarthy turns to us and he's like, 'You need multiple MVPs to be able to make that throw,'" Callahan says. "I'm still not sure how he was able to pull it off."

Extrapolate that out -- a seemingly obvious conclusion to throw the ball away, completely unpacked and turned on its head. That is what it's like being around Rodgers, Callahan says. Often this would happen on subjects unrelated to football: Rodgers is unabashed about his belief in the existence of UFOs, for example, and frequently engages with teammates in long, drawn-out discussions about who actually built the Egyptian pyramids. ("We can't reveal what we know," Callahan says when I inquire about any conclusions.)

Brett Hundley, who was a Packers backup from 2015 to 2018, also had discussions about UFOs with Rodgers, as well as the existence of aliens. "His brain is just always processing so much information," Hundley says. And then there was the time in 2013 when Rodgers stopped in the middle of practice, pulled aside then-backup Seneca Wallace and pointed to an airplane that was flying overhead.

"'What do you think all that stuff is flying behind that jet stream?'" Wallace recalls Rodgers asking. "'Do you think that has anything to do with maybe why everybody's getting cancer?'"

Wallace snorts. Rodgers "marches to the beat of his own drum," he says, "always looking for loopholes" or things that "set people apart."

Bizarrely, many of these potpourri discussions actually originate from a football staple: the weekly quarterback scouting tests. Each week, as happens on many clubs, one of the backups is responsible for putting together a 45-minute exam for the starter and the other backup to take.

Naturally, Rodgers' instructions about the exam are pointed: There should be questions that cover strategy related to Green Bay's upcoming opponent (Sample: What is the correct audible if the Bears come with an all-out blitz?), but there must also be a lengthy section devoted to pretty much anything else (Who really assassinated President Kennedy?).

Rodgers has high standards for the tests, and Hundley conceded that his exams "went from a B-minus to an A-plus" when he began focusing his off-field questions around conspiracy theories. Rodgers is also a trivia freak, and he appreciates a quarterback who can hew to a strong theme. Geographic questions about the team's next road trip can be fertile ground for the test composer, as can pop culture.

"He's good at history, good at music, good at movies," Harrell says. But it's possible to stump him by leaning into extremely niche subject areas. Rodgers -- despite his famous championship-belt celebration -- is actually weak on professional wrestling knowledge, for instance, so Harrell, who is a die-hard WWE fan, would enrage Rodgers by constantly peppering his tests with questions about, say, WrestleMania V.

As an alternative for those who prefer to avoid challenging Rodgers' general knowledge acumen, Rodgers allows the second part of the quiz to also feature tongue-in-cheek "questions" about top opposing players, as long as there is some component to the question that Rodgers might be able to use on the field. Like everything else, Rodgers wants to challenge the traditional notion of trash-talking -- give me something different I can use, he tells the test makers. Find me something new.

That can be difficult too, though, particularly because Rodgers has played for so long. There are only so many embarrassing photos of Matt Stafford to be found, Callahan says, meaning that often "you had to go deep back into the mid-2000s to find some old MySpace picture that they still have floating around."

Callahan shrugs. With Rodgers, originality is prized above almost all else, so the pressure to learn the offensive scheme in any given week is frequently overshadowed by the pressure to dig up a new, entertaining nugget about Kirk Cousins. "We got pretty good at searching the internet for funny pictures of opposing teams," Callahan says.

EARLIER THIS YEAR, the Packers used their first-round draft pick on Jordan Love, a quarterback seen as a strong contender to be Rodgers' eventual successor. Many wondered whether Rodgers would be offended -- Wallace suggested Rodgers might have been "a little butt-hurt about it" -- and speculated that the selection could have led Rodgers to become overly competitive.

For those who have been in the position of backing up Rodgers before, the notion that the selection would change anything about the way Rodgers approaches his job is absurd. It isn't about competitiveness (after all, Rodgers is already plenty competitive) -- it is, once again, pushing back on the idea that has been accepted. Putting in work on something that seems decided. Rodgers is not simply going to cede his place because it seems that the Packers might have decided the time is coming.

So there will still be tests. There will still be trivia. There will still be moments of extreme social discomfort, like when Callahan was a rookie and Rodgers invited him and the other quarterbacks over for a friendly hang and then brought out his own personal karaoke machine, which tracked and rated each participant. Suddenly, Callahan found himself being forced to try to hit the high notes of Adam Levine on Maroon Five's "She Will Be Loved" (it didn't go well), while Rodgers cackled and then selected a song for himself with a much more reasonable range.

"You could definitely tell that he practiced," Callahan says. "I would also definitely double-check the calibration on that microphone because his score seemed a little too high that day."

Not all quarterbacks would assert their superiority through karaoke contests or authoritatively answering questions about the population density of the greater Houston area (Harrell learned all about that before a Texans game once). But what Love will find, the former backups say, is that those experiences are intensely valuable, if only because they put on display a critical part of what makes Rodgers the star that he is. Thinking counterintuitively is a skill that can be honed just like a seven-step drop, and so whether or not you personally believe that airplanes cause cancer or that there are residents of Mars who are longtime Packers fans, the simple act of pondering -- even for a second -- the possibility that those things might be true uses roughly the same muscle that Rodgers uses when he looks at a disintegrated offensive line and still sees a way to make a play.

Making our brains more elastic, more open to things that are not exactly the way we assume them to be, is the most basic path to creativity. And for Rodgers, creativity is his light.

"He loves seeing guys get outside their comfort zone," Wallace says, "and pushing them to a point where it's, 'Oh, man, I don't do this so well.' Then he wants to see what happens."

That is definitely what took place with Wallace and Hundley in the testing room and Callahan at the karaoke party and Harrell at the Carnation Crush. It is what will happen, over and over, with Love. Rodgers might be deeply cerebral (if not deeply weird), but he is also deeply talented, and there is no doubt those things are connected.

Will being around that help Love's development? Will it change the way he sees the quarterback position? Will it affect his perspective on how to run an offense?

It is difficult to see how it won't. And, knowing Rodgers, it is also difficult to imagine Rodgers not pushing to make Love's learning period last for as long as possible.

"He'll learn," Hundley says. "But I'll tell you what: Jordan is going to be sitting for a while."

Hundley laughs. "Aaron's not going to give up that position, that's for sure."

Dude sounds like a crazy mofo, but the part about the frat party is literally insane lol. Also him wanting the back up QBs to dig up dirt for trash talk is pretty sweet. Should just hire someone to do it. I'll take that job.

Thanks for sharing!

