Business Insider writes of the sale of the Brady Bunch house for 3.2 million dollars.
The home was renovated by the previous owner, HGTV, who matched the interior from the television show inside the real home.
The 3.2 million dollar price was less than the 3.5 million that HGTV paid for the home, but it made money from the reality show that filmed the renovation.
The new owner is planning to allow fans to tour the home and meet cast members by entering contests that will benefit various charities.
The New York (Upper East Side ) Townhouse that served as the exterior for the 1961 film Breakfast at Tiffany's has hit the real estate market.
Decor Magazine reports that the famous Tiffany Blue door welcomes a home that was renovated a few years ago, adding an elevator, a basement, a wine cellar, and a fifth floor with a terrace.
Asking price? A cool fifteen million.
Smithsonian Magazine writes of the development of "Robo-Bunnies" in Florida to draw the invasive Burmese Python out of hiding.
The robot rabbits are built with internal heaters and motors to replicate the movement and warmth that pythons can detect and are used to hunt prey.
If successful, it could see an increase in pythons being removed from areas where they don't belong.
We finish with three articles from The Athletic.
Former NBA coach George Karl feels his voice is ignored by the NBA and its teams.
Karl has suffered from health issues in recent years, but the controversial Hall of Famer still fires away on social media and his 2017 book, which seemed to take shots at everyone in the game.
Karl would be a person worth listening to, but he has burned lots of bridges in the game, so I'm not sure that he'll have the chance to be more than an advisor at his age (74).
The Buffalo Bills are a franchise that draws a chunk of their ticket-buyers from nearby Canada, a country that Donald Trump has enjoyed tweaking often since his return to the Presidency.
This article looks at the financial aspects of what could sting the Bills, should fewer of their Canadian fans cross into New York for Bills game.
The Bills claim eight thousand of their season ticket holder are Canadian residents and the money they spend are safe but the non-season ticket holders could reduce with the extra hassle crossing the border and the current climate between the two countries.
It also discusses the NFL's marketing program in Canada, Buffalo fans past concerns about nearby Toronto, and how the Lions and Seahawks are doing with their Canadian neighbors.
The story of the rare baseball card from the Goudey company in 1933/34 is a good one and involves Cleveland Hall of Fame second baseman Napoleon Lajoie.
The set was missing a number and collectors beseiged the company for the card to finish the set.
The company never released the card in packs and only people that wrote the company received a card to finish the set.
The card attached most of the cards to a paper clip which means that very few cards of the already limited card are in top condition.

No comments:
Post a Comment