DonKnock
KPJ Gonna Save Us
...Please do us all a favor and off yourself
I couldn't believe my eyes when I saw this shyt..
Some of y'all really tripping like that off of fantasy getting banned?
There's no shortage of protesters around Wall Street. But now there's a rather unlikely group to add to the mix: fantasy football fans.
Nearly 200 protesters showed up in lower Manhattan Friday to voice their displeasure with New York's decision to ban FanDuel and DraftKings, the online fantasy sports platforms. The state contends the two sites violate gambling laws.
The villain, at least in the protesters' eyes, is State Attorney General Eric T. Schneiderman, who ordered both websites to stop collecting wagers from New Yorkers earlier in the week.
While many fans have expressed their outrage online, the protesters took to the streets to make sure New Yorkers were getting the message. It wasn't immediately clear whether they had jobs or had decided to call in sick.
And just in case things got rowdy, a large group of heavily armed police were on hand to keep watch over the group.
TheStreet went out to see what all the fuss was all about. Here's what we found.
NY

I couldn't believe my eyes when I saw this shyt..

Some of y'all really tripping like that off of fantasy getting banned?


There's no shortage of protesters around Wall Street. But now there's a rather unlikely group to add to the mix: fantasy football fans.
Nearly 200 protesters showed up in lower Manhattan Friday to voice their displeasure with New York's decision to ban FanDuel and DraftKings, the online fantasy sports platforms. The state contends the two sites violate gambling laws.
The villain, at least in the protesters' eyes, is State Attorney General Eric T. Schneiderman, who ordered both websites to stop collecting wagers from New Yorkers earlier in the week.
While many fans have expressed their outrage online, the protesters took to the streets to make sure New Yorkers were getting the message. It wasn't immediately clear whether they had jobs or had decided to call in sick.
And just in case things got rowdy, a large group of heavily armed police were on hand to keep watch over the group.
TheStreet went out to see what all the fuss was all about. Here's what we found.



NY