KCUnited 10-21-2020 02:49 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by dlphg9 (Post 15264162)
https://www.google.com/amp/s/www.esp...3fplatform=amp

IT IS 2010. Aaron Rodgers is going into his third season as the starting quarterback for the Green Bay Packers. He is a Pro Bowler, a superstar on the rise. Graham Harrell is new to the Packers, signed to be the third-stringer. Harrell is a friendly, fast-talking Texan from Brownwood, and he develops a real rapport with Rodgers. The banter between the two starts right away and never stops.One day, Rodgers tells Harrell he thinks they are basically fraternity brothers. This becomes a running joke. The pair bro-talk constantly, and very quickly Harrell becomes amazed at the depth of Rodgers' investment in this (completely imaginary) universe. The Packers' other quarterback, Matt Flynn, is now in an "enemy fraternity," Rodgers tells Harrell, and whenever Harrell does well in a drill, Rodgers compliments him by saying, "It's about time you did something for the brothers." Likewise, if Flynn is better than Harrell on a particular day, Rodgers laughs and tell Harrell, "Bro, you're getting paddled when we get back to the house."

Rodgers even names their fraternity: Tau Kappa Epsilon, or TKE.

All of this is going along fine until one afternoon at Packers training camp, which is held on the campus of nearby St. Norbert College. During drills, one of the ball boys overhears the banter between Harrell and Rodgers. "Hey, what fraternity are you guys in?" the ball boy asks Harrell after practice ends. After weighing whether to come clean about how he and the Packers' franchise player have created an elaborate fictitious scenario involving two 20-something men being in a fraternity, Harrell simply says, "Oh, uh ... we're TKEs?" He hopes that will end the conversation.

It does not end the conversation.

"No way, I'm a TKE!" the ball boy erupts. Harrell is stunned. "Yeah, uh ... TKEs, man," he says weakly, looking around helplessly. Rodgers is giddy. The ball boy's smile is ripping his own face apart.

The ball boy invites Harrell and Rodgers to a mixer that the St. Norbert chapter of TKE is hosting that fall. The mixer is known as the "Carnation Crush," because it also involves the women of Delta Phi Epsilon, one of the college's sororities. Harrell is certain this is where they will draw the line and explain that they're not, you know, actually TKEs, but Rodgers is defiant. "There is no way in the world we're missing this," he tells Harrell.

They go to the mixer. It is like most college parties. Rodgers and Harrell sit with the fraternity's president, Stephen Schumacher, and some of the brothers. Schumacher asks everyone at the party to respect that Rodgers and Harrell just want to hang out and not to take cellphone photos or videos. Somehow, everyone listens. Inside, Rodgers asks lots of questions about the fraternity and is very interested in all the small details. Schumacher, who is a Packers fan, tries to keep his heart from exploding out of his chest. As they talk, Schumacher notices that Rodgers and Harrell are eyeing a table where flip cup is being played. He asks if they want to play. Rodgers and Harrell jump up.

Flip cup involves two teams of multiple players flipping plastic cups in order. Rodgers and Harrell are on a team with Schumacher and some other brothers. They play against a team of women from one of the school's social clubs. Schumacher and the brothers are very skilled. The women are even better. Rodgers isn't very good, but he finally gets his cup over. Harrell is a complete disaster. He is struggling to find the sweet spot between weakly knocking his cup down and overflipping it four times in the air. The TKE team loses. Rodgers is frustrated. He tells Harrell he needs to "be better," but then he brightens when a ceremony begins during which one of the sorority sisters will be crowned as a queen.

As part of the ritual, all of the brothers in attendance get down on a knee and sing a song while holding up one hand, as if offering the queen a flower. Harrell has no idea what is going on. He spins around and realizes he is suddenly surrounded by a bunch of teenage boys kneeling and shouting verses to a teenage girl who is up on a stage, and he assumes that now, surely now, is the moment when he and Rodgers -- two professional football players who are, again, grown men -- will finally make their exit.

Except then he looks to his right and sees Rodgers down on one knee with his hand up.

"This isn't even real life, bro," Harrell says to Rodgers, who gestures wildly for Harrell to get down beside him. Harrell sighs and kneels next to Rodgers. They raise their hands. They mouth words to a song they do not know. The queen is crowned.

Shouts and cheers ring out from all corners of the room. The queen beams. Rodgers giggles uncontrollably.

Harrell has never seen him happier.IF HARRELL'S STORY about Rodgers and their (pretend) fraternity seems weird, well, fair enough -- it definitely is. But the truth is that it is also squarely in character for Rodgers, whose athletic prowess has always been rooted in an equally intense desire to push and prod and challenge and question. To take things to such a degree as to be, at times, uncomfortable.

For Rodgers, nothing is irrelevant and everything is subject to review. He wants to know about people and places and things. He wants to understand motivations. While almost every high-level athlete is ambitious and determined to kick down doors, Rodgers is among the few who also want to know why the door was closed in the first place and, while they're at it, where the hinges came from.

Now, it should be said: Plenty of that unconventionality is channeled toward Rodgers' actual job. His ability to scramble out of plays, to see throwing lanes that aren't there, is fabled. He has passed for nearly 50,000 yards and 377 touchdowns (including 13 so far this season). There are scads of highlights showcasing his ingenuity -- the miracle Hail Mary against the Lions in 2015, the roll-left-throw-back 48-yarder to win the game against the Bears in 2013, among many others -- and the magic is absolutely an everyday thing.

Joe Callahan, who was a rookie quarterback in 2016, recalls an otherwise nondescript drill from early that year that has always stuck with him. It was a quick drop drill, Callahan says, and Rodgers backpedaled. He saw two defenders blanketing the tight end from both sides. Instead of chucking the ball away, Rodgers simply dropped his elbow and unleashed a wicked 15-yard pass that curved in the air like a golfer hitting an intentional slice around a tree. The ball bent at an angle, then dived sharply into the tight end's belly.

Callahan was slack-jawed by the play and even now shakes his head as he describes it. "Coach [Mike] McCarthy turns to us and he's like, 'You need multiple MVPs to be able to make that throw,'" Callahan says. "I'm still not sure how he was able to pull it off."

Extrapolate that out -- a seemingly obvious conclusion to throw the ball away, completely unpacked and turned on its head. That is what it's like being around Rodgers, Callahan says. Often this would happen on subjects unrelated to football: Rodgers is unabashed about his belief in the existence of UFOs, for example, and frequently engages with teammates in long, drawn-out discussions about who actually built the Egyptian pyramids. ("We can't reveal what we know," Callahan says when I inquire about any conclusions.)

Brett Hundley, who was a Packers backup from 2015 to 2018, also had discussions about UFOs with Rodgers, as well as the existence of aliens. "His brain is just always processing so much information," Hundley says. And then there was the time in 2013 when Rodgers stopped in the middle of practice, pulled aside then-backup Seneca Wallace and pointed to an airplane that was flying overhead.

"'What do you think all that stuff is flying behind that jet stream?'" Wallace recalls Rodgers asking. "'Do you think that has anything to do with maybe why everybody's getting cancer?'"

Wallace snorts. Rodgers "marches to the beat of his own drum," he says, "always looking for loopholes" or things that "set people apart."

