91_Aggie said:
maroon barchetta said:
Bob Yancy said:
doubledog said:
Bob Orlando is a bad comparison. Orlando has a major airport, Disneyland etc... We have football, no interstate and a poor airport.
Then how did all those people get here for the largest ticketed concert in United States history? Orlando doesn't hold that record. We do.
My week is kicking off. I have to go guys. I'll say one thing, many of you are very consistent.
Respectfully,
Yancy '95
You are also consistent.
Bringing up a once-in-a-lifetime event, hosted on a university campus, by a legend with very few concerts left in him, and somehow thinking that is relevant to WPC and the acts it could attract.
I would quote Andy Dufresne talking to the warden, but humor is lost on this board.
I agree. City Council members using logic fallacies and anecdotal evidence to advance their agenda just should not happen and we need to expect more.
You are consistent with your push/desire to want concerts here, and when you originally asked about this what seemed like a year ago, you were presented with facts as to why it is impossible to get big acts here... did you forget about that? Or are you just ignoring hoping no one else Will remember it.
I admire you for posting here and originally thought you were different and wanted to.do the right things for the right reasons. But this convention center infatuation of yours appears to be showing you as the "same old same old" that a particular block of voters keep voting in.
Please disabuse of this perception
I guess I'd offer that the largest ticketed concert in U.S. history is not an anecdote, but rather a crucial data point. Strait and the soccer match prove, I believe irrefutably, that our airport and highway limitations are not enough of a hindrance to keep people from getting here to see entertainment they want to see.
Our location is inside the Texas Triangle. Just as we have no problem driving to Cynthia Woods Mitchell Pavilion for a concert we want to see, so too will folks in Houston, Austin, Dallas, Waco, et al drive here. We aren't just in a decent location. We're central to the Texas Triangle- the largest and fastest growing megalopolis in the United States. I urge you to look at that and research what it really means.
If people completely voluntarily come here for entertainment, and we now know they will, why wouldn't they come here for all of the above? Family entertainment. Concerts. Trade shows. Boat shows. Car shows. Medical equipment. Agriculture exhibitions. University research symposiums? And of course, Sports.
A review of the cell phone data from the friendly international soccer match shows an unbelievably diverse list of countries registries in attendance. I forget the number but I'll go back and look. Dozens of countries.
What this boils down to is "do you want to be a destination?" Not, "can we be a destination."
Now maybe the citizens answer to that first question is "no." Maybe folks don't want to embrace growth in housing, commerce, jobs, tourism.
But that position is wrought with circumstances too. For years, the city of Austin embraced a philosophy now nicknamed "don't build it and they won't come." Rather than see growth as a blessing, they saw it as a curse. They wanted to freeze in stasis their 'big city with a midsized town feel' the way some among us pine for yesteryear in this community.
But Austin paid a terrible price for that philosophy. In housing costs. In traffic. In quality of life. They said "no" a lot and dissuaded development and growth via fees and a regulatory regime that pushed everything outward. They didn't want to be a destination.
The reverberative effects of those policies impact them negatively to this day. I urge you all to research that. You'll quickly see why Austin offers a cautionary tale that others want to avoid. Ultimately, growth won in Austin. They couldn't stop it. And neither can we. In a market based economy, growth is immutable.
My overarching philosophy is that growth is a blessing and the best we can hope to do is grow smart. Whether it's housing, jobs, economic development or tourism we have to be smart. We can do some things alone, but most we cannot. We need each other. Tamu, Tamus, Bryan, Brazos County and College Station- and the business community writ large.
We have an opportunity to be an even more impressive community than we already are. That takes vision. Cooperative vision.
Maybe it's a championship ball field. An updated amphitheater. Better programming and event promotion and utilization of our assets. More housing closer in to mitigate traffic. A powerhouse multi-event center that is jointly funded by the aforementioned and the private sector- that entertains locals and visitors alike.
Maybe some of those things never get off the ground, or don't manifest for another decade.
But we are growing. And we're leaving things and opportunities on the table and leaving people behind as we do. That has to change.
My $.02 and Respectfully
Yancy '95
Read this book:
https://news.rice.edu/news/2021/deep-heart-texas-triangle-global-powerhouse-emergesAnd these pieces…
https://www.kvue.com/article/news/local/boomtown-yesterday-dont-build-it-and-they-wont-come-mentality-pricing-austinites-out/269-492526666https://www.strongtowns.org/journal/2019/1/9/growth-and-the-fallacy-of-control My opinions are mine and should not be construed as those of city council or staff. I welcome robust debate but will cease communication on any thread in which colleagues or staff are personally criticized. I must refrain from comment on posted agenda items until after meetings are concluded. Bob Yancy 95