Broadway is a joke!

People keep giving figures on how many people have attended a certain certain place in so many years, and trying to use it to justify a certain building is a World Wonder.

The problem is, USA have a lot of people. How many people that went to watch a play in Broadway are actually from within the country?

I bet in the past 100 years, more or similar number of people have watched a baseball game in Yankee Stadium as compared to watching a Broadway Show, but how many people outside the USA really know Yankee Stadium? Should we make it a world wonder?
 
Speaker said:
Bad quality? Last I checked, the United States soccer/football team is ranked 7th in the world--1 spot ahead of England and 48 ahead of Belgium. Bad quality? I think not.

And the American habit of regarding rankings based on win/lose ratios and conjecture rears its ugly head.;)
Whenever the US mens (the women are a different story) team plays a "quality" nation its quite funny really. The ranking is nice but far from realistic in terms of high level performance.
 
eatomhoch said:
"The Phantom of the Opera" is the most successful entertainment venture in history, with a worldwide box office of $3.2 billion, far surpassing the highest-grossing film, "Titanic," at $1.2 billion. Worldwide attendance now exceeds 80 million.
The book was better. :mischief:

OG is simply the best villain ever.

Thalassicus said:
If not Broadway, what is the most prominent modern drama venue to choose?
The Internet. ;)

No, I like the Broadway as a wonder but see it as a modern Globe Theater which is a National Wonder, not a World Wonder like Broadway.

I for one like Soccor/Football. I don't like the fact that this country pretty much ignores it. The problem I run into is that I'm so poorly educated on it as a sport that I have no idea when the Worldcup is. Four years ago, I caught the Worldcup on my third shift job. I really enjoyed watching it even though I had no real attachment to any of the teams that were playing.

I have my opinions about American Football but I'll refrain from commenting on them here. Simply stated, I'd watch a Sox game anyday over Worldcup and I'd watch Worldcup anyday over American Football.
 
Mad Hab said:
I like most of Civ IV wonders, but from a worldwide point of view I believe Broadway makes a very lousy wonder.

I am ok with Rock'n'Roll. Hollywood is a wonder of international impact. But... Broadway? It's relevant only in the USA (and maybe westen Europe), it is ridiculous it has the same in-game impact as Hollywood or Rock'n'roll. Maybe it would do a fine National Wonder, but as a Unique Wonder, is sucks big time!

Cheers,

Mad Hab


Hmmmm....let me see:

-Statue of Liberty
-Hollywood
-Broadway
-Rock n Roll
-The Pentagon
-Mount Rushmore
-Wall Street
-West Point

hey, they're all american wonders!! Oh, and the game was made by Americans!!!

What an exquisite coincidence!!!


P.S. - @Mad Hab: Paz e saúde meu irmão! ;)
 
EdCase said:
And the American habit of regarding rankings based on win/lose ratios and conjecture rears its ugly head.;)
Whenever the US mens (the women are a different story) team plays a "quality" nation its quite funny really. The ranking is nice but far from realistic in terms of high level performance.
Their quarterfinal result in the 2002 WC confirms that ranking, no?

The ranking is from FIFA.com. About as official as it can get
 
Broadway is a wonder ... you wonder what the heck it's doing in your game :D

Stonehenge, Versailles, and many others are not strictly American.
Were you expecting Portugean Wonders?
 
gettingfat said:
The issue is whether it is an overkill by putting more than a dozen of great/national wonders in the game if your suggestions are adopted.

No, there needs to be a far greater amount of wonders in the modern ages, as the impact of early age wonders is exponentially greater than modern wonders. To make up for the difference, there should be more modern wonders.

gettingfat said:
How many wonders are there in the game. And do you consider other countries have no significant achievements in the modern time?

Nobody said anything along those lines. Nobody is demanding the Three Gourges Dam to be taken out, outside of the people who think its an American wonder.Then all of the sudden, its becomes a "We can't have it in there!"

gettingfat said:
everything big done by the USA looks even bigger in your eyes. The problem is, some centuries ago, something that looked very trendy and the biggest thing at that time may only be a footnote in the history book.