Bizarrely, many of these potpourri discussions actually originate from a football staple: the weekly quarterback scouting tests. Each week, as happens on many clubs, one of the backups is responsible for putting together a 45-minute exam for the starter and the other backup to take.

Naturally, Rodgers' instructions about the exam are pointed: There should be questions that cover strategy related to Green Bay's upcoming opponent (Sample: What is the correct audible if the Bears come with an all-out blitz?), but there must also be a lengthy section devoted to pretty much anything else (Who really assassinated President Kennedy?).

Rodgers has high standards for the tests, and Hundley conceded that his exams "went from a B-minus to an A-plus" when he began focusing his off-field questions around conspiracy theories. Rodgers is also a trivia freak, and he appreciates a quarterback who can hew to a strong theme. Geographic questions about the team's next road trip can be fertile ground for the test composer, as can pop culture.

"He's good at history, good at music, good at movies," Harrell says. But it's possible to stump him by leaning into extremely niche subject areas. Rodgers -- despite his famous championship-belt celebration -- is actually weak on professional wrestling knowledge, for instance, so Harrell, who is a die-hard WWE fan, would enrage Rodgers by constantly peppering his tests with questions about, say, WrestleMania V.

As an alternative for those who prefer to avoid challenging Rodgers' general knowledge acumen, Rodgers allows the second part of the quiz to also feature tongue-in-cheek "questions" about top opposing players, as long as there is some component to the question that Rodgers might be able to use on the field. Like everything else, Rodgers wants to challenge the traditional notion of trash-talking -- give me something different I can use, he tells the test makers. Find me something new.

That can be difficult too, though, particularly because Rodgers has played for so long. There are only so many embarrassing photos of Matt Stafford to be found, Callahan says, meaning that often "you had to go deep back into the mid-2000s to find some old MySpace picture that they still have floating around."

Callahan shrugs. With Rodgers, originality is prized above almost all else, so the pressure to learn the offensive scheme in any given week is frequently overshadowed by the pressure to dig up a new, entertaining nugget about Kirk Cousins. "We got pretty good at searching the internet for funny pictures of opposing teams," Callahan says.

EARLIER THIS YEAR, the Packers used their first-round draft pick on Jordan Love, a quarterback seen as a strong contender to be Rodgers' eventual successor. Many wondered whether Rodgers would be offended -- Wallace suggested Rodgers might have been "a little butt-hurt about it" -- and speculated that the selection could have led Rodgers to become overly competitive.

For those who have been in the position of backing up Rodgers before, the notion that the selection would change anything about the way Rodgers approaches his job is absurd. It isn't about competitiveness (after all, Rodgers is already plenty competitive) -- it is, once again, pushing back on the idea that has been accepted. Putting in work on something that seems decided. Rodgers is not simply going to cede his place because it seems that the Packers might have decided the time is coming.

So there will still be tests. There will still be trivia. There will still be moments of extreme social discomfort, like when Callahan was a rookie and Rodgers invited him and the other quarterbacks over for a friendly hang and then brought out his own personal karaoke machine, which tracked and rated each participant. Suddenly, Callahan found himself being forced to try to hit the high notes of Adam Levine on Maroon Five's "She Will Be Loved" (it didn't go well), while Rodgers cackled and then selected a song for himself with a much more reasonable range.

"You could definitely tell that he practiced," Callahan says. "I would also definitely double-check the calibration on that microphone because his score seemed a little too high that day."

Not all quarterbacks would assert their superiority through karaoke contests or authoritatively answering questions about the population density of the greater Houston area (Harrell learned all about that before a Texans game once). But what Love will find, the former backups say, is that those experiences are intensely valuable, if only because they put on display a critical part of what makes Rodgers the star that he is. Thinking counterintuitively is a skill that can be honed just like a seven-step drop, and so whether or not you personally believe that airplanes cause cancer or that there are residents of Mars who are longtime Packers fans, the simple act of pondering -- even for a second -- the possibility that those things might be true uses roughly the same muscle that Rodgers uses when he looks at a disintegrated offensive line and still sees a way to make a play.

Making our brains more elastic, more open to things that are not exactly the way we assume them to be, is the most basic path to creativity. And for Rodgers, creativity is his light.

"He loves seeing guys get outside their comfort zone," Wallace says, "and pushing them to a point where it's, 'Oh, man, I don't do this so well.' Then he wants to see what happens."

That is definitely what took place with Wallace and Hundley in the testing room and Callahan at the karaoke party and Harrell at the Carnation Crush. It is what will happen, over and over, with Love. Rodgers might be deeply cerebral (if not deeply weird), but he is also deeply talented, and there is no doubt those things are connected.

Will being around that help Love's development? Will it change the way he sees the quarterback position? Will it affect his perspective on how to run an offense?

It is difficult to see how it won't. And, knowing Rodgers, it is also difficult to imagine Rodgers not pushing to make Love's learning period last for as long as possible.

"He'll learn," Hundley says. "But I'll tell you what: Jordan is going to be sitting for a while."

Hundley laughs. "Aaron's not going to give up that position, that's for sure."

Dude sounds like a crazy mofo, but the part about the frat party is literally insane lol. Also him wanting the back up QBs to dig up dirt for trash talk is pretty sweet. Should just hire someone to do it. I'll take that job.

Discount double check your spoiler tag

eDave 10-21-2020 02:51 PM

He wears a ****ing scarf.

Titty Meat 10-21-2020 02:53 PM

I'm not reading all that

Graystoke 10-21-2020 02:53 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by eDave (Post 15264230)
He wears a ****ing scarf.

Who doesn't?

eDave 10-21-2020 02:54 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Graystoke (Post 15264237)
Who doesn't?

Alpha's, bitch.

Simply Red 10-21-2020 02:58 PM

<blockquote class="imgur-embed-pub" lang="en" data-id="a/ysUVrjP" data-context="false" ><a href="//imgur.com/a/ysUVrjP"></a></blockquote><script async src="//s.imgur.com/min/embed.js" charset="utf-8"></script>

staylor26 10-21-2020 03:00 PM

Cliff notes please?

CarlosCarson27 10-21-2020 03:01 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Titty Meat (Post 15264234)
I'm not reading all that

LOL

CarlosCarson27 10-21-2020 03:01 PM

:hmmm:
Quote:

Originally Posted by Graystoke (Post 15264237)
Who doesn't?


In58men 10-21-2020 03:01 PM

Dumb and childish

ChiefBlueCFC 10-21-2020 03:02 PM

I read the first paragraph, allow me to give my expert opinion...

Rodgers is gonna end up in Chicago or Minnesota in 2-3 years

eDave 10-21-2020 03:03 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by CarlosCarson88 (Post 15264264)
LOL

This dude does this shit all the time and is called out all the time. He's just being as he is.

eDave 10-21-2020 03:03 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by ChiefBlueCFC (Post 15264273)
I read the first paragraph, allow me to give my expert opinion...

Rodgers is gonna end up in Chicago or Minnesota in 2-3 years

Old bones need sun and warmth.

