Russell Wilson sightings

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SantaClaraHawk

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toffee

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SantaClaraHawk

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May be Payton just in awe of a star, a Hollywood celebrity. And Payton hated that he couldn't handle the situation.

Payton has already had a movie made about him. His retirement from coaching will likely be on his own timeline. He will write a book and be on podcasts as long as he wants to be, then fade from public view like Mike Shanahan. That’ll be Paytons post nfl life, just as Wentz’s will likely feature hunting podcasts and perhaps cabela sponsorships.

With Wilson? Shady charity deals as in the latest pr release stating Russ had helped raise 21.6m and his foundation was taking half of it. The campaign was to award some kid with the Most Special Award for which he was awarded 25,000 and a slot as a 3Brand model in a commercial. Literally, he’s working for them as part of his prize.

It certainly doesn’t seem the type of campaign people would flock to donate 21,600,000 to, does it?
 

evergreen

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It's a tarnished sheen for sure. Earlier there was talk about Moon. It seemed like a lock that he would come to Seattle after his five Grey Cup wins. But no! His wife didn't like the racism here. I was like, "what are you talking about, Houston is down south!" And He went to UW. Rose Bowl? Hello? What a complete bummer. It would've been right with the great 1984 defense too.
My friend John had tickets to UW games and he would take each of us a few times. He sat next to this DB Cooper type dud that brought a brief case in with 18 bud cans in it. I'm talking '78 rose bowl season. And towards the ens of his beers this DB Cooper looking dude was throwing the N word around loudly. So I guess she was right?
But with Wilson to start we had anywhere from four to six years of absolutely no QB envy. Never was jealous of Rogers or anyone with him. He beat Brady, Watson, MaHomes, Rapeburger, Kapernick-all of them. Then Watson got my attention and then Lamar beat us and was the new it. Even though the envy would've been for TB.
 

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Which players, exactly?


What players have objected?

What Payton said has likely been said so many times behind the scenes among coaches that he thought at the time it was normal.
For sure it has been called out behind the scenes, still pretty low brow / petty to do it publicly.
Miami should have set the scoring record on him.
 
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NoGain

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How much of Russell Wilson's foundation is made up of his own money?
 
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SantaClaraHawk

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How much of Russell Wilson's foundation is made up of his own money?

Is the 11M of the 21.6m he just raised for his own foundation his own money? What was the outlay spent to get that, I wonder? Was an island involved?
 
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NoGain

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Is the 11M of the 21.6m he just raised for his own foundation his own money? What was the outlay spent to get that, I wonder? Was an island involved?
I only asked the question because I don't really know much at all how these celebrity foundations work. Reading up on RW's foundation, all I found on a shallow dive was that his has a poor grade in terms of financial effectiveness, where only something like 21 cents of every dollar finds their charitable target. The rest is absorbed by operational/overhead costs.

What I found a bit strange was what comprised these operational costs? As far as I was able to discern, the foundation has only three salaried employees, a least at the time of the articles I was looking at. I guess the rest would be things like advertising, office expenses, possibly travel expenses for RW and these employees, possibly money spent wooing potential donors, and the like. To me, I had a hard time seeing how 79 cents of every accrued dollar or thereabouts was justifiable, a least once the money coming in began to shrink (or I thought should shrink) these operational costs in comparison.

Like I said, I'm kind of a dunce about these things, even though I once worked for a NPO in my youth.

I had to ask the simple question: How much of his actual "own money" did he spend in establishing the foundation, and how much of his own money does he continue to enrich the foundation with on a yearly basis? Poking around, I couldn't find an answer to this question, but admittedly didn't spend much of any time doing a deeper dive.

Point being from the crap I've just written, it sure started to seem to me like his foundation was a lot more about promoting his image, or "brand", and possibly enriching the people (friends?) he chose to be amongst the few employees of the foundation, and a lot less about financially aiding the various charities his foundation financially supports.

I'm now starting to become dubiously skeptical about these celebrity foundations in general.

Sorry for the long-winded post. :)
 

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Speaking as a member of the Wilsoncologists Club (WC), I believe that Wilson's priorities have always been:

1. Wealth
2. Fame

All the rest, MVP, all-pro, Hollywood wife, God, etc., were means to achieve wealth and fame. At this point, he is doing quite well wealth wise with a net worth of over $200mil, but not in fame. Here, on football matters, he never received votes for MVP, selected as second-team all-pro once, he was ditched by his hand-picked QB guru Peyton. On social stuff, he's a corny laughing stock at best, a con artist-ish character at worst.

About wealth, he has more than $100 mil, but at $100m and 5% return. He will have about $10k a day after tax "spending" money. That obviously isn't stopping him from squeezing the last penny from his so-called charity endeavors.
 

Cyrus12

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I only asked the question because I don't really know much at all how these celebrity foundations work. Reading up on RW's foundation, all I found on a shallow dive was that his has a poor grade in terms of financial effectiveness, where only something like 21 cents of every dollar finds their charitable target. The rest is absorbed by operational/overhead costs.