100 years later, I bet people will still be listening to the music made by Mozart or Beethoven, but very few people will know Mickey Mouse. Ok, if you wish make it a Great Artist, then. And once again, Disneyland's success is derived from the success of movie industry. In a sense it's essentially a more successful theme park compared to Universal Studio. No need to over-represent that.

That's irrelevant for discussion. It is the importance in each relative age that matters in the game for the majority of wonders, not the importance across ages. Nobody is demanding Stonehenge to have a lasting appeal beyond the ancient age. Obelisks are important for that age, but the advance of calendars negates that benefit. The Parthenon is great for an early age GP farm, but of course, it becomes obsolete. There are only a few wonders that have lasting appeals across ages, ie the Pyramids or Hanging Gardens. The problem with Civ IV is the lack of a post-modern age, in which wonders can again become negated. You are free to make up your own technologies that would render the modern ones benefitless.

Therefore, the argument you have makes no logical sense, and in fact contradicts in the backdrop of the game. Most Wonders are meant to be beneficial in a limited window, but the problem with modern wonders is that there is not a future technology tree to eliminate those bonuses. Hypothesizing about the future gains of current wonders is thus moot.

gettingfat said:
And you simply can't compare the modern age wonders to those built earlier. Nowadays, the world is like one. Back in just a few centuries ago, it is unusual if a building is known by people in several countries. Now if something is not known by most people in the world for a decent stretch of time, you can't even call it a wonder candidate. Your comparison of Ellis Island to Hagia Sophia is not legitimate at all.

No, you somehow came up with a condition in which a wonder needs to be well known. I argue that there is no condition necessary. I'm pretty sure the Angkor Wat was pretty limited in its knowledge even in its own time period.

gettingfat said:
Remember the Great Wall, a long recognized wonder that took the lives of hundreds of thousands to build it is not even in the game, and Mt. Rushmere is. What do you want more?

That comparison is worthless. One would be clearly a Great Wonder, while the other is merely a modern age National wonder. Apples to oranges, as they say.

gettingfat said:
Also bear in mind that in modern age, it's much easier to build something that looks great. So one got to pick the absolute best out of them. Something that everybody knows, and its influence will probably last. Sorry, I don't even think Broadway fits this criteria.

As stated above, the lasting appeal of a wonder has never been a requirement for a wonder. What you said is completely contradictory to how Civ IV is designed. Most wonders only have a limited window in which their impact is important.
 
tbd said:
Broadway is a wonder ... you wonder what the heck it's doing in your game :D

Stonehenge, Versailles, and many others are not strictly American.
Were you expecting Portugean Wonders?

Brilliant first statement! I wish I have said it myself! :)

But, as a matter of fact, there used to be a Portuguese wonder (and that's since Civ 1): Magellan's Expedition was accomplished by a Portuguese capitain, Fernão de Magalhães... The +1 bonus naval movement from circumnavigating the globe represents that voyage!

Cheers,

Mad Hab

PS: E saudações através do Atlântico, eddie verde! :)
 
Mickey Mouse was "born" with Steamboat Willie in 1928. I doubt he'll disappear in 22 years.

But that's neither here nor there.

1) I love Broadway. To say it's culturally unimportant because it's popular, or to disparage its music AND PLAYS, is silly. I think this is one problem: a lot of people see "Broadway" and think "Cats", instead of "Gypsy" or "A Streetcar Named Desire". Broadway's not just musicals, and its musicals are not just of the Andrew Lloyd Weber variety. I wouldn't disparage Weber too much though; his stuff IS culturally important, no matter what one's opinion of its musical and literary worth.