Dante84 10-21-2020 03:05 PM

About 8-9 years ago, my buddy worked in the athletic department doing donor relations & events for a Big 12 school, and one of his former colleagues (also a friend at this point) went on to join the Packers front office staff in some mid/low level position.

Anyways, my buddy has some down time and decides to take a trip up to Green Bay and visit his friend for a long weekend. He gets off the plane and checks his voicemail, and his friend had some emergency come up and couldn't break away from work to come get him (this was before UBER was in Green Bay, mind you).

He said in the voicemail that one of his coworkers would pick up instead. My buddy saw he had a text from a random number saying "Hey, parked outside near arrivals. Let me know when you're here."

He figured **** it, so he texted the number back saying what he was wearing and where he was standing, and sure as shit, a black SUV pulls up and it's Aaron ****ing Rodgers, picking him up from the airport, as if he was any other random Joe.

New World Order 10-21-2020 03:06 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by dlphg9 (Post 15264162)
https://www.google.com/amp/s/www.esp...3fplatform=amp

IT IS 2010. Aaron Rodgers is going into his third season as the starting quarterback for the Green Bay Packers. He is a Pro Bowler, a superstar on the rise. Graham Harrell is new to the Packers, signed to be the third-stringer. Harrell is a friendly, fast-talking Texan from Brownwood, and he develops a real rapport with Rodgers. The banter between the two starts right away and never stops.One day, Rodgers tells Harrell he thinks they are basically fraternity brothers. This becomes a running joke. The pair bro-talk constantly, and very quickly Harrell becomes amazed at the depth of Rodgers' investment in this (completely imaginary) universe. The Packers' other quarterback, Matt Flynn, is now in an "enemy fraternity," Rodgers tells Harrell, and whenever Harrell does well in a drill, Rodgers compliments him by saying, "It's about time you did something for the brothers." Likewise, if Flynn is better than Harrell on a particular day, Rodgers laughs and tell Harrell, "Bro, you're getting paddled when we get back to the house."

Rodgers even names their fraternity: Tau Kappa Epsilon, or TKE.

All of this is going along fine until one afternoon at Packers training camp, which is held on the campus of nearby St. Norbert College. During drills, one of the ball boys overhears the banter between Harrell and Rodgers. "Hey, what fraternity are you guys in?" the ball boy asks Harrell after practice ends. After weighing whether to come clean about how he and the Packers' franchise player have created an elaborate fictitious scenario involving two 20-something men being in a fraternity, Harrell simply says, "Oh, uh ... we're TKEs?" He hopes that will end the conversation.

It does not end the conversation.

"No way, I'm a TKE!" the ball boy erupts. Harrell is stunned. "Yeah, uh ... TKEs, man," he says weakly, looking around helplessly. Rodgers is giddy. The ball boy's smile is ripping his own face apart.

The ball boy invites Harrell and Rodgers to a mixer that the St. Norbert chapter of TKE is hosting that fall. The mixer is known as the "Carnation Crush," because it also involves the women of Delta Phi Epsilon, one of the college's sororities. Harrell is certain this is where they will draw the line and explain that they're not, you know, actually TKEs, but Rodgers is defiant. "There is no way in the world we're missing this," he tells Harrell.

They go to the mixer. It is like most college parties. Rodgers and Harrell sit with the fraternity's president, Stephen Schumacher, and some of the brothers. Schumacher asks everyone at the party to respect that Rodgers and Harrell just want to hang out and not to take cellphone photos or videos. Somehow, everyone listens. Inside, Rodgers asks lots of questions about the fraternity and is very interested in all the small details. Schumacher, who is a Packers fan, tries to keep his heart from exploding out of his chest. As they talk, Schumacher notices that Rodgers and Harrell are eyeing a table where flip cup is being played. He asks if they want to play. Rodgers and Harrell jump up.

Flip cup involves two teams of multiple players flipping plastic cups in order. Rodgers and Harrell are on a team with Schumacher and some other brothers. They play against a team of women from one of the school's social clubs. Schumacher and the brothers are very skilled. The women are even better. Rodgers isn't very good, but he finally gets his cup over. Harrell is a complete disaster. He is struggling to find the sweet spot between weakly knocking his cup down and overflipping it four times in the air. The TKE team loses. Rodgers is frustrated. He tells Harrell he needs to "be better," but then he brightens when a ceremony begins during which one of the sorority sisters will be crowned as a queen.

As part of the ritual, all of the brothers in attendance get down on a knee and sing a song while holding up one hand, as if offering the queen a flower. Harrell has no idea what is going on. He spins around and realizes he is suddenly surrounded by a bunch of teenage boys kneeling and shouting verses to a teenage girl who is up on a stage, and he assumes that now, surely now, is the moment when he and Rodgers -- two professional football players who are, again, grown men -- will finally make their exit.

Except then he looks to his right and sees Rodgers down on one knee with his hand up.

"This isn't even real life, bro," Harrell says to Rodgers, who gestures wildly for Harrell to get down beside him. Harrell sighs and kneels next to Rodgers. They raise their hands. They mouth words to a song they do not know. The queen is crowned.

Shouts and cheers ring out from all corners of the room. The queen beams. Rodgers giggles uncontrollably.

Harrell has never seen him happier.IF HARRELL'S STORY about Rodgers and their (pretend) fraternity seems weird, well, fair enough -- it definitely is. But the truth is that it is also squarely in character for Rodgers, whose athletic prowess has always been rooted in an equally intense desire to push and prod and challenge and question. To take things to such a degree as to be, at times, uncomfortable.

For Rodgers, nothing is irrelevant and everything is subject to review. He wants to know about people and places and things. He wants to understand motivations. While almost every high-level athlete is ambitious and determined to kick down doors, Rodgers is among the few who also want to know why the door was closed in the first place and, while they're at it, where the hinges came from.

Now, it should be said: Plenty of that unconventionality is channeled toward Rodgers' actual job. His ability to scramble out of plays, to see throwing lanes that aren't there, is fabled. He has passed for nearly 50,000 yards and 377 touchdowns (including 13 so far this season). There are scads of highlights showcasing his ingenuity -- the miracle Hail Mary against the Lions in 2015, the roll-left-throw-back 48-yarder to win the game against the Bears in 2013, among many others -- and the magic is absolutely an everyday thing.

Joe Callahan, who was a rookie quarterback in 2016, recalls an otherwise nondescript drill from early that year that has always stuck with him. It was a quick drop drill, Callahan says, and Rodgers backpedaled. He saw two defenders blanketing the tight end from both sides. Instead of chucking the ball away, Rodgers simply dropped his elbow and unleashed a wicked 15-yard pass that curved in the air like a golfer hitting an intentional slice around a tree. The ball bent at an angle, then dived sharply into the tight end's belly.

