Awwwww
Awwwww
#RavensFlock
Well that ending sucked
Wooooo!!!!
Gang - this is true!! Do it!!!!!!!!
I’d be in for that
All kind lf the same…all entertaining.
Shocker
Woooo!!!
Right
Yeah i like this one better than last season
We still use this at work lol
Jedi mind trick. She will use this later to control you later.
Ugh, so sorry for your loss but good job getting through that i’m sure it was tough.
That whole episode was hilarious
He may have to call Charles from where he is…
Right! My dentist that I have go e to for over 40 years started a new portal and wanted all this info and i was like you have it I been going there for 40 years.
Pretty! Hope you have a great time!
What a final
Good luck!
This is gonna be a case where podcasters or something figure it out because the authorities sure aren’t
If it doesn’t fit you must acquit
Both John Buccigross and Matthew Berry continue to have big, public-facing roles with ESPN, despite the allegations against them. As with seemingly all men in sports media accused of sexual misconduct, the public eventually forgives, forgets, and then lashes out at those who remind them. Some of these men go on to become the faces of sports coverage for their outlets. Mike Tirico, for example, was disciplined by ESPN decades ago for one of the most egregious allegations of sexual harassment/assault I’ve heard of, in addition to multiple allegations of stalking and harassment by other female colleagues. In his book ESPN: The Uncensored Story, Michael Freeman recounts Tirico’s inexplicable behavior toward a work colleague at a house party. After ignoring the woman’s pleas that he leave her alone, Tirico, who had just met the woman for the first time, continued to follow her around the party and insist he was in love with her. When the woman, fed up with Tirico’s harassment, left the party, he followed her out to her car and attempted to block her from leaving. When she rolled down the driver’s window to tell him to get out of the way, Tirico reached into the car and shoved his hand between her legs. In another case, Freeman writes that Tirico followed a woman’s car after she rejected
his proposition to “throw you on the table right here and fuck your brains out.” This wasn’t the only harassment allegation against Tirico. In the book Those Guys Have All the Fun, James Andrew Miller and Tom Shales write that at least six other women came forward with stories about Tirico. In 1992, ESPN suspended him for three months and told him to seek counseling. After that, Tirico began a meteoric rise at ESPN, eventually becoming the host of ESPN’s crown jewel, Monday Night Football. Tirico was put front and center by ESPN, despite his disturbing history, and I often think of the women he left in his wake as he went on to call NBA and college basketball games, US Open tennis matches, and World Cup soccer. In 2016, before #MeToo exploded on Twitter, Tirico left ESPN for NBC, which would, the following year, fire Matt Lauer for similarly predatory behavior. Like at ESPN, Mike Tirico became the face of NBC Sports, replacing Bob Costas as the lead studio host for coverage of the Olympics. And, in an impressively tone-deaf move by NBC, they had Tirico interview snowboarder Shaun White about a sexual harassment lawsuit against White. When asked, NBC admitted they knew of Tirico’s past but dismissed it as something that happened long ago.
Despite my best efforts, too many people still don’t know about Mike Tirico. Here’s what I wrote about him in my book:
Ginger Cuz!!
Fail lol
You can choose one kid, one cake
I had one force me to have a tele appointment when i wanted an in person appointment and showed up 15 minutes late then told me i had to sit still because i started doing other things. I found a new dr after that.
Woooo!!!!!
It was not good
Watched too many heist movies