2) I would love more non-American wonders. The World Cup in soccer would be great. So would the Olympics; it would be cool to have two versions of that, one ancient, one modern.
 
meisen said:
Mt. Rushmore is the defacement (graffiti) by one nation upon a sacred site of another. On land the 1st nation even admits now that it illegally stole. Furthermore, it was created by a klu klux klansman. You really want to glorify this with a wonder? The existance of Mt. Rushmore offends many in the USA still and I am surprised the designers of this game would be so culturly insensitive about this. And Mt. Rushmore isn't even its proper name.

Who said anything about glorifying it? I even suggested it could be replaced earlier in this thread, as I mentioned how people wouldn't like the Gulag (as I then offered Alcatraz).

(The Great Pyramids were not built on the backs of thousands of slaves-edited per ivanof), the Hanging Gardens was constructed on the backs of Jewish slaves, even a modern wonder of the Three Gorges Dam caused many Chinese to be incompletely reinbursed, or moved to poorer lands. Mao Zedong represents millions of deaths. There are plenty of aspects in the game that have their "black-eyes." Whatever complaint you have, please put in perspective of everything else in the game.

meisen said:
BTW, the comparison GettingFat made that you objected to is not worthless, only your high horse style of judgement of it. And after closer reading, along with much of the rest of that post of your's in my humble opinion.

:confused: So the only argument you have is that the comparision is not worthless? Again, tell me why should we elevate a national wonder, and compare it to a World Wonder? If anything, you should be arguing how the Great Wall should be back to its Civ III type bonus, and replace what the Chichen Itza does in the game now. In addition, I don't see why a modern wonder should be compared to something that would have its bonuses located in the classical or medieval time periods. Ultimately, I don't need a high horse, I, at least in "my humble opinion," offer up my opinions on the matter beyond just telling others off that they are wrong.
 
Mt Rushmore is America's 2nd best sculpture (the best being the Statue of Liberty
-ol french are hard to compete with in art)

It offends people? Who? I watched a public tv channel show on its creation and the sculpture that did it and they made no mention of anyone being offended.

Land stolen from the indians? lol. As oppossed to the rest of america? American indians lost - they got wiped out - happened to civs since the dawn of time. They should have been smarter or better fighters or knew how to steal tech or had more babies or whatever but the bottom line is they were not strong enough or tough enough to win.

In so far as "klansman" ...an artists job is to do his/her art. That is what they are judged on - not their politics. Caarvagio was a murderer- modigiloni a drug addict..ect. I guess their work suxed too. Man , some people would even erase the freedom of art if they disagree with some aspect of it.

Think the Muslims did that to alot of Byzantine art and some statues recently.
Iconoclasts, Muslims, and other "protecters of mankind's feelings" all ought to get together and destroy all artwork that they think the rest of us can do without. Because they know what is good for u.

Although personally i would rather look at a giant stone sculpture than listen to someone who has created nothing sit and whine about it.
 
The Great Pyramids were built on the backs of thousands of slaves

Actually, it appares, taht it was built by free people, who were there of their own free will, to honour their god, the Pharaoh. Think of it as if your Deity told you, to build Him/Her a Mausoleum. I think youd go there and build as well.

Thought son wonders:

If we need wonders, that produce new goods, why not the following:

The Louvre: It could have a new technology, Academic Art, attached to it. Because when the Louvre first became an Art related building, it was an academy for professional arts. It became a museum considerably later. So maybe it could produce 6 Great pieces of Art, which could not only make your citizens happy, but also be used at a one time cost, to boost your city for 4000+ points. Hermitage could do that too. But actually. Louvre was REALLY first a palace, before that Louis XIV moved out of there. So it could actually be built somewhere in Renessaince, but In the Industrial age, it would become a new importance.

