Peter King Just Now Learns About Friday Night Lights AND Picks The Super Bowl Winner, All In the Same Article!
Monday, June 04, 2007
I think Peter King isn't bad on TV. The guy has great contacts and always seems to have some insider information to provide "Sunday Night Football in America The All-Time Fabulous Show", or whatever they call it.
Well, I know I'm not breaking any new ground here, but his column is completely the opposite. I have no idea how I came across this, but he's already predicting the winner of Super Bowl XLII....
Feb. 3, 2008, in the desert: Colts 44, Saints 37. My advice: Score your tickets now. It's going to be one of the best Super Bowls ever. And the zaniest.Why do I have a feeling they won't post 81 points? Not that I don't trust Mr. King, but that seems unlikely to me. One other thing struck me as odd, and I will leave you to discuss in the comments.
You work for NBC and you work in Football....How haven't you seen Friday Night Lights?
Before my vacation began, I asked NBC boss Dick Ebersol which show I should download to my IPod. "Friday Night Lights,'' he said without hesitation. I took him up on it, downloading all of season one, and he's right. The parenting stuff in there is as good as the football stuff.Monday Morning QB (SI.com)
P.S.- Hey Andrea! What the hell are you looking at?
7 Comments:
"Hey Andrea! What the hell are you looking at?"
perhaps lil' sean salisbury snuck in there with his cell phone?
My superbowl prediction...
Colts 30 Seahawks 20
My hometown team loses without the referees messing up anything.
Have you guys heard of this new show called Seinfeld??? Apparently, it's funny!!!
My Super Bowl prediction: one team from the NFC and one team from the AFC.
His predictions always have scores that would be completely impossible.
Check out Olberdouche...what a douche. Christ, he looks gay.
Where can I place a bet on how long it takes Costas to punch Keith "set phasers on smug" Olbermann in the face on-air?
What are any of them looking at? Bob's the only one that might be looking at the camera at the time that picture was taken.