- Jul 24, 2018
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Well you know it is all about you and your love for Nintendo.....Just sayin' they probably wouldn't have done that if you weren't around. :fight: :grin:So why they gotta tease us like that?
It seems as if Stan Thomas has finally given up the game in Orlando.
A bunch of assignments were posted for AFF Universal (the lender that's been suing Stan Thomas in Orlando recently) and it appears that Stan Thomas' remaining land in Orlando is now held by Gamma Real Estate, a lender out of New York under their GRE Delta LLC.
So we might see some parcels hit the market again soon. Universal would probably want those 2 large parcels on Universal Blvd. that they didn't get last time if this is indeed the case.
Out of curiosity..where, are those two large parcels?
Seeing this makes me feel that Universal should reach out to Rosen about partnering with Shingle Creek a la Swan and Dolphin, but not sure if the deal with Loew's would allow it.
It'd be those red parcels that changed hands if such a transaction did occur.
I'd assume Universal would want those 2 larger ones on Universal Blvd.
Seeing this makes me feel that Universal should reach out to Rosen about partnering with Shingle Creek a la Swan and Dolphin, but not sure if the deal with Loew's would allow it.
Both the large parcels seem like necessities. Will be interested to see how it plays outThat eastern parcel (right) seems like a no-brainer... but we still don’t know their current plan so maybe not.
Let me rephrase: If it’s not ready for info to release in 2018, why say you’ll release info in 2018.Because things aren't ready yet?
Although, Dave is probably right. The closest we will get to see Nintendo will either be by Hollywood by a surprise..or by Osaka, and that it'd be a kickstart for pushing the land for a 2020 launch.
Pretty much2019 Blog Post: "Nintendo this year, we promise!"
It'd be those red parcels that changed hands if such a transaction did occur.
I'd assume Universal would want those 2 larger ones on Universal Blvd.
When I read bots were starting to write articles the first site I thought of was the motley fool. That site seems to exist just to have content available for anything that could get clicks. I am not sure that humans actually write all of their stuff.
I’m convinced that humans write their articles.When I read bots were starting to write articles the first site I thought of was the motley fool. That site seems to exist just to have content available for anything that could get clicks. I am not sure that humans actually write all of their stuff.
I could see a bot writing most of the articles and a human editor covering up the imperfections. If the bot were good enough a site could churn out a crazy number of articles with little overhead. If the reddit TL,DR bot can summarize other sites articles decently some site could even just yank shorter versions of everyone else's content.I’m convinced that humans write their articles.
I could see some kind of bot being used to help establish what to write and what kind of tone to take. For example, they may know that negative stories about Universal get more clicks, so a human has to write a negative article about Universal using whatever news happened.
Is this third park far along in development where Universal has a general idea what its gonna be
When I read bots were starting to write articles the first site I thought of was the motley fool. That site seems to exist just to have content available for anything that could get clicks. I am not sure that humans actually write all of their stuff.
Not saying this site is doing it yet but we are at the point where sites are going to have footnotes like that that make them see more legit when they are bots. I mean shady ppl have been using BBB as seen on tv stuff for a long time.Just pointing out that the human who wrote that article did disclose that they are a Disney shareholder. FWIW, I have seen that name on a few Fool articles in the past where he seemed to paint UoR in a positive light. May he was just poking WDW to react to UNI more than they were a few years ago.
Original AFF Universal debt was $27 million. I think the GRE loan was $35 million, so that should be the basis.Any idea of what the new owner's basis in these is? I am sure Uni has determined it so they can tailor the bid to the circumstances.