Fashion capital: Sounds weird at first, but think. It would produce 6 pieces of fashion. What is really more civilized, then a bunch of really strance, well educated people coming together, drawing something, cutting some cloth and selling the BS they produce for A lot of cash. Fashion is historically significant, has its place in europe, I think and matters to some extent everywhere across the globe.
 
troytheface said:
Land stolen from the indians? lol. As oppossed to the rest of america? American indians lost - they got wiped out - happened to civs since the dawn of time. They should have been smarter or better fighters or knew how to steal tech or had more babies or whatever but the bottom line is they were not strong enough or tough enough to win.
The Lakota (Sioux) are a great and brave people. The Lakota were strong enough to fight the U.S. to the peace table. And the Lakota were human enough to pursue peace. However.. if not for U.S. treaties that secured for them their most sacred ground, as well as a continuance of their way of life, they would have continued the fight. If not for trusting in the lies of the U.S. government, the Lakota would be free today to live in the way of their Grandfathers. And despite what has been done to them they remain a great people.
 
troytheface said:
It offends people? Who? I watched a public tv channel show on its creation and the sculpture that did it and they made no mention of anyone being offended.
It offends me for one. But I am just one of many who see that carving as a desecration of sacred ground. The entirety of the Black Hills are sacred to the Lakota peoples. So sacred that I don't beleive that any of us can really understand what that land meant to them.



If you doubt the sacredness of the Black Hills to the Lakota Nations then consider the following...
The 1980 reparation payment, being held in trust by the US government, has now grown, with interest, to about $570 million. 80% of Sioux tribal members recently polled affirmed that the Black Hills are not for sale and said they support drafting another bill to ask Congress for the return of the Paha Sapa to the Sioux Nation. ~ http://www.cabinetmagazine.org/issues/7/sixgrandfathers.php


That land was stolen by gold greedy politicians. And it is gold greedy politicians that continue to keep this sacred ground from it's people...
In 1980, after decades of filing claims, the US Supreme Court ruled in favor of the Sioux Nation, acknowledging that the Black Hills had been appropriated illegally by the US government when it broke the treaty of 1868. [...] In 1990 further legislation over the Black Hills claim was defeated on Capitol Hill. South Dakota Senator Tom Daschle (Dem.) established the Open Hills Association in his home state, an organization dedicated to fighting future attempts by the Sioux to regain the Paha Sapa. Daschle also began using Mount Rushmore to raise campaign money, charging "guests" $5,000 dollars each for a helicopter ride to the top of Washington's head; an area designated off-limits by the National Park Service. ~ http://www.cabinetmagazine.org/issues/7/sixgrandfathers.php

If any game wonder caused me grief, it would be Mt. Rushmore. It is a desecration of a sacred site, and it is a reminder of an attempted genocide. And those sacred grounds are still in the hands of thieves. It's inclusion into the game is like a sick joke to me. It is for reducing war weariness.. yet if I am to dwell on what it means to me.. it invokes feelings of war from within me.

Even so, it is just a toy in a game and it's inclusion doesn't bother me.
 
well then - good luck to u and urs... have nuth'n against minority groups trying to get as much of the pie as they can. they all do it- and if whites were in the minority i suspect they would do it as well.
 
troytheface said:
well then - good luck to u and urs... have nuth'n against minority groups trying to get as much of the pie as they can. they all do it- and if whites were in the minority i suspect they would do it as well.
They don't want your money. They want their sacred lands back!
 
Using the native americans land stolen is not a good argument.

Nations all over the world throughout HISTORY have stolen land from other countries.

Conquistadors in Mexico wiped out the aztecs very VERY brutally and enslaved them. Nobody disses modern day spain about that so i dont think people should use the native americans vs U.S as a argument tool.

Not only that native americans in South America were ravaged, look at the incas.

Other places in the world history like this happens. England invading france during the hundred years war (Its actually longer then a hundred years) is another example. Ancient Rome conquering vasts amount of land outside italy is yet another example.

So please dont give me that native american losing land argument bull. Of course it wasnt right how we treated them. We murdered women and children. But how many wars are clean and justified hundreds of years ago? Europeans, asians, and many other cultures have a long history of brutal subjugation.
 
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