Callahan was slack-jawed by the play and even now shakes his head as he describes it. "Coach [Mike] McCarthy turns to us and he's like, 'You need multiple MVPs to be able to make that throw,'" Callahan says. "I'm still not sure how he was able to pull it off."

Extrapolate that out -- a seemingly obvious conclusion to throw the ball away, completely unpacked and turned on its head. That is what it's like being around Rodgers, Callahan says. Often this would happen on subjects unrelated to football: Rodgers is unabashed about his belief in the existence of UFOs, for example, and frequently engages with teammates in long, drawn-out discussions about who actually built the Egyptian pyramids. ("We can't reveal what we know," Callahan says when I inquire about any conclusions.)

Brett Hundley, who was a Packers backup from 2015 to 2018, also had discussions about UFOs with Rodgers, as well as the existence of aliens. "His brain is just always processing so much information," Hundley says. And then there was the time in 2013 when Rodgers stopped in the middle of practice, pulled aside then-backup Seneca Wallace and pointed to an airplane that was flying overhead.

"'What do you think all that stuff is flying behind that jet stream?'" Wallace recalls Rodgers asking. "'Do you think that has anything to do with maybe why everybody's getting cancer?'"

Wallace snorts. Rodgers "marches to the beat of his own drum," he says, "always looking for loopholes" or things that "set people apart."

Bizarrely, many of these potpourri discussions actually originate from a football staple: the weekly quarterback scouting tests. Each week, as happens on many clubs, one of the backups is responsible for putting together a 45-minute exam for the starter and the other backup to take.

Naturally, Rodgers' instructions about the exam are pointed: There should be questions that cover strategy related to Green Bay's upcoming opponent (Sample: What is the correct audible if the Bears come with an all-out blitz?), but there must also be a lengthy section devoted to pretty much anything else (Who really assassinated President Kennedy?).

Rodgers has high standards for the tests, and Hundley conceded that his exams "went from a B-minus to an A-plus" when he began focusing his off-field questions around conspiracy theories. Rodgers is also a trivia freak, and he appreciates a quarterback who can hew to a strong theme. Geographic questions about the team's next road trip can be fertile ground for the test composer, as can pop culture.

"He's good at history, good at music, good at movies," Harrell says. But it's possible to stump him by leaning into extremely niche subject areas. Rodgers -- despite his famous championship-belt celebration -- is actually weak on professional wrestling knowledge, for instance, so Harrell, who is a die-hard WWE fan, would enrage Rodgers by constantly peppering his tests with questions about, say, WrestleMania V.

As an alternative for those who prefer to avoid challenging Rodgers' general knowledge acumen, Rodgers allows the second part of the quiz to also feature tongue-in-cheek "questions" about top opposing players, as long as there is some component to the question that Rodgers might be able to use on the field. Like everything else, Rodgers wants to challenge the traditional notion of trash-talking -- give me something different I can use, he tells the test makers. Find me something new.

That can be difficult too, though, particularly because Rodgers has played for so long. There are only so many embarrassing photos of Matt Stafford to be found, Callahan says, meaning that often "you had to go deep back into the mid-2000s to find some old MySpace picture that they still have floating around."

Callahan shrugs. With Rodgers, originality is prized above almost all else, so the pressure to learn the offensive scheme in any given week is frequently overshadowed by the pressure to dig up a new, entertaining nugget about Kirk Cousins. "We got pretty good at searching the internet for funny pictures of opposing teams," Callahan says.

EARLIER THIS YEAR, the Packers used their first-round draft pick on Jordan Love, a quarterback seen as a strong contender to be Rodgers' eventual successor. Many wondered whether Rodgers would be offended -- Wallace suggested Rodgers might have been "a little butt-hurt about it" -- and speculated that the selection could have led Rodgers to become overly competitive.

For those who have been in the position of backing up Rodgers before, the notion that the selection would change anything about the way Rodgers approaches his job is absurd. It isn't about competitiveness (after all, Rodgers is already plenty competitive) -- it is, once again, pushing back on the idea that has been accepted. Putting in work on something that seems decided. Rodgers is not simply going to cede his place because it seems that the Packers might have decided the time is coming.

So there will still be tests. There will still be trivia. There will still be moments of extreme social discomfort, like when Callahan was a rookie and Rodgers invited him and the other quarterbacks over for a friendly hang and then brought out his own personal karaoke machine, which tracked and rated each participant. Suddenly, Callahan found himself being forced to try to hit the high notes of Adam Levine on Maroon Five's "She Will Be Loved" (it didn't go well), while Rodgers cackled and then selected a song for himself with a much more reasonable range.

"You could definitely tell that he practiced," Callahan says. "I would also definitely double-check the calibration on that microphone because his score seemed a little too high that day."

Not all quarterbacks would assert their superiority through karaoke contests or authoritatively answering questions about the population density of the greater Houston area (Harrell learned all about that before a Texans game once). But what Love will find, the former backups say, is that those experiences are intensely valuable, if only because they put on display a critical part of what makes Rodgers the star that he is. Thinking counterintuitively is a skill that can be honed just like a seven-step drop, and so whether or not you personally believe that airplanes cause cancer or that there are residents of Mars who are longtime Packers fans, the simple act of pondering -- even for a second -- the possibility that those things might be true uses roughly the same muscle that Rodgers uses when he looks at a disintegrated offensive line and still sees a way to make a play.

Making our brains more elastic, more open to things that are not exactly the way we assume them to be, is the most basic path to creativity. And for Rodgers, creativity is his light.

"He loves seeing guys get outside their comfort zone," Wallace says, "and pushing them to a point where it's, 'Oh, man, I don't do this so well.' Then he wants to see what happens."

That is definitely what took place with Wallace and Hundley in the testing room and Callahan at the karaoke party and Harrell at the Carnation Crush. It is what will happen, over and over, with Love. Rodgers might be deeply cerebral (if not deeply weird), but he is also deeply talented, and there is no doubt those things are connected.

Will being around that help Love's development? Will it change the way he sees the quarterback position? Will it affect his perspective on how to run an offense?

It is difficult to see how it won't. And, knowing Rodgers, it is also difficult to imagine Rodgers not pushing to make Love's learning period last for as long as possible.

"He'll learn," Hundley says. "But I'll tell you what: Jordan is going to be sitting for a while."

Hundley laughs. "Aaron's not going to give up that position, that's for sure."

Dude sounds like a crazy mofo, but the part about the frat party is literally insane lol. Also him wanting the back up QBs to dig up dirt for trash talk is pretty sweet. Should just hire someone to do it. I'll take that job.

I quoted it in case you guys wanted to read the whole thing.

CarlosCarson27 10-21-2020 03:32 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by eDave (Post 15264280)
This dude does this shit all the time and is called out all the time. He's just being as he is.

I'm expressing that it was humorous. I'm not sure why this is a negative to you. You seem to be taking things out of context.
Never once have I been rude or negative to you. Called out? Are we 6th graders on a playground?
I didn't even roast you in your thread. You're looking for negatives where none exist. I don't not like you.

