Tim?
Who's Tim?
Tim?
Who's Tim?
It really isn't. Thats like saying shut NSC down after another binfest about Baldock.
There's a lot of interesting debate on Twitter, up-to-the-second news, a chance to interact with other fans and journalists, and loads of videos of people having accidents. Anyone who follows STANLOI knows by his very nature he's going to have one of his regular meltdowns at some point and start gobbing off, because the bloke is a weapons grade COCKWOMBLE and just cannot help himself. There's an easy way around it though - unfollow. Just try to follow people who are interesting, amusing, articulate, funny, or ideally a combination of all of those. Twitter is what you make of it.
I wonder if there would be the same outrage if he loudly suggested to Leeds fans that Jimmy Saville was one of their own? After all that could be seen as pretty low, particularly during a televised game...
...oh hang on...
not sure you can honestly attribute quality debate to a product that restricts you to 100+ characters. It is what you make it, agreed, but unlike the web, don't most just make a mess of it? At least websites like NSC have rules and moderators usually. Twitter seems to quickly cross the line into legal action. Bit like guns. There's a sizeable bunch of idiots out there so best restrict use heavily! Anyway, it's here to stay and I'm not missing out on anything I'm sure of that. Except arguing with former footballers it seems
If Collymore was ever as good at football as he is at talking utter shite he'd have won a Ballon d'Or.
Huge fan of this turn of phrase... And agree. To be honest, I don't really get that involved in tweeting (comparitively), but it's the first place I go for football news.
But when the North stand sang it it was BANTER.
not sure you can honestly attribute quality debate to a product that restricts you to 100+ characters. It is what you make it, agreed, but unlike the web, don't most just make a mess of it? At least websites like NSC have rules and moderators usually. Twitter seems to quickly cross the line into legal action. Bit like guns. There's a sizeable bunch of idiots out there so best restrict use heavily! Anyway, it's here to stay and I'm not missing out on anything I'm sure of that. Except arguing with former footballers it seems
I think there's a few differences here.
We're all guilty of acting like wallies at football and saying things in the heat of the moment (usually beer-driven) that you wouldn't ordinarily say and not directly to people face to face. I've said things at football that I now wish I hadn't and certainly now wouldn't sing that Savile song. Other people will sing it in the heat of the moment.
Last night though it's clear that Collymore went looking to pick a fight with Derby fans. He was the one who instigated the argument and the one who first went nuclear with that "joke". Fair enough, it's base and a low blow but the Savile chant was just as bad, however Collymore describes himself as 'the best football broadcaster in Britain'. He also describes himself as a journalist, a mental health campaigner and has moralised on many topics on Twitter, in print and on air. He clearly sees himself as an important and influential person and he makes lots of money from it.
So when he starts winding up Derby fans, one of whom makes a fairly innocuous comment and Collymore responds completely OTT with a comment about a Derby fan who murdered his 6 children and then carries on fuelling the fire with more arguments, threats and suchlike you have to wonder if either he is a very bad judge of what is socially acceptable or he deliberately manufactured an argument (coincidentally he recently started a new digital radio show). Either way, he's crossed a line and used Twitter to do it and if a QPR fan can get a lengthy ban for tweeting that he is glad that Knockaert's dad is dead and a young footballer can get the sack for tweeting about another footballer's stillborn son then what price is a tweet from a self-proclaimed senior football broadcaster making jokes about a rival club's fan who murdered his own children?
Wife beating c***
The Katie Hopkins of the football world?
We seem to live in a world now where reactions are polarised, and there's no sense of proportionality.
I'm not defending Collymore. He shouldn't have said it, there's no defence from a rational person, he should also know that with fame and fortune come responsibility. Having seen his consequent tweets he's backed himself into a corner and is acting like a complete cock.
At the same time I'm genuinely not comfortable with trial of people who post tweets, which as you correctly state yourself, wouldn't be said in a face to face conversation. The QPR fan in relation to Knockaert was a stupid little boy, but IMO didn't need a visit from the police. Andre Gray made a moronic tweet six years ago, it doesn't justify the FA giving him a long ban this season. I've tweeted some crap myself (as well as plenty of posts on NSCand cringed when I've looked at it when calmer.
I
We seem to live in a world now where reactions are polarised, and there's no sense of proportionality.