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Inside Lacrosse

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Inside Lacrosse
Vice president and editor-in-chiefTerry Foy
CategoriesSports
Frequency11 per year
Formatoversized glossy
PublisherRobert Carpenter
FounderRobert Carpenter
Founded1996
CompanyAmerican City Business Journals
CountryUnited States
Based inBaltimore, Maryland
Websiteinsidelacrosse.com
ISSN1541-5007

Inside Lacrosse is a lacrosse media entity and ESPN affiliate. It includes many parts including a news website, an 11 times annual magazine, online video streaming, internet forums and an ESPN television show. The company is currently headquartered in Baltimore, Maryland.

YouTube Encyclopedic

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  • What's inside a TV?

Transcription

- Oh, hi there! I'm just pushing a TV down the road. Just your normal, everyday "take your TV on a walk." (laughs) No, we picked up this TV from a neighbor. They were gonna get rid of it, and we thought, "Let's take it and cut it open and see what's inside." So, unfortunately, I have to do the walk of shame, and walk past all my neighbors, looking like I'm stealing a giant TV. I feel like, at some point, the cops are gonna pull up and ask me if that's my TV. So we've got this TV in our garage and we've got a couple of boys here. Of course, you know Lincoln, I'm Dan, and this is Kai. So Kai is our neighbor, and he's the one that gave us this gigantic TV. So they didn't need it anymore. We just hooked it up to the Wii to see if it would work. And Kai, thank you so much for the TV. - You're welcome. - So let's push the button and see how it looks. (laughs) It's kind of blurry, so you can see why Kai's family probably didn't need this TV anymore. It's a little bit-- You can see, but it'd probably make your eyes go cross-eyed. So I'm gonna give it a shot with this tool. I think the easy way to do it would be just to bash open the glass part, but what I'd like to do is just cut all around it, this side, and then we can pry it open and look inside and see what's there, and maybe later if we wanna have a little fun, we'll bash in the front of it. So Kai, this is your TV, what do you think's gonna be inside of it? - Probably some wires or something. - Yeah? What about you, Lincoln, what do you think? - Wires, plugs, and some cords inside, that's my guess. - Ok. I think the Teletubbies are gonna be inside of it, They're gonna jump out, maybe, maybe not. You guys ready for this? - Yep! - Let's do this! - This could be dangerous. Don't try this at home. (power tool buzzing) Ew! - What? - Melted plastic. It's like toothpaste. (power tool buzzing) Ok, so we've got Lincoln, Kai, and London here, and we're ready to just break this thing open, so let's go ahead and do it! Ready, boys? - Yep. - Yep. - Woah! - Woah! Look at that! Woah! - Check that out, you have those color things, just probably does the three different colors, the red, yellow, and blue. It's really dusty in here. No wonder it looked like we were seeing double. And then look at this, it's a mirror. This must be a projection screen, and that's how it works, is it goes up onto here and then projects onto this glass. - This one lights-- ow. - This is a mirror, buddy. (laughs) That's pretty funny. What do you guys think about that? - That is cool. - I was kind of right, there is a couple of cords over there, but not much. - Under here is where this stuff goes, and then also, I bet the speakers are down there. Aw, look how tiny they are! - They're so tiny. - Oh, I pushed it in. - Kai just rips it! (laughs) - This may not be the smartest idea, but I'm gonna plug it in, and see what it looks like inside. Hopefully it doesn't explode or something on us. (TV static) - It works! - Red, green, woah woah! - I can see it! - Look at that! Look at those colors, guys! - That looks cool! - I'm gonna turn down the volume. Look at that, that's how it works! There's the colors. (laughs) Red, green, and blue. Did I say red, yellow, and blue? I thought it was red, yellow, and blue. I guess it's red, green, and blue. Am I wrong? Check out the colors on that. They kind of come and go. With the naked eye you can see them the entire time, but on the video camera, they kind of come and go, but there's the red, green, and blue colors. This is from the mirror. Here's the actual lights down here. Check that out. (laughs) So cool and strange. That is what makes a TV do the pictures, these three colors all work together to make whatever you're watching on TV. We have this brand new Rawlings baseball bat that we're going to cut open in the next couple of episodes, but I think it'd be the perfect thing to hit this glass mirror part. But because this is Kai's TV and he so graciously let us have to the TV, I'm gonna let him take the first swing at it. He's got his helmet on, his glasses, his gloves, and hopefully his parents don't mind that we're letting him do this. (glass shatters) Nice! (glass shatters) Nice, give it one more hit. (glass shatters) Nice! I just wanna see what's underneath here. Let's see if I can get it open. You saw my amazing home run hitting skills, so I'm pretty sure I can do this. (glass shatters) There's your wires that you boys were thinking was gonna be inside of a TV. Alright, look at those cords, guys. These are the three bubbles that make these lights right here. - And it looks like there's a panel. - Yeah, a little chip panel, a motherboard. Whenever you're ready. (glass shatters) Thanks so much for watching this video and for subscribing to our channel. If you liked it, go ahead and "like" it below or add your comments of what things we should cut open next. And keep on watching and we're gonna keep having more fun.