Oh wait..maybe you're referring to OP?

Rain Man 10-21-2020 03:33 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Dante84 (Post 15264287)
About 8-9 years ago, my buddy worked in the athletic department doing donor relations & events for a Big 12 school, and one of his former colleagues (also a friend at this point) went on to join the Packers front office staff in some mid/low level position.

Anyways, my buddy has some down time and decides to take a trip up to Green Bay and visit his friend for a long weekend. He gets off the plane and checks his voicemail, and his friend had some emergency come up and couldn't break away from work to come get him (this was before UBER was in Green Bay, mind you).

He said in the voicemail that one of his coworkers would pick up instead. My buddy saw he had a text from a random number saying "Hey, parked outside near arrivals. Let me know when you're here."

He figured **** it, so he texted the number back saying what he was wearing and where he was standing, and sure as shit, a black SUV pulls up and it's Aaron ****ing Rodgers, picking him up from the airport, as if he was any other random Joe.


That's a great story. It sounds like that guy and Aaron Rodgers were fraternity brothers.

Rain Man 10-21-2020 03:35 PM

Off topic a bit, but I really don't understand the appeal of fraternities. Any time I read anything about a fraternity's activities, I think to myself, "Man, I would have no interest at all in doing that'.

eDave 10-21-2020 03:36 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by CarlosCarson88 (Post 15264380)
I'm expressing that it was humorous. I'm not sure why this is a negative to you. You seem to be taking things out of context.
Never once have I been rude or negative to you. Called out? Are we 6th graders on a playground?
I didn't even roast you in your thread. You're looking for negatives where none exist. I don't not like you.

Oh wait..maybe you're referring to OP?

I wasn't talking about you. I was speaking TO you about OP.

EPodolak 10-21-2020 03:37 PM

An eccentric dude obviously, wouldn't have guessed that.

Simply Red 10-21-2020 03:37 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Rain Man (Post 15264399)
Off topic a bit, but I really don't understand the appeal of fraternities. Any time I read anything about a fraternity's activities, I think to myself, "Man, I would have no interest at all in doing that'.

Totally agree!

CarlosCarson27 10-21-2020 03:39 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by eDave (Post 15264401)
I wasn't talking about you. I was speaking TO you about OP.

Oopsy!

eDave 10-21-2020 03:39 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Rain Man (Post 15264399)
Off topic a bit, but I really don't understand the appeal of fraternities. Any time I read anything about a fraternity's activities, I think to myself, "Man, I would have no interest at all in doing that'.

I joined one and it was beneficial overall. But I hated it, wished I had joined a different one that wanted me, and maintain zero relationships from it, other than my brother.

Jewish Rabbi 10-21-2020 03:39 PM

I didn’t catch the end of the article. Could someone please quote it for me? My phone must be glitching.

CarlosCarson27 10-21-2020 03:41 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Rain Man (Post 15264399)
Off topic a bit, but I really don't understand the appeal of fraternities. Any time I read anything about a fraternity's activities, I think to myself, "Man, I would have no interest at all in doing that'.

In crowd, sheep, popular kids etc etc.

Gotta run with the crowd ,bro

CaliforniaChief 10-21-2020 03:45 PM

I do enjoy him on Pat McAfee's show. It's pretty good stuff, actually.

CarlosCarson27 10-21-2020 03:47 PM

Lol the original post was bad enough. But quoting him in full?
DAMN YOU, GOOD SIR! DAMN YOU!

Otter 10-21-2020 03:47 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Rain Man (Post 15264399)
Off topic a bit, but I really don't understand the appeal of fraternities. Any time I read anything about a fraternity's activities, I think to myself, "Man, I would have no interest at all in doing that'.

Consider yourself on double secret probation, Mr. Rain Man!

BWillie 10-21-2020 03:51 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Titty Meat (Post 15264234)
I'm not reading all that

I got 33% of the way thru.

KChiefs1 10-21-2020 04:09 PM

Sounds like a fun guy.

CarlosCarson27 10-21-2020 04:12 PM

In other words, Rodgers is secretly gay

SuperBowl4 10-21-2020 04:13 PM

AARON ROGERS is a CALIFORNIA GOLDEN BEAR JUST LIKE MARSHAWN LYNCH, TONY GONZALEZ, and many other great NFL players. GO BEARS and **** the HATERS! :thumb:

dlphg9 10-21-2020 04:27 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by eDave (Post 15264401)
I wasn't talking about you. I was speaking TO you about OP.

Damn dude. I thought we were friends.

Mecca 10-21-2020 04:27 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by idrapethat (Post 15264200)
Rodgers said "my down years are career years for most other qb's" on national tv in the week leading up to his 38-10 embarrassment.

It was still an accurate statement.

eDave 10-21-2020 04:27 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by dlphg9 (Post 15264532)
Damn dude. I thought we were friends.

We are. Stop being a dick.

Why Not? 10-21-2020 04:31 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Rain Man (Post 15264399)
Off topic a bit, but I really don't understand the appeal of fraternities. Any time I read anything about a fraternity's activities, I think to myself, "Man, I would have no interest at all in doing that'.

Never went to college but the thing I regret the least (tongue in cheek, I regret nothing about that) is “missing out” on being in a fraternity.

Bearcat 10-21-2020 04:52 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Rain Man (Post 15264399)
Off topic a bit, but I really don't understand the appeal of fraternities. Any time I read anything about a fraternity's activities, I think to myself, "Man, I would have no interest at all in doing that'.

I rushed my freshman year with seriously zero interest in joining, but there was a lot of free food. I'm sure there are less douchey frats out there, but not the ones I checked out.

One guy told me "when you're out there, building a deck on the frat house, there's just this bond"..... and I translated that as, uh, I'm paying you fees so I can build you a deck on your house with a bunch of douchebags?

Sadly, a high school friend joined one and never really met up with him after that.... the few times we'd show up at their house, it was like being figured out in someone's Inception dream.

dlphg9 10-21-2020 04:53 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by eDave (Post 15264535)
We are. Stop being a dick.

I honestly can't remember any other times that I've posted a very large article like this.

Rain Man 10-21-2020 05:01 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Otter (Post 15264436)
Consider yourself on double secret probation, Mr. Rain Man!

Oh, gosh. I'm going to be paddled now, aren't I?

CarlosCarson27 10-21-2020 05:01 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Bearcat (Post 15264604)
I rushed my freshman year with seriously zero interest in joining, but there was a lot of free food. I'm sure there are less douchey frats out there, but not the ones I checked out.

One guy told me "when you're out there, building a deck on the frat house, there's just this bond"..... and I translated that as, uh, I'm paying you fees so I can build you a deck on your house with a bunch of douchebags?

Sadly, a high school friend joined one and never really met up with him after that.... the few times we'd show up at their house, it was like being figured out in someone's Inception dream.