What I found a bit strange was what comprised these operational costs? As far as I was able to discern, the foundation has only three salaried employees, a least at the time of the articles I was looking at. I guess the rest would be things like advertising, office expenses, possibly travel expenses for RW and these employees, possibly money spent wooing potential donors, and the like. To me, I had a hard time seeing how 79 cents of every accrued dollar or thereabouts was justifiable, a least once the money coming in began to shrink (or I thought should shrink) these operational costs in comparison.

Like I said, I'm kind of a dunce about these things, even though I once worked for a NPO in my youth.

I had to ask the simple question: How much of his actual "own money" did he spend in establishing the foundation, and how much of his own money does he continue to enrich the foundation with on a yearly basis? Poking around, I couldn't find an answer to this question, but admittedly didn't spend much of any time doing a deeper dive.

Point being from the crap I've just written, it sure started to seem to me like his foundation was a lot more about promoting his image, or "brand", and possibly enriching the people (friends?) he chose to be amongst the few employees of the foundation, and a lot less about financially aiding the various charities his foundation financially supports.

I'm now starting to become dubiously skeptical about these celebrity foundations in general.

Sorry for the long-winded post. :)
Sounds criminal...how can a man with such high moral Fibre do such a thing..
 

Cyrus12

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Speaking as a member of the Wilsoncologists Club (WC), I believe that Wilson's priorities have always been:

1. Wealth
2. Fame

All the rest, MVP, all-pro, Hollywood wife, God, etc., were means to achieve wealth and fame. At this point, he is doing quite well wealth wise with a net worth of over $200mil, but not in fame. Here, on football matters, he never received votes for MVP, selected as second-team all-pro once, he was ditched by his hand-picked QB guru Peyton. On social stuff, he's a corny laughing stock at best, a con artist-ish character at worst.

About wealth, he has more than $100 mil, but at $100m and 5% return. He will have about $10k a day after tax "spending" money. That obviously isn't stopping him from squeezing the last penny from his so-called charity endeavors.
Ciara takes half of that in the divorce...agree with assessment his dire push to be popular really backfired.
 

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We had a thing a while back about his charity getting in trouble with
the IRS, it's not coming out of own pocket - Zero, it's more like a
slush fund of sorts, they were charging vacations, travel ect as business
expenses related to the charity, I'm not digging up that old thread but it's
here somewhere.
@SantaClaraHawk, I remember you being in there, it's been a few years.
 
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SantaClaraHawk

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I only asked the question because I don't really know much at all how these celebrity foundations work. Reading up on RW's foundation, all I found on a shallow dive was that his has a poor grade in terms of financial effectiveness, where only something like 21 cents of every dollar finds their charitable target. The rest is absorbed by operational/overhead costs.

What I found a bit strange was what comprised these operational costs? As far as I was able to discern, the foundation has only three salaried employees, a least at the time of the articles I was looking at. I guess the rest would be things like advertising, office expenses, possibly travel expenses for RW and these employees, possibly money spent wooing potential donors, and the like. To me, I had a hard time seeing how 79 cents of every accrued dollar or thereabouts was justifiable, a least once the money coming in began to shrink (or I thought should shrink) these operational costs in comparison.

Like I said, I'm kind of a dunce about these things, even though I once worked for a NPO in my youth.

I had to ask the simple question: How much of his actual "own money" did he spend in establishing the foundation, and how much of his own money does he continue to enrich the foundation with on a yearly basis? Poking around, I couldn't find an answer to this question, but admittedly didn't spend much of any time doing a deeper dive.

Point being from the crap I've just written, it sure started to seem to me like his foundation was a lot more about promoting his image, or "brand", and possibly enriching the people (friends?) he chose to be amongst the few employees of the foundation, and a lot less about financially aiding the various charities his foundation financially supports.

I'm now starting to become dubiously skeptical about these celebrity foundations in general.

Sorry for the long-winded post. :)

Don’t be sorry. The fact that there aren’t even industry rags like chronicle on philanthropy not asking these questions leaves anyone with a question as to whom to trust.
 
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SantaClaraHawk

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We had a thing a while back about his charity getting in trouble with
the IRS, it's not coming out of own pocket - Zero, it's more like a
slush fund of sorts, they were charging vacations, travel ect as business
expenses related to the charity, I'm not digging up that old thread but it's
here somewhere.
@SantaClaraHawk, I remember you being in there, it's been a few years.

Yeah, I remember it. The Arizona republic did the investigation that’s still out there for everyone to see. And in the years since, he has only gotten worse. 21.6m raised with half to his foundation for promoting a $25k prize special needs pageant.
 
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SantaClaraHawk

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Got hero ball, will travel.

Joking aside, Russ
featuring starters at his “celebrity” wife’s birthday party for media consumption illustrates why Russ needs to go or at least be taken down a notch. It’s not like you’d see Drew lock or Jalen Milroe or even Joe Flacco doing this.

Everyone saw the player, coach and fan reaction when Russ was called upon for one unsuccessful pass. Winston should be qb2 already. But here like in Pittsburgh, Russ manages to hold on to a better title than he shoukd have.
 

AROS

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Russ quite simply can’t seem to help himself. Despite the ubiquitous narrative highlighting his savant-level tone deafness with a plethora of evidence, he just keeps providing comedic material to the masses.

I’ve reached the stage of serious concern for the man’s mental state.
 

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