Properties

Inside Lacrosse Magazine

Currently published 11 times a year, the magazine is in an oversized glossy format, similar to Rolling Stone and ESPN The Magazine. The page count averages anywhere from 136–172 pages depending on the time of year and main topics of interest are the men's college and high school lacrosse. Also receiving coverage is Major League Lacrosse, the National Lacrosse League, and women's lacrosse. Of the 11 issues, the most popular is the recruiting issue, followed by the college season preview issues. [citation needed]

Inside Lacrosse TV

Inside Lacrosse TV is the name of both Inside Lacrosse's video streaming website and their ESPN television show. The television show is a one-hour special that usually occurs twice annually as season "preview" and "summary" shows before and after the college season.

The Lacrosse Forums

As of May 2009, The Lacrosse Forums (TLF) has over 50,000 registered users making it the largest online lacrosse forums.[1]

IL Indoor

IL Indoor is a National Lacrosse League news blog. Formerly known as "NLL Insider", it was started in 2005 as a spinoff to Inside Lacrosse so that Inside Lacrosse could focus on field lacrosse while IL Indoor would focus on box lacrosse. It features its own forums similar to The Lacrosse Forums. Some of the writers are former NLL players including Teddy Jenner, Brian Shanahan, Marty O'Neill, and Tom Ryan.[2]

IL Indoor Forums

IL Indoor also has its own distinct message board forum, IL Indoor Forums which focuses primarily on National Lacrosse League news and discussions. This message board began in 2000 and was originally known as the National Lacrosse League Message Board until Inside Lacrosse purchased and then renamed it. It is the premier website for fan-based NLL journalism and is the location for serious NLL fans, staffers, and players to share news, rumors, opinions, and ideas for improving both the sport of box lacrosse and the NLL. It also serves as a living repository of NLL history and as a resource for new NLL fans to learn about the league, its rules, and its history by searching past posts or interacting with long-time fans.

History

The company was founded in 1996 by Robert Carpenter, a Duke lacrosse and Vestal, NY High School graduate. Knowing that fans cannot be truly invested in a sport if they don't have access to the news and the personalities surrounding it, Inside Lacrosse was born. A ham and egg operation run out of Carpenter's spare bedroom in Towson, Maryland was all about printing and sending weekly score bulletins to lacrosse junkies nationally, in first-class envelopes so nothing was out of date. The maiden issue was a 16-page black-and-white newspaper consisting mostly of box scores and stats. Among the content was the news of Michigan State and New Hampshire dropping their men's varsity programs and Syracuse's epic 22–21 win over Virginia.

In 2007, American City Business Journals acquired the magazine from Carpenter Publishing LLC.[3]

Awards and honors

References

  1. ^ "The Lacrosse Forums pass 50,000 member landmark". Inside Lacrosse. May 23, 2009. Archived from the original on May 27, 2009. Retrieved June 5, 2009.
  2. ^ "About IL Indoor". IL Indoor. Archived from the original on April 16, 2012. Retrieved March 28, 2012.
  3. ^ "Inside Lacrosse Magazine to be acquired by BBJ parent company". Baltimore Business Journal. November 19, 2007. Retrieved 2024-04-23.

External links

This page was last edited on 23 April 2024, at 22:43
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