BUT THERE WAS A LOT OF FREE FOOD.

dlphg9 10-21-2020 05:03 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Bearcat (Post 15264604)
I rushed my freshman year with seriously zero interest in joining, but there was a lot of free food. I'm sure there are less douchey frats out there, but not the ones I checked out.

One guy told me "when you're out there, building a deck on the frat house, there's just this bond"..... and I translated that as, uh, I'm paying you fees so I can build you a deck on your house with a bunch of douchebags?

Sadly, a high school friend joined one and never really met up with him after that.... the few times we'd show up at their house, it was like being figured out in someone's Inception dream.

Nothing can break the bond between a couple of pals that drank piss together to impress some megadouches, so you could have the privilege of sexually assaulting the girls on campus and ramming a broom stick up a pledges ass all in the name of Kappa Kappa Kappa!

htismaqe 10-21-2020 05:12 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by dlphg9 (Post 15264636)
Nothing can break the bond between a couple of pals that drank piss together to impress some megadouches, so you could have the privilege of sexually assaulting the girls on campus and ramming a broom stick up a pledges ass all in the name of Kappa Kappa Kappa!

I was in a fraternity and none of that ever happened.

We had beach parties in our basement, complete with several tons of sand we dumped through the windows. Smoked, and sold, a lot of weed. Drank a lot of 40's and ate a lot of Twinkies for breakfast.

I guess we did do a few panty raids and pull a few fire alarms but that was about the extent of it.

eDave 10-21-2020 05:16 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by dlphg9 (Post 15264636)
Nothing can break the bond between a couple of pals that drank piss together to impress some megadouches, so you could have the privilege of sexually assaulting the girls on campus and ramming a broom stick up a pledges ass all in the name of Kappa Kappa Kappa!

The real bonding happens when it's your classes turn to haze the pledges for the first time.

Rain Man 10-21-2020 05:18 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by eDave (Post 15264414)
I joined one and it was beneficial overall. But I hated it, wished I had joined a different one that wanted me, and maintain zero relationships from it, other than my brother.

Could you switch, or do they hunt you down and kill you for being a traitor?

One of my best high school friends joined a frat, and to my shock he loved it. He didn't seem like the fraternity type at all. So like anything else, I'm sure that individual experiences can vary wildly.

I'll admit that I had a very bad formative experience that made me despise fraternities. My father owned a used car lot that was half a block away from the TKE frat house. The fraternity members would come out in the middle of the night and kick out the windows of his cars just for fun. He got several of them arrested eventually, but the president of the fraternity and other officers lied to the police to try to cover for the criminals who got caught. The TKE house was nothing but an organized criminal gang, so that was my perception of all fraternities when I went into college.

Kman34 10-21-2020 05:19 PM

Watkins and Rogers would be best friends....

eDave 10-21-2020 05:28 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Rain Man (Post 15264668)
Could you switch, or do they hunt you down and kill you for being a traitor?

One of my best high school friends joined a frat, and to my shock he loved it. He didn't seem like the fraternity type at all. So like anything else, I'm sure that individual experiences can vary wildly.

I'll admit that I had a very bad formative experience that made me despise fraternities. My father owned a used car lot that was half a block away from the TKE frat house. The fraternity members would come out in the middle of the night and kick out the windows of his cars just for fun. He got several of them arrested eventually, but the president of the fraternity and other officers lied to the police to try to cover for the criminals who got caught. The TKE house was nothing but an organized criminal gang, so that was my perception of all fraternities when I went into college.

I could surely have just dropped, sat out and pledged differently next round. Saw it done and the animosity between him at our frat was large and carried over to his new frat. Stupid stuff. They did want to kick me out as a pledge but my brother said if I go he goes.

CarlosCarson27 10-21-2020 05:33 PM

The thing is,what do they do now? I'm assuming it's more wussy now after possible deaths or what ever from years ago

Bearcat 10-21-2020 05:46 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by dlphg9 (Post 15264636)
Nothing can break the bond between a couple of pals that drank piss together to impress some megadouches, so you could have the privilege of sexually assaulting the girls on campus and ramming a broom stick up a pledges ass all in the name of Kappa Kappa Kappa!

My freshman roommate was a TKE (just like Aaron Rodgers! :eek: ) and that chapter got shutdown years later for sexually assaulting girls. A few guys in that frat, including my roommate, made me feel like the university's degrees were participation certificates, even though I'm sure they all cheated with each other (apparently a benefit of being in a frat?) for their communications degrees.

Needless to say, I'm not exactly the type who thinks someone needs a college degree for certain jobs or that it's any indication of intelligence. At all.

Megatron96 10-21-2020 06:05 PM

In college, free food is a real thing. Or it was when I was in school.

I never rushed, but my brother did. Worked out for him as he made tons of contacts and those relationships have served him well in his career.

As for the article, I guess I just don't see much of an issue. Rodgers didn't do anything that I can point to and say, "oh, that's beyond the pale." It reads like typical college/frat type shenanigans. And this was pretty early in his career right? So he wasn't that many years removed from college? I don't see how this is weird.

Easy 6 10-21-2020 06:17 PM

Having now read it, I actually like him a lot more

Still an aloof looking prick at times, but this shows a more relatable side of him

He's an egotistical mfer, no doubt the signing of Love is whats behind his more engaged and intense looking start this year... but maybe he's not all bad after all

seclark 10-21-2020 07:11 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by htismaqe (Post 15264652)
I was in a fraternity and none of that ever happened.

We had beach parties in our basement, complete with several tons of sand we dumped through the windows. Smoked, and sold, a lot of weed. Drank a lot of 40's and ate a lot of Twinkies for breakfast.

I guess we did do a few panty raids and pull a few fire alarms but that was about the extent of it.

Pretty much the same here
We were the geeks
Highest gpa
Lots of weed
Couldn’t score with the ugliest castaways on campus, though
Sec

tyecopeland 10-21-2020 07:47 PM

Found it odd he's a possible chemtrail conspiracy nut.

CarlosCarson27 10-21-2020 07:54 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by tyecopeland (Post 15264967)
Found it odd he's a possible chemtrail conspiracy nut.

Govt ready said they can seed clouds or change weather. Chemtrails aren't a conspiracy.. they are reality

tyecopeland 10-21-2020 07:57 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by CarlosCarson88 (Post 15264974)
Govt ready said they can seed clouds or change weather. Chemtrails aren't a conspiracy.. they are reality

I dont find it odd at all that you are a chemtrail conspiracy nut.

SuperBowl4 10-21-2020 07:59 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by tyecopeland (Post 15264967)
Found it odd he's a possible chemtrail conspiracy nut.

It's called WEATHER MODIFICATION. You should read a book about it. Your tax dollars at work.

Bearcat 10-21-2020 07:59 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by CarlosCarson88 (Post 15264633)
BUT THERE WAS A LOT OF FREE FOOD.

Correct.

