As I was responding to something funny that @CheekySchneider posted, I started reminiscing about the old Fran days and the VIP news letter... Honestly, I was trying to remember MicMac's real name... and then I stumbled across some articles written about the VIP news letter and wanted to throw some of it out there for you guys. How far we've come, but we still have a long way to go. That fvcker Fran set us so far back when he was handed a program setup for success. Here's my favorite quote from one of the articles...
"The explicit editorial stance from here on out at EDSBS is that Dennis Franchione is a ****ing idiot. A total goddamn piss-shitting paste-eating ****ing idiot. We wouldn't trust him with sinking a leaky barge full of bricks with the U.S.S. New Jersey. We wouldn't trust him to feed our pet alligator Lawrence if we had freezer full of dead chickens and a shovel at the ready. "
I provide these as reference for any further discussion you all may want to have to reminisce over the dark days, the beginning of purgatory... if you will, of our beloved Aggie football.
www.sbnation.com
www.espn.com
"The explicit editorial stance from here on out at EDSBS is that Dennis Franchione is a ****ing idiot. A total goddamn piss-shitting paste-eating ****ing idiot. We wouldn't trust him with sinking a leaky barge full of bricks with the U.S.S. New Jersey. We wouldn't trust him to feed our pet alligator Lawrence if we had freezer full of dead chickens and a shovel at the ready. "
I provide these as reference for any further discussion you all may want to have to reminisce over the dark days, the beginning of purgatory... if you will, of our beloved Aggie football.

Imagine Harbaugh selling roster secrets to boosters | 2007: The inside story of the greatest season in college football history
That's what Texas A&M's head coach did a decade ago.


Aggies coach stops selling inside info to boosters
Texas A&M coach Dennis Franchione said he has stopped selling inside information on the Aggies in a newsletter to boosters who paid $1,200 per year in subscription fees that helped finance the coach's personal Web site.