It's finally here. The signal that spring will come eventually, the start of the NASCAR Season. Really it started last weekend when I actually fell asleep to the Rolex 24 hour race @ Daytona. I had a small ego boost when Mazda won the GT division with their RX-8.
So I'm going to watch the race this afternoon. With the freeview of Hotpass I can watch an isolation cam of Stewart, Earnhardt Jr, Gordon & Harvick.
I've secretely been into racing for about 10 years now. I started out just watching just the "open wheel" cars such as Indy/Champ cars and Formula One. Then for some reason I just got hooked on the popular trend. Having all the good open wheel drivers go over the Nascar helped as well. Especially my driver Tony Stewart who started off in the IRL and has not looked back since. It is kind of scary that this year's Daytona 500 is going to have more former Indy 500 winners starting than the Actually Indy 500 will in May. It just shows how the landscape has changed.
So Yea, that's what I'm going to be doing for the next few hours, watching 43 cars make left hand turns all afternoon...It is the biggest Spectator sport hands down & actually you can make the case that it bumped hockey out of it's place in the "4 Major Pro Sports" just on TV Revenue alone. So Yea I have been sucked in to the phenomena that is NASCAR. Although I did like it back in the day when the sponsors were extremely potent cigarettes [Winston] & low value beer [Busch]; instead of Cellular Phones [Sprint/Nextel] and Insurance[Nationwide]
The other story line is the arrival of Toyota as a competitive
manufacturer. Last year they were almost kicked out for "cheating" but to be honest it was more of a xenophobic thing than anything else & them not knowing the rules. Now Toyota won the Camping World 300 yesterday when Tony Stewart led from Pole to Finish. I just find it ironic as GM tries to shed the last vestiges of the ultimate blue collar job with it's latest buy out package to close the gap on one of the biggest corporate losses last quarter. While at the same time they are losing ground not only in market share in the USA, but the one showcase for it's products where Chevys once dominated.
In all Go #20 in your Joe Gibbs Toyota!!!
I think they could get the asking price or at least close to it. The reason I say that is the Beer place is all ready there and a corner is a great place for another business and with it being mixed use you might be able to make up your money. If you where going to start a buisness (and had the money) it might not be a bad place to start it since you could rent out other spots make more money. That being said "the elmwood strip" has a lot of overturn in terms of companies and because of that I think the building is over priced, but that doesn't mean someone won't pay it.
"The Lesches Group, a Brooklyn-based real estate firm, is marketing the Buffalo building on Loopnet.com, a national real estate Internet site. The recently posted ad notes that the property is located in Buffalo’s Elmwood Village, a neighborhood that was named one of the nation’s Top 10 neighborhoods by the American Planning Association."
They forget the part about how everything else is moving out of the village to cheaper places like Hertel.