Megatron96 10-21-2020 07:59 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by CarlosCarson88 (Post 15264974)
Govt ready said they can seed clouds or change weather. Chemtrails aren't a conspiracy.. they are reality

:facepalm:

No, chemtrails are not a reality. I fly commercially. All of my best friends are in aviation. We would know. Chemtrails are not a thing.

Sending you your custom-made magical tin foil hat tomorrow. Remit your $2000 asap.

CarlosCarson27 10-21-2020 08:13 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Megatron96 (Post 15264985)
:facepalm:

No, chemtrails are not a reality. I fly commercially. All of my best friends are in aviation. We would know. Chemtrails are not a thing.

Sending you your custom-made magical tin foil hat tomorrow. Remit your $2000 asap.

You fly commercially. Yeah, so? It's called military.

Look dude, you don't know anything about this. Knowing how to fly doesn't mean you know anything about govt or military..

CarlosCarson27 10-21-2020 08:34 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Bearcat (Post 15264984)
Correct.

I'm just saying, that's a valid reason ,if any lol

Megatron96 10-21-2020 08:34 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by CarlosCarson88 (Post 15265008)
You fly commercially. Yeah, so? It's called military.
Are you disputing govt? They have in fact said they can alter weather.
Look dude, you don't know shit about this. Knowing how to fly doesn't mean you know shit about govt or military.

Ah, the military literally doesn't fly enough to change the weather with 'chemtrails.'

And most of my buddies in aviation flew military. Everything fromC-130s to F-16Cs. Not to mention all the guys I know that actually service aircraft or are involved in fueling logistics.

You couldn't keep it quiet anyway, not at the commercial level. Way too many people involved at all levels to get away with it for more than about a week.

In fact, I have a buddy that actually services military airbases fueling stations all across the Southwest; we've had the discussion about what kinds of fuels are used by the military vs. commercial, whatever.

Sorry to burst your bubble, but there's no "weather-changing" additives in Jet-A. Other than the fuel itself, of course.

dlphg9 10-21-2020 08:45 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Megatron96 (Post 15264772)
In college, free food is a real thing. Or it was when I was in school.

I never rushed, but my brother did. Worked out for him as he made tons of contacts and those relationships have served him well in his career.

As for the article, I guess I just don't see much of an issue. Rodgers didn't do anything that I can point to and say, "oh, that's beyond the pale." It reads like typical college/frat type shenanigans. And this was pretty early in his career right? So he wasn't that many years removed from college? I don't see how this is weird.

He was a 27 year old and decided to make up a fake fraternity between him and Graham Harrell. Then played it off like he was actually in that frat so that he could learn more about said frat lol

CarlosCarson27 10-21-2020 08:49 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by tyecopeland (Post 15264977)
I dont find it odd at all that you are a chemtrail conspiracy nut.

I'm not actually. It's just a side note. Govt has shown they are capable of complete covert dishonesty about basically everything.
Rodgers doesn't give a shit about chemtrails. They put that in articles to make people discredit anyone else they point at , calling them a conspiracy theorist about anything.. It doesn't matter whether they exist or not. Govt lies about anything and everything.

Bearcat 10-21-2020 08:56 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by CarlosCarson88 (Post 15265048)
I'm just saying, that's a valid reason ,if any lol

A small part of me wanted to give the whole thing a chance, but computer geeks and fraternities don't really mix... and when it came to my preconceived notion that frats were just a bunch of douche canoes, they did not disappoint.

If there was one thing I'd like to have back from college days though, it's my metabolism.

Megatron96 10-21-2020 08:56 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by dlphg9 (Post 15265076)
He was a 27 year old and decided to make up a fake fraternity between him and Graham Harrell. Then played it off like he was actually in that frat so that he could learn more about said frat lol

And? 27 isn't that old. A lot of people graduate after they're 21 or 22. Or go to get more education, do an internship, or a Masters/PhD or whatever. I didn't, but I had several friends that basically stayed in school after graduating from undergrad for up to 6 years. So I hung out near the university all the time years after I graduated. I even went to several frat parties until I was maybe 26?

To me it sounds like they had an inside joke, and then circumstances put them in that position to go to a party, and what 25-27 year olds don't want to go to a party populated by young girls?

Basically they pulled a prank or whatever and got away with it. Not even that impressive a prank in terms of scale.

Good for them.

Rain Man 10-21-2020 09:03 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Megatron96 (Post 15264772)
In college, free food is a real thing. Or it was when I was in school.

....


Half the reason that I took ROTC courses in college was the free coat and boots.

CarlosCarson27 10-21-2020 09:05 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Rain Man (Post 15265106)
Half the reason that I took ROTC courses in college was the free coat and boots.

Seriously? Really?

Rain Man 10-21-2020 09:08 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by CarlosCarson88 (Post 15265110)
Seriously? Really?

It was nice stuff. Military grade.

threebag 10-21-2020 11:38 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by staylor26 (Post 15264261)
Cliff notes please?

dlphag Threads Suck

Dunerdr 10-22-2020 06:39 AM

The Chem trails is the only weird thing really to me. He was a young overly eccentric cali dude who took a inside imaginary frat joke way to far, possibly to make his back up uncomfortable. As far as aliens the govt basically came out and said they are real a few months ago. Listening to him on the Pat Mcafee show ive realized hes not a bad dude hes just different than me. He is pretty entertaining, i enjoy hearing his view of the world.

htismaqe 10-22-2020 06:49 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by seclark (Post 15264904)
Pretty much the same here
We were the geeks
Highest gpa
Lots of weed
Couldn’t score with the ugliest castaways on campus, though
Sec

Sell the weed, don't just smoke it. ;)

seclark 10-22-2020 07:24 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by htismaqe (Post 15265462)
Sell the weed, don't just smoke it. ;)

40 years later, now he tells me
sec

Pasta Little Brioni 10-22-2020 07:48 AM

So, he had a bit of fun? Seems opposite of the persona he's perceived as

KChiefs1 12-02-2020 12:10 PM

<blockquote class="twitter-tweet"><p lang="en" dir="ltr">.<a href="https://twitter.com/AaronRodgers12?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">@AaronRodgers12</a> turns 37 today �� <br><br>Never forget his beer chugging competition with <a href="https://twitter.com/DavidBakhtiari?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">@DavidBakhtiari</a> ���� (��: <a href="https://twitter.com/Bucks?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">@Bucks</a>) <a href="https://t.co/uUGY4LCHrq">pic.twitter.com/uUGY4LCHrq</a></p>&mdash; ESPN (@espn) <a href="https://twitter.com/espn/status/1334155384001613827?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">December 2, 2020</a></blockquote> <script async src="https://platform.twitter.com/widgets.js" charset="utf-8"></script>

ThaVirus 12-02-2020 12:14 PM

Chugging beer is dumb af but idk why he’d even try if he had an idea it’d end like that lol

Sorce 12-02-2020 12:36 PM

https://i.imgur.com/8V3USgQ.jpg

TLDR, but I felt the need to add to this thread.


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